This Town Has Been Named the Poorest in New Jersey

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This Town Has Been Named the Poorest in New Jersey

Atlantic City has been named the poorest town in New Jersey for 2025, holding the top spot with a staggering 33.9% poverty rate and a median household income of just $36,220.

Why Atlantic City Tops the List

Once synonymous with glamour and casinos, Atlantic City now grapples with economic decline, topping RoadSnacks’ analysis of 189 New Jersey cities over 5,000 residents. Using 2019-2023 American Community Survey data, the study weighed poverty levels and median incomes, crowning AC the hardest-hit due to its 13,039 residents in poverty—far outpacing state averages.

Tourism slumps post-pandemic, casino closures, and seasonal jobs exacerbate woes. Unemployment lingers, and high living costs for available wages trap families. Despite affordable housing relative to Jersey norms, low earnings keep 1-in-3 struggling.

Key Economic Indicators

Atlantic City’s metrics paint a stark picture:

MetricAtlantic CityNJ Average
Poverty Rate33.9%~10% 
Median Income$36,220$97,126 
People in Poverty13,039N/A 
Cost of Living RankBottom 15%N/A 

These figures, unchanged from prior years, underscore persistent challenges amid broader state prosperity.

Boardwalk Shadows: Daily Struggles

Residents face boarded-up storefronts along the iconic Boardwalk, where gaming revenue peaked in the 1980s but halved since. Service jobs dominate—dealers, waitstaff, cleaners—but automation and online betting erode them. Over 38,000 people, many single-parent households, rely on food pantries and SNAP amid 13% unemployment spikes seasonally.

Crime and addiction compound poverty; opioid crises hit hard in underfunded neighborhoods. Schools lag, with low graduation rates limiting upward mobility. Yet community hubs like Stockton University offer glimmers of retraining programs.

Comparisons to Other Struggling Towns

Bridgeton ranks second with 31.7% poverty and $46,124 median income, its agricultural roots yielding low-wage factory work. Camden (28.5%, $40,450) battles urban decay across the river from Philly. Smaller Salem (31.2%, $40,650) mirrors patterns, while giants like Newark (24.7%, $48,416) show scale amplifies raw numbers—75,752 poor.

RankTownPoverty RateMedian Income
1Atlantic City33.9%$36,220 
2Bridgeton31.7%$46,124 
3Camden28.5%$40,450 
4Salem31.2%$40,650 
10Lindenwold24.3%$55,099 

Paths to Recovery

State initiatives pour millions into AC revitalization: $100M+ for infrastructure via the Transformative Redevelopment Districts. New casinos like Hard Rock invest, creating 5,000 jobs since 2018. Nonprofits expand workforce training in hospitality and tech, targeting youth dropout rates.

Federal aid bolsters, with ARPA funds aiding housing vouchers. Local leaders push diversification—conventions, esports—to blunt tourism dips. Success hinges on curbing crime and addiction via expanded rehab.

Voices from the Ground

Locals echo resilience: “Casinos built this town, but we need more than slots,” says a longtime server. Programs like ACUA’s job fairs connect residents to stable gigs. Still, exodus looms—population dipped 5% since 2020—as brighter NJ spots lure talent.

Broader NJ Context

New Jersey boasts the nation’s highest median income at $97,126, but inequality festers. Poorest towns cluster South Jersey, contrasting North Jersey wealth hubs like Glen Ridge. Poverty correlates with urban density, minority populations, and deindustrialization—not laziness, per analysts.

Hope Amid Hardship

Atlantic City’s crown as NJ’s poorest underscores a fall from grace, yet reinvention brews. With targeted investments and grit, the town synonymous with reinvention could rebound. For now, its story spotlights the human toll of economic tides in the Garden State.

Sources

  • (https://www.roadsnacks.net/poorest-places-in-new-jersey/)
  • (https://www.roadsnacks.net/poorest-places-in-new-jersey/)
  • (https://www.roadsnacks.net/poorest-places-in-new-jersey/)

Maria

Maria is a professional content writer at MyHometownPost.com, specializing in Oklahoma local news, U.S. laws and policy updates, and global current events. With a keen eye for detail and commitment to accuracy, she delivers timely, engaging, and informative stories that keep readers well-informed about important developments locally and worldwide.

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