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U.S. childlessness among women 20–39 rose sharply, with 5.7 million more childless women in 2024 than expected, driven by cost, career, and social changes.
A new study from the University of New Hampshire finds a significant rise in childlessness among U.S. women aged 20 to 39, with 5.7 million more childless women in 2024 than expected—up from 2.1 million in 2016.
Over 17 years, nearly 12 million fewer births occurred than projected, driven by declining fertility among women under 30.
Despite modest increases in fertility among older women, the gains didn’t offset the drop.
Researchers link the trend to rising housing and child-rearing costs, limited childcare and family leave, lower marriage rates, and greater educational and career opportunities for women.
The shift raises concerns about long-term impacts on healthcare, schools, industries, and the labor force, a phenomenon called the “demographic cliff.” The study, based on Census and health statistics data, has not been peer-reviewed and was funded by federal and state sources.
La falta de hijos en los Estados Unidos entre las mujeres entre 20 y 39 aumentó bruscamente, con 5,7 millones más de mujeres sin hijos en 2024 de lo esperado, impulsadas por el costo, la carrera y los cambios sociales.