27 U.S. States Have Suffered 1,000 or More Coronavirus Deaths

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The U.S. coronavirus death toll climbed to at least 160,104 on Friday, according to the latest report by Johns Hopkins University.

New York tops the death toll ranking, with 32,756 fatalities to date, followed by New Jersey (15,849), California (10,021) and Massachusetts (8,691) and Texas (8,569) in the top five slots for states with the most number of deaths.

New York City has a higher death rate than all 50 states, with 281 deaths per 100,000 people, according to the latest report Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

New Jersey has the largest death rate among the states, reporting 178 deaths per 100,000 people, followed by Massachusetts (125), Connecticut (124), Rhode Island (96) and Louisiana (88), according to the CDC.

More than half of the states have each seen 1,000 or more total COVID-19 deaths to date, while five states have each seen less than 70 total fatalities. They include Montana (65 deaths), Vermont (58), Hawaii (29), Wyoming (27) and Alaska (25), which has the lowest death toll in the country.

While Hawaii has a low death count so far, new infections in the state have been rising on a sharp upward trend over roughly the past two weeks from July 22 to August 4, according to the latest report Thursday by Johns Hopkins University.

South Dakota, which also has a relatively low death count (141 fatalities) compared with that of most other states, has seen a growth in new cases over the same 14-day period.

The country's daily death toll rose on a sharp incline between mid-March and mid-April, peaking on April 17 when it recorded 2,666 deaths. From then, it went on a downward trend, mostly declining through late June. Daily new deaths have been mostly increasing through July and August, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The U.S. has the 10th highest death rate in the world, reporting 48.37 deaths per 100,000 people, overtaking that of Canada, Mexico and Brazil in the Americas as well as France and The Netherlands in Europe.

The graphics below, provided by Statista, illustrate the spread of COVID-19 cases in the U.S.

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Total COVID-19 deaths per U.S. state

Source: Johns Hopkins University (as of August 7)

  1. New York: 32,756
  2. New Jersey: 15,849
  3. California: 10,021
  4. Massachusetts: 8,691
  5. Texas: 8,569
  6. Illinois: 7,791
  7. Florida: 7,747
  8. Pennsylvania: 7,282
  9. Michigan: 6,506
  10. Connecticut: 4,437
  11. Louisiana: 4,146
  12. Georgia: 4,026
  13. Arizona: 4,002
  14. Ohio: 3,618
  15. Maryland: 3,551
  16. Indiana: 3,013
  17. Virginia: 2,299
  18. North Carolina: 2,126
  19. South Carolina: 1,942
  20. Colorado: 1,852
  21. Mississippi: 1,825
  22. Alabama: 1,714
  23. Minnesota: 1,677
  24. Washington: 1,653
  25. Missouri: 1,302
  26. Tennessee: 1,186
  27. Rhode Island: 1,014
  28. Wisconsin: 978
  29. Iowa: 912
  30. Nevada: 900
  31. Kentucky: 760
  32. New Mexico: 669
  33. Oklahoma: 593
  34. Delaware: 587
  35. Arkansas: 515
  36. New Hampshire: 419
  37. Kansas: 378
  38. Nebraska: 340
  39. Oregon: 339
  40. Utah: 330
  41. Idaho: 223
  42. South Dakota: 141
  43. Maine: 124
  44. West Virginia: 124
  45. North Dakota: 109
  46. Montana: 65
  47. Vermont: 58
  48. Hawaii: 29
  49. Wyoming: 27
  50. Alaska: 25
New York, coronavirus death, funeral, June 2020
Family and friends attend the burial of Conrad Coleman Jr., who died of COVID-19 on June 20, 2020, in Rye, New York. Getty Images

Over 19.1 million people globally have been infected since the virus was first reported in Wuhan, China, including more than 4.8 million in the U.S. Over 11.5 million globally have reportedly recovered from infection, while more than 715,000 have died, as of Friday.

The graphic below, provided by Statista, illustrates the countries with the most COVID-19 cases.

Countries with most COVID-19 cases
STATISTA

About the writer

Soo Kim is a Newsweek reporter based in London, U.K. She covers various lifestyle stories, specializing in travel, health, home/interior design and property/real estate. Soo covered the COVID-19 pandemic extensively from 2020 to 2022, including several interviews with the chief medical advisor to the president, Dr. Anthony Fauci. Soo has reported on various major news events, including the Black Lives Matter movement, the U.S. Capitol riots, the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. and Canadian elections, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Soo is also a South Korea expert, covering the latest K-dramas—including the breakout hit Squid Game, which she has covered extensively, including from Seoul, the South Korean capital—as well as Korean films, such as the Golden Globe and Oscar-nominated Past Lives, and K-pop news, to interviews with the biggest Korean actors, such as Lee Jung-jae from Squid Game and Star Wars, and Korean directors, such as Golden Globe and Oscar nominee Celine Song. Soo is the author of the book How to Live Korean, which is available in 11 languages, and co-author of the book Hello, South Korea: Meet the Country Behind Hallyu. Before Newsweek, Soo was a travel reporter and commissioning editor for the award-winning travel section of The Daily Telegraph (a leading U.K. national newspaper) for nearly a decade from 2010, reporting on the latest in the travel industry, from travel news, consumer travel and aviation issues to major new openings and emerging destinations. Soo is a graduate of Binghamton University in New York and the journalism school of City University in London, where she earned a Masters in international journalism. You can get in touch with Soo by emailing s.kim@newsweek.com . Follow her on Instagram at @miss.soo.kim or X, formerly Twitter, at @MissSooKim .Languages spoken: English and Korean


Soo Kim is a Newsweek reporter based in London, U.K. She covers various lifestyle stories, specializing in Read more