In 2024, the official U.S. poverty line for a family of four was approximately $31,200 per year. A family earning $31,199 is officially poor; a family earning $31,201 is not. Both realities are nearly identical, but the binary classification determines eligibility for dozens of federal programs. The threshold was originally designed in the 1960s by Social Security Administration economist Mollie Orshansky, who based it on the observation that poor families spent about a third of their income on food — so she multiplied the minimum adequate food budget by three. That formula, updated only for general inflation since then, still determines who counts as poor in official U.S. statistics. Whether that 60-year-old method still accurately captures the modern experience of material deprivation is one of the most consequential measurement questions in social policy.
In plain terms
A poverty line (also called a poverty threshold) is an income level below which a household or individual is classified as living in poverty. It defines the minimum income necessary to meet basic needs — and thus serves as the official cutoff for poverty statistics and program eligibility.
Absolute poverty: a fixed standard representing the income needed to purchase a specific basket of necessities. The official U.S. poverty threshold is an absolute measure — it does not change as average living standards rise, only as prices do (CPI adjustment). The Census Bureau's official poverty statistics use this measure: roughly 11–13 percent of the U.S. population falls below it in any given year.
Relative poverty: a threshold defined relative to the overall income distribution — typically 50 or 60 percent of the median income. As the median rises (the general standard of living improves), the poverty line rises with it. Most European countries use relative measures, which is why their official poverty rates don't fall as fast during growth periods as absolute poverty rates do: people are poor relative to peers, not just relative to a fixed basket.
Why it works this way
The U.S. absolute measure was innovative in 1964 but has attracted increasing criticism:
Underinclusion: the threshold doesn't account for regional cost differences (housing is vastly more expensive in San Francisco than in rural Mississippi), and doesn't include major non-food expenses like healthcare, childcare, and transportation that are proportionally larger in modern budgets.
Overcounting (and undercounting) income: the official measure counts cash income but ignores in-kind benefits (SNAP, Medicaid, housing vouchers) that materially improve living standards, overstating poverty among transfer recipients. It also misses the Earned Income Tax Credit.
The Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), introduced by the Census Bureau in 2011, addresses these issues: it counts in-kind benefits, accounts for taxes and tax credits, and uses a consumption-based threshold updated to modern spending patterns. The Census Bureau's SPM data shows substantially different poverty rates than the official measure — particularly showing that government programs reduce poverty far more than the official measure captures.
A real example
The COVID-19 pandemic period illustrated the measurement gap dramatically. The Census Bureau's data showed official poverty rates barely moving in 2020 despite massive economic disruption — because cash income was replaced by stimulus payments and enhanced unemployment benefits that the official measure captures. The SPM showed poverty rates reaching historic lows in 2021 as expanded transfers (Child Tax Credit, stimulus payments) were included in the broader income measure.
Why it matters
The poverty line is the administrative linchpin of dozens of federal programs — Medicaid, SNAP, housing assistance, CHIP, and others. The measurement choice directly determines who receives help and what official progress against poverty looks like. Choosing an absolute threshold makes it easier to achieve "progress" (fewer people below a fixed bar) even as relative deprivation persists; choosing a relative threshold keeps the definition of poverty tied to societal living standards and makes it harder to claim progress through nominal income growth alone.





