Far fewer workers would be in poverty if their employers paid them the legal minimum wage: Poverty status of all minimum-wage-eligible workers in the 10 most populous states and of those paid less than the minimum wage, actual and if all workers were paid correctly

At current wage values If subminimum wages were raised to the applicable minimum wage
 Total number of minimum-wage-eligible workers  Number of eligible workers in poverty Share of workers in poverty  Number of eligible workers in poverty Share of workers in poverty Change in number in poverty Change in share in poverty
All minimum-wage-eligible workers 59,014,000 4,075,000 6.9% 3,916,000 6.6% -159,000  -0.3 ppt.
Eligible workers paid less than the minimum wage 2,422,000 517,000 21.4% 358,000 14.8% -159,000  -6.6 ppt.

Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Shares are computed based on unrounded numbers.

Sample includes workers age 16 to 85 in the 10 most populous states: California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas.

Source: EPI analysis of Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group and March Supplement data, 2013–2016

View the underlying data on epi.org.