ExecutivePulse
Official Federal Data

Wilson County, Kansas

FIPS 20205 · Population 8,505
9 Sources Updated June 22, 2026
$60,677
Median Income
$80,734 national
4.8%
Unemployment
4% national
$389M
GDP
19.9%
Bachelor's+
35.7% national
Small population: 8,505 residents. These figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates, which carry a wide margin of error for places under 20,000 people. Read each value as an approximate range, and treat year-over-year changes as indicative rather than exact. A small shift can reflect survey sampling, not a real change on the ground.

Demographics & Population

Census Bureau American Community Survey 2020-2024 · 5-Year Estimates

Household Income

Source: U.S. Census Bureau · American Community Survey 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates
Median Household
$60,677
Per Capita
$33,560
Mean Household
$77,777
Poverty Rate
15.5% approx.
Median Income Comparison
Wilson County$60,677
Kansas$74,275
National$80,734

Population Profile

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 · Tables B01001, B02001, B03003
65+: 23.1% (1,964 residents) 55-64: 13.8% (1,176 residents) 35-54: 23.5% (2,000 residents) 18-34: 15.7% (1,333 residents) Under 18: 23.9% (2,032 residents) 43 Median Age
Cohorts
Under 18 · 23.9%
18-34 · 15.7%
35-54 · 23.5%
55-64 · 13.8%
65+ · 23.1%
Race & Ethnicity
White93%
Black or African American0.2%
Asian0%
Hispanic or Latino(any race)3.8%
Hispanic or Latino is an ethnic category and overlaps with the race categories above.

Educational Attainment

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 · Table B15003 · Population 25+
90.3%
High School+
National: 89.6%
▲ +0.7 pts
19.9%
Bachelor's+
National: 35.7%
▼ 15.8 pts
4.6%
Graduate+
National: 14.1%
▼ 9.5 pts

Employment Overview

Source: U.S. Census Bureau · American Community Survey 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates
8,505
Population
4,027
Labor Force
Employed
3,908
Unemployment Rate BLS LAUS 2025 annual
4.8% ▲ +0.7 pts YoY
Mean Commute 6 min below national avg
20.3 min
Work From Home vs 15.1% national
4.2%
Key Takeaways
  • Income gap: Households earn meaningfully less than the national median, which directly affects retail demand, housing absorption, and tax base.
  • Elevated poverty: At 15.5%, the rate is in economically distressed territory and supports federal funding narratives (CDFI, NMTC, EDA).
  • Talent gap: Bachelor's-or-higher attainment trails the national average by 15.8 pts, relevant for advanced-services attraction strategy.
  • Aging population: Median age of 43 is materially above the U.S. norm; succession planning and senior-services demand are real factors.

Economy & Industry

Bureau of Labor Statistics QCEW · Bureau of Economic Analysis

$389M
Gross Domestic Product · 2024
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis · CAGDP1 Regional GDP

Top Industries by Employment

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics · Quarterly Census of Employment & Wages 2025 Annual
Top industries by employment in Wilson County, Kansas, with employment, share of top sectors, and average wage
IndustryEmploymentShare of Top 10Avg Wage
1Manufacturing
730 43.1%
$57,342
2Construction
276 16.3%
$79,117
3Retail Trade
219 12.9%
$20,692
4Health Care and Social Assistance
204 12.0%
$42,432
5Finance and Insurance
80 4.7%
$55,695
6Wholesale Trade
62 3.7%
$34,238
7Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting
39 2.3%
$41,701
8Other Services (except Public Administration)
33 1.9%
$29,850
9Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
28 1.7%
$42,793
10Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction
23 1.4%
$58,436
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Key Takeaways
  • Largest sector: Manufacturing employs 730 workers (43.1% of tracked sectors), at an average wage of $57,342.
  • Economic scale: Regional GDP of $389M (2024).
  • Wage stratification: Construction averages $79,117 while Retail Trade averages $20,692, a 3.8x spread in the same local economy, with implications for workforce development and talent strategy.
Source: BLS QCEW + BEA Regional GDP.
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Industry Concentration

Location Quotient measures regional specialization vs. national average. LQ > 1.0 = concentrated.

Location Quotient Analysis

Concentrated Industries
Source: BLS QCEW · 3-digit NAICS sub-sector · Location Quotient vs. national employment share
Same source as the Top Industries table above, sub-sector view surfaces the specialization the supersector view masks (e.g., Plastics & Rubber Manufacturing inside the Manufacturing supersector).
Gasoline Stations and Fuel Dealers
3.08x
60
2.54x
1,068
Crop Production
1.93x
19
Specialty Trade Contractors
1.68x
163

Cluster Depth

Source: BLS QCEW · Sub-sectors with LQ ≥ 1.5 indicate genuine cluster concentration
Dominant Cluster
Goods-Producing Cluster
Coherent grouping of concentrated sub-sectors, signals supply-chain fit for site selectors
1,068
Cluster Employment
2.54x
Peak LQ
Concentrated Sub-Sectors
Gasoline Stations and Fuel Dealers
3.08x 60
2.54x 1,068
Crop Production
1.93x 19
Specialty Trade Contractors
1.68x 163

Attraction Opportunities

LQ < 0.5 with ≥ 50 employed, realistic diversification targets. Source: BLS QCEW
Key Takeaways
  • Top specialization: Gasoline Stations and Fuel Dealers concentrates at 3.08x the national norm, strong concentration that anchors the local economy and supports supply-chain attraction strategy.
  • Cluster depth: 4 sub-sectors register LQ ≥ 1.5, suggesting an interconnected industrial base rather than reliance on a single employer or sector.
  • Attraction whitespace: 3 sub-sectors register LQ < 0.5, candidates for diversification or recruitment depending on labor-market fit.
Source: BLS QCEW sub-sector Location Quotients.
Wilson County's Top Sectors by Workforce Share
Each rectangle's area is proportional to that sector's share of total private-sector employment across all NAICS supersectors. Hover for exact employment.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics QCEW 2025 Annual · Private sector, NAICS supersectors

Housing & Affordability

Census ACS · HUD Fair Market Rents FY2026

Housing Overview

Source: Census Bureau ACS 2020-2024 5-Year Estimates · Tables B25001, B25077, B25064
$93,500
Median Home Value vs 2019
$736
Rent/Mo
77.7%
Owner-Occ
21.7%
Vacancy
1.5x
Home Value to Income Ratio - Affordable
vs. ~4.1x national average

HUD Fair Market Rents

Source: HUD · Fair Market Rents FY2026
Studio
$643/mo
1 Bedroom
$668/mo
2 Bedroom
$877/mo
3 Bedroom
$1,103/mo
4 Bedroom
$1,419/mo
30% of monthly median household income (~$1,517/mo) · rents above this line are typically considered cost-burdened.
Key Takeaways
  • Affordable market: Home value to income ratio of 1.5x is well below the ~4.1x national average; supports talent attraction and family settlement narratives.
  • High home ownership: 77.7% owner-occupied; rental supply may be tight for incoming workers.
  • Elevated vacancy: 21.7% vacancy rate. In resort, rural, and seasonal markets much of this is recreational/seasonal (second homes), not available supply; confirm the vacancy-by-reason split before treating it as a redevelopment opportunity.
  • Broadly affordable rents: All 5 HUD Fair Market Rent bedroom tiers sit below the 30%-of-median-income affordability threshold (~$1,517/mo), a clear cost-of-living advantage for workforce attraction.
Source: Census ACS housing tables + HUD Fair Market Rents.

Workforce Pipeline

Labor force readiness, commuting, and workforce composition

Labor Market Overview

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Tables B01001, B23025, B08303, B08301
4,509
Working Age (18-64) vs 2019
Mean Commute 6 min below national avg
20.3 min
Work From Home vs 15.1% national
4.2%
Prime-Age Employed (25-54)
81.9%
of prime-age population
Labor force participation rate: 62.2% of working-age population (18-64) 62% Participation
▼ vs 2019

Education & Talent Pipeline

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Table B15003 · College Scorecard
Bachelor's+
19.9%
HS Diploma+
90.3%
Regional / Statewide Institutions
Total credentials awarded
26,009/yr
University of Kansas 7,733/yr
Kansas State University 6,027/yr
Fort Hays State University 3,925/yr
Wichita State University 3,714/yr
Johnson County Community College 2,809/yr
Pittsburg State University 1,801/yr

Aging Workforce

Source: Census Bureau ACS · Derived from age & employment tables
26.1%
55-64 of working-age population (18-64)
Elevated retirement risk, above the 20% threshold. Succession planning recommended.

Workforce by Occupation

Source: Census ACS 2020-2024 · Table C24010 · Civilian employed population 16+
Management / Professional
35.5%
Service
15.9%
Sales & Office
13.8%
Construction / Maint.
12.8%
Production / Transport
22%
Bars scaled 2× for visual differentiation; percentage labels show actual share of 3,908 employed workers.
Key Takeaways
  • Succession risk is real: 26.1% of working-age residents are 55-64. Plan for retirements over the next decade and pair attraction strategy with talent retention.
  • Short commutes: 20.3-minute mean commute is a quality-of-life and labor-access advantage worth surfacing for site selectors.
  • Talent pipeline: 6 regional institutions feed the workforce; the top three combined produce 17,685 annual credentials.
Source: ACS workforce data and College Scorecard.

AI Insights

AI-assisted analysis, drawn from 9 federal data sources

Sample AI Insight

Wilson County shows meaningful potential for gasoline stations and fuel dealers attraction, with a 3.08x concentration and 60 jobs in this sub-sector. Near-term succession risk is elevated, with 26.1% of the working-age population within 10 years of retirement age.

The interconnected base across gasoline stations and fuel dealers, , and crop production creates supply-chain attraction leverage rather than single-employer risk, a structural advantage for industrial recruitment.

Industry Shift Analysis

Manufacturing Automation Risk
High
Healthcare Growth Forecast
+4.2% CAGR
Remote Work Migration
67/100

Prospect Match Scores

Advanced Manufacturing
92/100
Life Sciences
84/100
Data Centers
71/100
Illustrative example

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Data Sources

Updated from official federal government data.

Census ACS 5-Year2024
BLS QCEW2025 annual
BLS LAUS (via FRED)2025 annual
BEA Regional GDP2024
Census CBP2023
HUD Fair Market RentsFY2026
FCC Broadband Map2024
USAspending.govFY2026
College ScorecardAY 2022-23

Frequently Asked Questions

Key economic and demographic figures for Wilson County, Kansas, from federal data sources.

What is the population of Wilson County, Kansas?

8,505 (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates).

What is the median household income in Wilson County, Kansas?

$60,677 (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates).

What is the unemployment rate in Wilson County, Kansas?

4.8% (2025 annual average, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, LAUS).

What is the GDP of Wilson County, Kansas?

$389M (U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, CAGDP1).