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Unless otherwise indicated, all data in this section comes
from the 2000
Census. Information on areas within the City of Burlington
is included by reference to census tracts. A
map of the 2000 census
tracts in Burlington is included for reference. (The boundaries of
tracts 1, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 changed from the 1990 to the 2000
Census.)
PopulationBurlington is Vermont's largest city, with a population of just under 40,000. Burlington is the regional hub of Chittenden County (with a population of 146,571) for commerce, government, education, and health, legal, financial and social services. |
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The City's population has grown slightly over the last 20 years. Chittenden County, on the other hand, has seen a substantial increase in population.
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You can also view this information in a table format. |
| Burlington had a total of 15,885 households at the time of the 2000 Census. A
50-year trend of diminishing average household size had continued, with the
average household in 2000 consisting of 2.2 persons.
Families comprise less than half of all Burlington households. Close to 40% of family households with children are headed by single parents, mostly women. Most (64%) of Burlington's non-family households are people living alone. Many of the biggest shifts in Burlington demographics occurred between 1970 and 1980, with declines in rates of homeownership and children coinciding with increases in numbers of college students and single-person households. |
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The biggest decrease in the number of Burlington families happened during the decade from 1970 to 1980. Over the last decade, the number of family households actually increased slightly, although the percentage of family households decreased slightly.
| Burlington has a high concentration of young adults. The
presence of a number of institutions of higher learning within the city limits clearly contributes to local age
demographics. Over a quarter of the City's population - 10,163 residents
- were enrolled in college or grad school in 2000.
Seniors age 60 and older made up 13% of Burlington's population - a proportion slightly lower than state (17%) and national rates (16%). Children under the age of 18 made up 16% of the City's population - again, a proportion lower than state (24%) and national (26%) rates. Previous citywide downward trends in the proportion of children under 18 stabilized and increased in the last decade. |
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The City is home to two residential institutions of higher learning (the University of Vermont and Champlain College) and to three additional educational institutions with substantial student populations (the Community College of Vermont, Burlington College, and the New England Culinary Institute). The University of Vermont (UVM) is the largest of these educational institutions and has the greatest impact on local housing.
The overall number of college students in the City has grown from 5,877 in 1970 to 10,163 in 2000, with the largest jump in growth occurring from 1970 to 1980. UVM has announced a 10-year goal of increasing undergraduate enrollment from 7,600 to 9,600 and graduate enrollment from 1,200 to 2,400. In 2005 the University of Vermont is home to 8,000 undergraduates, 1,273 graduate students, 402 medical students and more than 1,185 full- and part-time faculty. There are currently around 6,100 college and graduate students living off campus in Burlington. In some neighborhoods, students are now the principal residents. See College Student Map. That trend has significantly affected the availability and affordability of rental housing in the City, as well as quality of life in residential neighborhoods.
Chittenden County is the most prosperous county in Vermont, with a 2000 median family income of $59,460 and a median household income of $47,673. Median income in Burlington, however, lags below that of the rest of Chittenden County (with the exception of the City of Winooski). See Regional Median Family Income Map.
Median household income in Burlington is $33,070, and is even lower in census tracts 3, 4, 5 and 10. Median household income is impacted by the large number of off-campus student residents in Burlington. However, median family income is also significantly lower in Burlington ($46,012 in 2000) than in the rest of the county (again, excluding Winooski), and lower again in the census tracts 3, 4 and 10. See Burlington Median Family Income Map.
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The chart below shows income distribution for households and families in Burlington:
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Poverty thresholds for purposes of the 2000 Census were:
| Single Adult < 65 | Single Adult 65 and Older | Single Adult with 2 Children | Two Adults with 2 Children | |
| Annual income was less than: | $8,959 | $8,259 | $13,874 | $17,463 |
The 2000 Census showed that in five of Burlington's eleven census tracts - where about 46% of the city's population lives - the poverty rate for individuals was over 25%. See Individual Poverty Map. However, in assessing poverty, the poverty rate for individuals in the City is skewed by the City's large population of college students who don't live in dorms (6,103 people) - and who are counted in the census calculation of the poverty rate for individuals. A more realistic assessment of poverty in the City is probably found in the family poverty rate. See Family Poverty Map.
| Poverty is particularly pronounced among female-headed
households with children. In the Old North End neighborhoods of
Burlington, where there are a high proportion of female-headed
households, 60% of those households - and 39% of children age 17 and
younger - were living in poverty.
Forty-nine percent of families living in poverty had at least one working adult in the household, and 11% had at least one adult working full-time, year round. |
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Poverty rates for families, families with children, and female-headed families with children decreased in the last decade after increasing - sometimes sharply - from 1980 to 1990. For seniors, the poverty rate continued to decline over the last 20 years. Around 20% of the children in Burlington continue to live in poverty.
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Those Living in Poverty: |
1980 | 1990 | 2000 |
|---|---|---|---|
| # families | 563 | 798 | 743 |
| # families with children under 18 | 434 | 689 | 624 |
| # female-headed households with children under 18 | 299 | 504 | 451 |
| # age 65 and older | 515 | 408 | 383 |
| # age 17 and under | 990 | 1208 | 1248 |
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"Low and moderate" income standards are established by regional medians, and are updated annually by HUD. The table below shows the definition of "low and moderate income"[1] for the year 2003 for the Burlington Metropolitan Statistical Area for one to four person households.
| 1 Person | 2 Persons | 3 Persons | 4 Persons | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very Low Income (30% of Median) | $13,800 | $15,750 | $17,700 | $19,700 |
| Low Income (50% of Median) | $22,950 | $26,250 | $29,500 | $32,800 |
| Moderate Income (80%of Median) | $36,750 | $42,000 | $47,250 | $52,500 |
"Poverty" thresholds are set nationally, and are generally lower than the local "low and moderate income" thresholds. For example, the 2002 poverty thresholds from the Census Bureau for people under 65 were:
| Household Size | No Children | One Child | Two Children | Three Children |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single Person | $9,359 | |||
| Two People | $12,047 | $12,400 | ||
| Three People | $14,072 | $14,480 | $14,494 | |
| Four People | $18,556 | $18,859 | $18,244 | $18,307 |
Using "low and moderate income" standards, fifty-seven percent of the City's population overall are low and moderate-income residents (i.e., earn less than 80% of area median income). In 16 of 27 census block groups, more than half of the households were low and moderate income. See Low and Moderate Income Map. The table below shows low and moderate-income information for each census block group in the City.
| Low/Mod Residents | Universe* | % Low/Mod | Moderate Income Families | Low Income Families | Very Low Income Families | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Census Tract 1, Block Group 1 | 1,281 | 2,857 | 44.8% | 322 | 138 | 71 |
| Census Tract 1, Block Group 2 | 843 | 1,761 | 47.9% | 218 | 79 | 34 |
| Census Tract 2, Block Group 1 | 1,039 | 1,509 | 68.9% | 334 | 188 | 113 |
| Census Tract 2, Block Group 2 | 746 | 1,629 | 45.8% | 190 | 62 | 16 |
| Census Tract 2, Block Group 3 | 201 | 965 | 20.8% | 38 | 12 | 3 |
| Census Tract 2, Block Group 4 | 419 | 1,455 | 28.8% | 99 | 33 | 16 |
| Census Tract 3, Block Group 1 | 1,613 | 1,908 | 84.5% | 375 | 246 | 143 |
| Census Tract 3, Block Group 2 | 947 | 1,310 | 72.3% | 178 | 86 | 52 |
| Census Tract 4, Block Group 1 | 856 | 1,119 | 76.5% | 141 | 81 | 54 |
| Census Tract 4, Block Group 2 | 893 | 1,115 | 80.1% | 148 | 118 | 69 |
| Census Tract 4, Block Group 3 | 492 | 719 | 68.4% | 95 | 46 | 19 |
| Census Tract 5, Block Group 1 | 475 | 722 | 65.8% | 69 | 26 | 20 |
| Census Tract 5, Block Group 2 | 1,151 | 1,688 | 68.2% | 57 | 38 | 25 |
| Census Tract 5, Block Group 3 | 1,093 | 1,329 | 82.2% | 36 | 15 | 14 |
| Census Tract 6, Block Group 1 | 1,300 | 2,346 | 55.4% | 190 | 75 | 28 |
| Census Tract 6, Block Group 2 | 976 | 1,676 | 58.2% | 52 | 38 | 21 |
| Census Tract 7, Block Group 1 | 271 | 851 | 31.8% | 33 | 14 | 5 |
| Census Tract 7, Block Group 2 | 409 | 716 | 57.1% | 25 | 8 | 0 |
| Census Tract 8, Block Group 1 | 795 | 1,591 | 50.0% | 156 | 85 | 49 |
| Census Tract 8, Block Group 2 | 220 | 718 | 30.6% | 52 | 17 | 11 |
| Census Tract 9, Block Group 1 | 239 | 688 | 34.7% | 26 | 5 | 0 |
| Census Tract 9, Block Group 2 | 474 | 863 | 54.9% | 40 | 11 | 0 |
| Census Tract 9, Block Group 3 | 637 | 842 | 75.7% | 74 | 40 | 14 |
| Census Tract 10, Block Group 1 | 563 | 810 | 69.5% | 62 | 41 | 20 |
| Census Tract 10, Block Group 2 | 934 | 1,132 | 82.5% | 180 | 112 | 63 |
| Census Tract 11, Block Group 1 | 665 | 1,578 | 42.1% | 129 | 62 | 47 |
| Census Tract 11, Block Group 2 | 164 | 874 | 18.8% | 22 | 5 | 0 |
| CITYWIDE | 19,696 | 34,771 | 56.6% | 3,351 | 1,681 | 907 |
* Total persons counted for purposes of calculating low and moderate income percentages. May be less than the total census count of population because it excludes certain groups such as students in dorms.
Using poverty statistics, there are high percentages of families living in poverty in census tracts 3, 4 and 10 in Burlington. A large number of families living in poverty are also found in census tract 2. See also Family Poverty Map.
Within Chittenden County, families living in poverty tend to be concentrated in Burlington. Forty-three percent of the county's impoverished families live in Burlington, although the City has only 20% of all families overall.
| # of Families | # of Families Living in Poverty | % of Families Living in Poverty | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chittenden County | 35,168 | 1,738 | 4.9% | |
| Williston | 2,140 | 18 | 0.8% | |
| Essex Junction | 2,253 | 42 | 1.8% | |
| Essex Town | 5,017 | 91 | 1.8% | |
| South Burlington | 3,785 | 87 | 2.3% | |
| Shelburne | 1,846 | 55 | 2.9% | |
| Milton | 2,609 | 110 | 4.2% | |
| Charlotte | 991 | 46 | 4.5% | |
| Colchester | 4,187 | 227 | 5.4% | |
| Winooski | 1,467 | 154 | 10.2% | |
| Burlington | 7,055 | 743 | 10.4% | |
| Census Tract 1 | 1,256 | 92 | 7.3% | |
| Census Tract 2 | 1,545 | 108 | 7.0% | |
| Census Tract 3 | 709 | 165 | 23.3% | |
| Census Tract 4 | 508 | 138 | 27.2% | |
| Census Tract 5 | 323 | 35 | 10.8% | |
| Census Tract 6 | 581 | 30 | 5.2% | |
| Census Tract 7 | 274 | 5 | 1.8% | |
| Census Tract 8 | 559 | 57 | 10.2% | |
| Census Tract 9 | 382 | 12 | 3.1% | |
| Census Tract 10 | 358 | 67 | 18.7% | |
| Census Tract 11 | 627 | 34 | 5.4% | |
To compare "low and moderate income" and "poverty" thresholds against the Basic Needs Budget calculated by the Joint Fiscal Office of the Vermont Legislature - which calculates the wages necessary to cover food, housing, child care, transportation, health care, clothing, household and personal expenses and insurance plus federal and state taxes - see Livable Jobs in the Economic Development section.
Burlington as a whole has become more racially and ethnically diverse over the last 20 years. Overall, 9.1% of City residents identify themselves as something other than white and not Hispanic. (The 2000 Census allowed people to identify themselves as multi-racial for the first time.) The City's largest single minority group is Asian; among that group, Vietnamese are the largest subgroup.
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Data from the 2000 U.S. Census showed no significant geographical concentrations of racial groups within Burlington. However, a higher percentage of minority residents live in the Old North End area of Burlington than in the rest of the city.
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In comparing Burlington to the rest of Chittenden County, there is clearly a geographic concentration of minority residents in the City. Burlington accounts for about 27% of the county's population, yet the City's percentage of racial minorities is considerably higher in each racial category:
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Information from the 2000 Census did show economic - as opposed to geographic - concentrations among racial/ethnic groups in the city. Both individual and family poverty rates are significantly higher among most minority groups:
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Race |
Total Individuals | # Individuals below poverty level | % Individuals below poverty level | Total Families | # Families below poverty level | % Families below poverty level |
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| White | 32,412 | 6,302 | 19.4% | 6,640 | 646 | 9.7% |
| Black / African American | 719 | 219 | 30.5% | 156 | 40 | 25.6% |
| American Indian | 163 | 69 | 42.3% | 19 | 5 | 26.3% |
| Asian | 922 | 223 | 24.2% | 195 | 33 | 16.9% |
| South Pacific Islander | 15 | 0 | 0% | 9 | 0 | 0% |
| Some Other Race | 166 | 39 | 23.5% | 15 | 9 | 60.0% |
| Two or More Races | 672 | 171 | 25.5% | 88 | 10 | 11.4% |
Burlington has seen an increase in its population of new new residents who are foreign-born and newly arrived in the United States. The 2000 Census showed that almost 5% of City residents (1,925 people) had entered the country in the last ten years - and 1,345 residents had entered the country in the last five years. The New Residents, Foreign Born Map shows principal areas of settlement within the City. Major refugee resettlement groups have come from Vietnam, Bosnia and the Sudan.
In Chittenden County, only Winooski has greater percentages of residents who entered the country in the last decade:
New Residents, Foreign-Born
Burlington residents as a whole are well educated, with 65% of those age 25 and older reporting some post-secondary education and 42% having at least a bachelor's degree. (The City's rate for residents having at least a bachelor's degree is substantially higher than state (29.4%) and national (24.4%) norms.)

At the same time, however, 12% of the City's adult residents - and over a quarter of adult residents in some Old North End neighborhoods (especially census tract 3) - had less than a high school diplima.
Around 10% of the City's population speaks a language other than English at home. A total of 414 households (2.6% of the City's households) identify themselves as "linguistically isolated," i.e., a household in which no person 14 years old and over speaks only English and - for those household members who speak a language other than English - no person 14 years old and over speaks English "very well." In Burlington, the principal household languages other than English are Serbo-Croatian, Vietnamese, Russian and French:
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Principal Language |
# of Linguistically Isolated Households |
|---|---|
| Spanish | 26 |
| Other Indo-European Languages | 276 |
| Asian and Pacific Island Languages | 98 |
| Other Languages | 14 |
Most residents with limited English proficiency are working-age adults:
| 5 - 17 Years | 18 - 64 Years | 65 Years and Older | |
|---|---|---|---|
| # of residents | 49 | 518 | 51 |
The 2000 Census reported the following numbers of residents age 5 and older living with a disability:
| Sensory disability | Physical disability | Mental disability | Self-care disability | Go-outside-home disability | Employment disability |
| 1,122 | 2,322 | 2,157 | 633 | 1,656 | 2,649 |
Seven percent of children age 5 to 15 had a reported disability; a mental disability was the most frequently reported type of disability, mentioned in over 80% of the reports. Ten percent of residents age 16 to 20 and 16% of residents age 21 to 64 reported some kind of disability. The employment rate for residents age 21 to 64 reporting a disability was 56%, as contrasted with 81% for residents in that age group reporting no disability.
Forty percent of seniors age 65 and older reported having some kind of disability. A quarter reported a physical disability; 18% reported a go-outside-home disability, defined as a physical, mental, or emotional condition lasting six months or more that made it difficult to go outside the home alone to shop or go to the doctor's office.
For children and working age adults, disabilities clearly affect poverty status:
| Poverty Rate | ||
|---|---|---|
| Age 5 to 15 | ||
| With a disability | 49.6% | |
| With no disability | 18.8% | |
| Age 16 to 20 | ||
| With a disability | 39.8% | |
| With no disability | 37.9% | |
| Age 20 to 64 | ||
| With a disability | 30.5% | |
| With no disability | 17.3% | |
| Age 65 and older | ||
| With a disability | 13.8% | |
| With no disability | 8.3% | |
[1]
The definitions of “low,” “very low,” and “moderate” income are from the CDBG
program. Under the HOME program, the term “low-income” is defined as at
or below 80% of Area Median Income (AMI), and very low-income is at or below
50% of AMI.
Page last updated March 29, 2010

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