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City risk detail

Household financial stress in Hailey, ID

Household financial stress reflects how close households are to the edge. It blends income, poverty exposure, housing cost burden, and safety-net reliance to show where families have less cushion for unexpected bills.

Risk score

no data

No validated household financial stress metrics are currently available for Hailey; city-level (place) context will be used until city coverage expands.

Risk metrics

No tracked metrics are currently available for Hailey at this scope.

Data status: Not available

Top drivers in this score

Driver-level attribution is still filling for this location. Current model coverage includes 0 of 0 metrics.

Scope fallback: City-level (place) (low confidence confidence).

How this compares

Location-specific comparison metrics are still being assembled for this profile.

A stable cohort median is not yet published for city-level locations.

Coverage and confidence

Scope usedCity-level (place)
Metric coverage0/0
ConfidenceLow confidence

No core metrics are available for this risk in the current dataset.

Why it matters

In Hailey, Higher stress means more households are cost-burdened and rely on SNAP or other supports, leaving less room for savings.

What we measure

  • Median household income
  • Households under 200% poverty
  • Rent-burdened households (30%+)
  • Mortgage-burdened households (30%+)
  • Households receiving SNAP
  • Income trend (YoY)

Key sources

  • U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-year

Compare this risk across nearby cities

No additional Idaho city records are currently published in this dataset for side-by-side comparison.

Common questions

What does a higher household financial stress score mean?

It signals more households facing cost burdens, lower incomes, and higher poverty exposure relative to other places.

Why use 200% of the poverty line?

It captures near-poor households that are still financially fragile but fall above the official poverty threshold.

How current is the data?

We use the most recent ACS 5-year release, which updates annually and smooths year-to-year volatility.