Hartford Courant

Hartford among top grad destinatio­ns

Area ranks ninth among cities for recent college graduates

- Abigail Brone can be reached at abrone@courant.com. By Abigail Brone

Hartford ranks among the top 10 cities for recent college graduates to live in, based on research gathered by the website HeyTutor.

The company analyzed data from the American Community Survey, County Business Patterns, and U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis to determine the nation’s best cities for young adults. The ranking looks at the greater Hartford area.

Heytutor is an online marketplac­e that serves tutors and students.

Among cities across the country, Hartford came in at ninth place. Here’s why:

The city’s median income for recent graduates is a healthy $48,056. The median income is the highest for any large American metropolit­an area for recent graduates, more than $10,000 above the national median.

The Hartford area has lots of financial services and aerospace industry jobs for new graduates. The best locations are generally not on either coast, according to Heytutor. The top 10 locations offer competitiv­e wages, lower living costs, employment opportunit­ies, and plenty of fun for residents outside of the office.

In the Hartford area, the median rent is $1,061 and the median home value is $247,900, higher than in cities with better rankings but still competitiv­e with larger cities. Popular cities such as New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington D.C. did not make the top 10 ranking because of the high cost of living.

The ranking gave high marks to Hartford’s arts and entertainm­ent scene and the many things to do in the region. Essentiall­y, the study is looking into the uptick in young adults earning a bachelor’s degree or higher. In the past 15 years, the rate of adults with graduate degrees has risen from 36.5 percent to 45.7 percent, according to to National Center for Educationa­l Statistic’s findings.

From 2016 to 2017, over 1.9 million bachelor’s degrees were awarded, which is an increase of 57 percent compared to the degrees awarded from 2000 to 2001, the study shows.

In addition to the increase in degrees, young adults leaving college and entering the workforce now are facing the largest period of economic advancemen­t in the nation’s history, according to HeyTutor.

The cities were ranked based on median rent, income, home value, rate of unemployme­nt, cost of living, the portion of the population that are recent college graduates and arts and entertainm­ent businesses available per 1,000 graduates.

For the unemployme­nt rate, median income, cost of living and rent, the goal was for these number to be lower for the city to score higher. In the other categories, the higher the better for the city’s rating.

The study only considered metropolit­an areas with 1 million or more residents, according to the website.

As the study was geared toward recent college graduates and their ideal living situations, HeyTutor defined recent college grads as, “residents ages 22 to 27 with a bachelor’s degree or higher, not currently in school.”

The highest-ranked metropolit­an area for recent college grads to live is the Indianapol­is area, according to the study.

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