Texas is 2nd-worst state for children’s health care, 2025 study finds

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Texas is 2nd-worst state for children’s health care, 2025 study finds

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How healthy is your child?

Even though 95% of kids in the U.S. have health insurance, it doesn’t come cheap. Those who qualify for employer-sponsored family coverage still pay an average of nearly $6,300 every year. Government-assistance programs such as Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) provide relief to some families, but more do not qualify.

Other factors like the quality of a health care system, access to healthy food, and availability of fluoridated water can also have a significant influence on a child’s health. WalletHub compared the 50 U.S. states, as well as the District of Columbia, across 33 key measures of cost, quality and access to children’s health care.

“The quality of children’s health care should be one of the most important considerations for parents when deciding where to live.” WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo said. “Having access to quality pediatric and dental care, nutritious food and good spaces for recreation from a young age can give children a much better chance of growing up healthy and forming good habits that will last into their adult life.”

How did children’s health care in Texas measure up against other states? We’ll be honest, the state’s system is in poor health.

Texas is 2nd-worst state for children’s health care, highest share of uninsured children

Unfortunately, the Lone Star State didn’t score very high on WalletHub’s study — in fact, it scored lower than all but one state, Mississippi.

In addition to overall rank, Texas also came second-to-last in the “kids’ health and access to health care” category. It had the highest percentage of uninsured children in the country, eight times more than Massachusetts which had the lowest share. The state also had the nation’s highest share of children with unaffordable medical bills (twice as much as Rhode Island, which had the lowest percentage). Texas also had the fourth-lowest share of children with “excellent/very good health.”

  • Overall rank: 50 out of 51
  • Total score: 40.72
  • Kids’ health & access to health care rank: 50
  • Kids’ nutrition, physical activity & obesity rank: 31
  • Kids’ oral health rank: 40

LIST: Best states for children’s health care in 2025

Overall rank State Total score Kids’ health & access to health care rank Kids’ nutrition, physical activity & obesity rank Kids’ oral health rank
1 Massachusetts 67.31 2 1 20
2 Rhode Island 64.88 1 7 16
3 New Jersey 63.15 4 3 51
4 Pennsylvania 61.45 8 8 6
5 Vermont 61.25 3 28 3
6 District of Columbia (D.C.) 60.52 5 27 1
7 Hawaii 60.23 6 21 42
8 New York 60.19 10 12 21
9 Connecticut 60.10 7 18 29
10 California 59.67 11 13 24
11 Maryland 59.46 9 20 36
12 Washington 59.03 14 4 46
13 Minnesota 58.19 17 5 32
14 Illinois 57.16 12 32 2
15 Utah 57.11 22 2 48
16 Delaware 56.56 18 15 15
17 Colorado 55.80 29 6 13
18 New Hampshire 55.51 13 38 27
19 Nebraska 55.41 21 22 9
20 Iowa 55.12 19 24 14
21 Virginia 55.11 16 26 38
22 Oregon 54.50 28 10 12
23 Michigan 54.29 27 19 8
24 Idaho 54.27 15 37 26
25 New Mexico 53.87 24 25 5
26 Missouri 53.24 31 14 39
27 Ohio 52.55 20 42 22
28 South Dakota 52.02 26 30 28
29 South Carolina 52.00 25 33 23
30 Indiana 51.98 33 23 34
31 North Dakota 51.35 36 17 4
32 Alabama 50.33 23 47 31
33 Montana 50.22 39 11 43
34 Nevada 49.91 30 36 49
35 Tennessee 49.56 32 44 25
36 Florida 49.55 41 16 45
37 Wisconsin 49.28 46 9 18
38 Kentucky 48.75 34 45 11
39 Georgia 48.60 37 34 7
40 Kansas 47.88 42 29 19
41 North Carolina 47.83 35 35 41
42 Louisiana 46.28 40 41 47
43 Maine 45.71 38 51 17
44 Arkansas 45.61 44 43 37
45 West Virginia 45.32 43 48 10
46 Arizona 44.76 47 40 30
47 Oklahoma 43.49 45 46 50
48 Alaska 43.05 48 50 33
49 Wyoming 41.80 49 39 44
50 Texas 40.72 50 31 40
51 Mississippi 37.83 51 49 35

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