The US fertility rate reached a new low in 2024, CDC data shows
[July 24, 2025]
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK (AP) — The fertility rate in the U.S. dropped to an all-time
low in 2024 with less than 1.6 kids per woman, new federal data released
Thursday shows.
The U.S. was once among only a few developed countries with a rate that
ensured each generation had enough children to replace itself — about
2.1 kids per woman. But it has been sliding in America for close to two
decades as more women are waiting longer to have children or never
taking that step at all.
The new statistic is on par with fertility rates in western European
countries, according to World Bank data.
Alarmed by recent drops, the Trump administration has taken steps to
increase falling birth rates, like issuing an executive order meant to
expand access to and reduce costs of in vitro fertilization and backing
the idea of “baby bonuses” that might encourage more couples to have
kids.
But there's no reason to be alarmed, according to Leslie Root, a
University of Colorado Boulder researcher focused on fertility and
population policy.
“We’re seeing this as part of an ongoing process of fertility delay. We
know that the U.S. population is still growing, and we still have a
natural increase — more births than deaths,” she said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the
statistic for the total fertility rate with updated birth data for 2024.
In the early 1960s, the U.S. total fertility rate was around 3.5, but
plummeted to 1.7 by 1976 after the Baby Boom ended. It gradually rose to
2.1 in 2007 before falling again, aside from a 2014 uptick. The rate in
2023 was 1.621, and inched down in 2024 to 1.599, according to the CDC's
National Center for Health Statistics.
Birth rates are generally declining for women in most age groups — and
that doesn’t seem likely to change in the near future, said Karen Guzzo,
director of the Carolina Population Center at the University of North
Carolina.
People are marrying later and also worried about their ability to have
the money, health insurance and other resources needed to raise children
in a stable environment.
“Worry is not a good moment to have kids,” and that’s why birth rates in
most age groups are not improving, she said.
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The toes of a baby are seen at a hospital in McAllen, Texas, on
Wednesday, July 29, 2020. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
 Asked about birth-promoting measures
outlined by the Trump administration, Guzzo said they don’t tackle
larger needs like parental leave and affordable child care.
“The things that they are doing are really symbolic and not likely
to budge things for real Americans,” she said.
Increase in births in new data
The CDC's new report, which is based on a more complete review of
birth certificates than provisional data released earlier this year,
also showed a 1% increase in births — about 33,000 more — last year
compared to the prior year.
That brought the yearly national total to just over 3.6 million
babies born.
But this is different: The provisional data indicated birth rate
increases last year for women in their late 20s and 30s. However,
the new report found birth rate declines for women in their 20s and
early 30s, and no change for women in their late 30s.
What happened? CDC officials said it was due to recalculations
stemming from a change in the U.S. Census population estimates used
to compute the birth rate.
That's plausible, Root said. As the total population of women of
childbearing age grew due to immigration, it offset small increases
in births to women in those age groups, she said.
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