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Helpful Tools and Links
Listed below are helpful resources for low-income individuals as well as agencies who help those working toward self-sufficiency. If you'd like to share a useful link you've found, please email the webmaster.

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2007 Poverty Guidelines

Size of Family Unit
48 Contiguous States and D.C.
1
$10,210
2
13,690
3
17,170
4
20,650
5
24,130
6
27,610
7
31,090
8
34,570
For each additional person, add:
3,480

SOURCE:  Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 15, January 24, 2007, pp. 3147–3148

The separate poverty guidelines for Alaska and Hawaii reflect Office of Economic Opportunity administrative practice beginning in the 1966-1970 period.  Note that the poverty thresholds — the original version of the poverty measure — have never had separate figures for Alaska and Hawaii.  The poverty guidelines are not defined for Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and Palau. In cases in which a Federal program using the poverty guidelines serves any of those jurisdictions, the Federal office which administers the program is responsible for deciding whether to use the contiguous-states-and-D.C. guidelines for those jurisdictions or to follow some other procedure.

The poverty guidelines apply to both aged and non-aged units.  The guidelines have never had an aged/non-aged distinction; only the Census Bureau (statistical) poverty thresholds have separate figures for aged and non-aged one-person and two-person units.

Programs using the guidelines (or percentage multiples of the guidelines — for instance, 125 percent or 185 percent of the guidelines) in determining eligibility include Head Start, the Food Stamp Program, the National School Lunch Program, the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program.  Note that in general, cash public assistance programs (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Supplemental Security Income) do NOT use the poverty guidelines in determining eligibility.  The Earned Income Tax Credit program also does NOT use the poverty guidelines to determine eligibility.  For a more detailed list of programs that do and don’t use the guidelines, see the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).

The poverty guidelines (unlike the poverty thresholds) are designated by the year in which they are issued.  For instance, the guidelines issued in January 2007 are designated the 2007 poverty guidelines.  However, the 2007 HHS poverty guidelines only reflect price changes through calendar year 2006; accordingly, they are approximately equal to the Census Bureau poverty thresholds for calendar year 2006.  (The 2006 thresholds are expected to be issued in final form in August 2007; a preliminary version of the 2006 thresholds is now available from the Census Bureau.)

The computations for the 2007 poverty guidelines are available.

The poverty guidelines may be formally referenced as “the poverty guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the authority of 42 U.S.C. 9902(2).”

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U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's 2006 Income Limits