Overview
U.S. Geography is one of Jeopardy!'s heavyweight topics with 1,518 clues and 45 Final Jeopardy appearances spanning 1984-2026, making it one of the most prolific FJ categories in the entire game. The topic draws from just 4 raw categories: U.S. GEOGRAPHY (890 clues), U.S.A. (443), AROUND THE USA (103), and U.S. PLACE NAMES (82).
The clue distribution skews toward the Jeopardy round (59%): 896 clues appear in J, 577 in DJ, and 45 in FJ. This means U.S. Geography tends to show up at lower dollar values where quick recall matters most; but it's no slouch in Double Jeopardy or FJ either.
What the Show Tests
The top 50 answers are dominated by states, Alaska (30 clues), Florida (25), Louisiana (20), Hawaii (20), California (19), Maine (16), Texas (14), North Carolina (14), New Hampshire (14). But the topic goes well beyond naming states. The show regularly tests:
- State superlatives: highest/lowest points, largest/smallest by area, longest coastlines, most borders
- Islands and coastal features: Oahu, Maui, Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, Padre Island, Chesapeake Bay
- Mountains and inland features: Death Valley, the Cascades, the Adirondacks, Pikes Peak, Great Salt Lake, Lake Tahoe
- Rivers and waterways: the Mississippi, Rio Grande, Lake Champlain, Puget Sound
Study Strategy
Three priorities will cover the most ground:
- Know the top states cold, especially their superlatives, borders, nicknames, and quirky facts. Alaska and Florida alone account for 55 clues.
- Learn the geographic features, islands, capes, mountain ranges, lakes, and deserts that appear 7+ times. Features like Death Valley (100% correct) are gimmes if you know them; Maui (30% correct) and the Adirondacks (56%) are stumpers that catch contestants off guard.
- Prepare for FJ, the show loves "which 2 states..." questions and state superlative trivia. The 45 FJ clues follow clear, repeating patterns.
The Top States
States dominate U.S. Geography answers. Here are the nine most frequent, with the facts the show tests most.
Alaska (30 clues, 79% correct)
The most-tested state by a wide margin. The show treats Alaska as a treasure trove of superlatives:
- Superlatives: Largest state by area (663K sq mi), longest coastline (6,640 mi), highest point in North America (Denali, 20,310'), northernmost and westernmost state
- Borders & oceans: The only U.S. state that touches the Beaufort Sea; borders the Arctic and Pacific Oceans; the only state touching 2 oceans (FJ 2001)
- Volcanoes: Recently active volcanoes include Chiginagak and Veniaminof
- Key clue angle: When a clue mentions extremes of size, coastline, or remoteness, think Alaska first
Florida (25 clues, 83% correct)
- Superlatives: Second-longest coastline in the U.S. (after Alaska, FJ 1990); lowest highest point of any state (Britton Hill, 345 ft, in the panhandle)
- Geography: Separates the Atlantic from the Gulf of Mexico; the Keys extend southwest toward Cuba
- Key clue angle: Coastline, the panhandle, and the fact that its "highest point" is absurdly low
Louisiana (20 clues, 79% correct)
- Superlatives: Highest point is Driskill Mountain, a "measly 535 feet tall"; parishes instead of counties
- Culture hooks: "Call 1-800-33-GUMBO"; strong Cajun/Creole identity; New Orleans (8 clues on its own)
- Borders: Touches Mississippi, Arkansas, Texas; bordered by the Gulf of Mexico
- FJ note: One of the 2 states on both sides of the Mississippi (FJ 1984), Louisiana and Minnesota
Hawaii (20 clues, 95% correct)
The highest correct rate among top states. Clues focus on:
- Superlatives: The only state made entirely of islands; the largest island in the U.S. by "common nickname" referring to its size; the Big Island (FJ 2004); the smallest state in land area not in the original 13 colonies (FJ 1989)
- Islands: Oahu (12 clues) and Maui (11 clues) are tested separately as geographic features
- Volcanoes: Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, Kilauea
- Key clue angle: Island-related superlatives, volcanic geography
California (19 clues, 79% correct)
- Features: Death Valley (lowest point in North America, -282 ft); the Sierra Nevada; the San Andreas Fault
- Superlatives: Most populous state; third-largest by area
- Key clue angle: Extremes, hottest, lowest, most populous, longest Pacific coastline
Maine (16 clues, 88% correct)
- Superlatives: Easternmost state in the contiguous U.S. (West Quoddy Head is the easternmost point)
- Geography: Borders only one other state (New Hampshire); heavily forested; Acadia National Park
- Key clue angle: "Easternmost" and its position as the lone New England state bordering Canada's maritime provinces
Texas (14 clues, 79% correct)
- Superlatives: Second-largest state by area; shares the longest U.S. border with Mexico
- Features: Padre Island (the longest barrier island in the world), Big Bend, the Rio Grande
- Key clue angle: Size, the Mexican border, barrier islands
North Carolina (14 clues, 100% correct)
A perfect correct rate, contestants know this state well.
- Features: The Outer Banks, Cape Hatteras, the Blue Ridge Mountains
- History hooks: Kitty Hawk (first flight), Roanoke ("Lost Colony")
- Key clue angle: Coastal geography and historical firsts
New Hampshire (14 clues, 85% correct)
- Features: The White Mountains, Mount Washington (highest peak in the Northeast, known for extreme weather)
- Neighbors: The only state bordering Maine from the south
- Key clue angle: Mount Washington, "Live Free or Die" motto, and its compact coastline (just 18 miles)
Quick Reference: Top States
| State | Clues | Correct % | Key Superlative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alaska | 30 | 79% | Largest state, longest coastline, highest peak |
| Florida | 25 | 83% | 2nd-longest coastline, lowest high point |
| Louisiana | 20 | 79% | Parishes, both sides of Mississippi |
| Hawaii | 20 | 95% | Only island state, largest U.S. island |
| California | 19 | 79% | Most populous, Death Valley |
| Maine | 16 | 88% | Easternmost contiguous U.S. |
| Texas | 14 | 79% | 2nd-largest, longest barrier island |
| North Carolina | 14 | 100% | Outer Banks, Cape Hatteras |
| New Hampshire | 14 | 85% | Mount Washington, 18-mile coast |
Islands, Capes & Coastal Features
Coastal geography is a major U.S. Geography sub-theme, and several features appear often enough to warrant dedicated study. This section also contains some of the topic's biggest stumpers.
Oahu (12 clues, 83% correct)
The third most populous Hawaiian island but the most populated, home to Honolulu and Pearl Harbor. Clues typically reference:
- Waikiki Beach and Diamond Head
- Pearl Harbor's location
- Honolulu as the state capital
- Its nickname: "The Gathering Place"
Maui (11 clues, 30% correct, MAJOR STUMPER)
With only 30% of contestants answering correctly, Maui is one of the hardest answers in all of U.S. Geography. The problem: contestants confuse the Hawaiian islands. When a clue describes a Hawaiian island that isn't Oahu or the Big Island, many contestants guess wrong.
Key Maui facts to lock in:
- Second-largest Hawaiian island
- Home to Haleakala volcano (10,023 ft)
- Named "The Valley Isle"
- Known for whale watching, the Road to Hana
- Memory hook: Maui is the "middle" island; not the biggest (Hawaii/Big Island), not the most urban (Oahu), but the second-largest and a major tourist destination
Cape Cod (11 clues, 100% correct)
A gimme answer, contestants nail it every time.
- Massachusetts' Barnstable County mostly consists of this "hook-shaped cape"
- The Cape Cod Canal separates it from the mainland
- Provincetown sits at the tip
- Key shape description: "fishhook" or "flexed arm"
Martha's Vineyard (8 clues, 75% correct)
- Island off the coast of Massachusetts, south of Cape Cod
- Famous as a summer retreat for presidents and the wealthy
- Filming location for Jaws (the fictional Amity Island)
- Often paired with or confused with Nantucket
Padre Island (7 clues, 43% correct, STUMPER)
Nearly 6 out of 10 contestants miss this. Padre Island is the longest barrier island in the world, stretching 113 miles along the Texas Gulf Coast. The issue: many contestants don't associate "barrier island" with Texas, or confuse it with other Gulf Coast islands.
Memory hook: "Padre" = "Father" in Spanish; the father of all barrier islands, it's the longest one.
Chesapeake Bay (8 clues, 88% correct)
- The largest estuary in the United States
- Borders Maryland and Virginia
- Famous for blue crabs, oysters
- The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel is one of the world's longest bridge-tunnel complexes
Puget Sound (7 clues, 100% correct)
A gimme when it appears.
- Inlet of the Pacific Ocean in Washington state
- Seattle sits on its eastern shore
- Connected to the ocean via the Strait of Juan de Fuca
- Home to the San Juan Islands
Coastal Features Quick Reference
| Feature | Clues | Correct % | State(s) | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oahu | 12 | 83% | Hawaii | "The Gathering Place," Honolulu |
| Maui | 11 | 30% | Hawaii | 2nd-largest HI island, Haleakala |
| Cape Cod | 11 | 100% | Massachusetts | Hook-shaped, Barnstable County |
| Martha's Vineyard | 8 | 75% | Massachusetts | Presidential retreat, Jaws island |
| Chesapeake Bay | 8 | 88% | MD/VA | Largest U.S. estuary |
| Padre Island | 7 | 43% | Texas | Longest barrier island in the world |
| Puget Sound | 7 | 100% | Washington | Seattle's inlet, Pacific access |
Mountains, Deserts & Inland Features
The interior of the country provides a rich set of recurring answers, from desert basins to alpine lakes to ancient mountain ranges.
Death Valley (10 clues, 100% correct)
A perfect score, every contestant who sees this clue gets it right. The facts the show tests:
- Lowest point in North America: Badwater Basin at -282 feet
- Hottest recorded temperature in the world: 134 degrees F (1913)
- Located in eastern California, extending into Nevada
- Part of the Mojave Desert
- Clue trigger: Any mention of "lowest point" or "hottest place" in the U.S. = Death Valley
The Cascades (9 clues, 89% correct)
- Volcanic mountain range running from northern California through Oregon and Washington into British Columbia
- Includes Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens, Mount Hood, Mount Shasta
- Part of the Pacific Ring of Fire
- Clue trigger: Volcanic peaks in the Pacific Northwest
The Adirondacks (9 clues, 56% correct, STUMPER)
Nearly half of contestants miss this. The Adirondacks are a mountain range and park in upstate New York, not New England. Contestants often guess the Catskills, the Berkshires, or the Green Mountains.
- Adirondack Park is the largest publicly protected area in the contiguous U.S. (6.1 million acres)
- Contains 46 peaks over 4,000 feet ("the 46ers")
- Lake Placid (1932 and 1980 Winter Olympics) is in the Adirondacks
- Memory hook: Adirondacks = Albany's mountains (upstate New York)
Pikes Peak (7 clues, 100% correct)
- Located in the Colorado Rockies near Colorado Springs
- Elevation: 14,115 feet
- Inspired "America the Beautiful": Katharine Lee Bates wrote it after reaching the summit
- The Pikes Peak International Hill Climb is a famous auto race
- Clue trigger: "America the Beautiful" or a famous Colorado peak
Great Salt Lake (8 clues, 100% correct)
- The largest saltwater lake in the Western Hemisphere
- Located in northern Utah, near Salt Lake City
- Remnant of prehistoric Lake Bonneville
- The Bonneville Salt Flats (land speed records) are nearby
- Clue trigger: Saltwater lake, Utah, or references to buoyancy in the U.S.
Lake Tahoe (8 clues, 100% correct)
Another gimme with a perfect score.
- Straddles the California-Nevada border
- The largest alpine lake in North America at 193 square miles (FJ 1994)
- Depth: 1,645 feet: the second-deepest lake in the U.S. (after Crater Lake)
- Known for its clear water
- Clue trigger: Alpine lake, CA-NV border, or crystal-clear water
Lake Champlain (7 clues, 100% correct)
- Lies between New York and Vermont, extending into Quebec
- Named for French explorer Samuel de Champlain
- The "sixth Great Lake" (briefly, by congressional designation in 1998)
- Site of key War of 1812 and Revolutionary War naval battles
- Clue trigger: Lake between NY and VT, or "sixth Great Lake"
Rio Grande (7 clues, 100% correct)
- Forms the border between Texas and Mexico
- Fifth-longest river in North America
- Flows from Colorado through New Mexico to the Gulf of Mexico
- Called "Rio Bravo del Norte" in Mexico
- Clue trigger: U.S.-Mexico border river
The Appalachians (7 clues, 71% correct)
- The oldest major mountain range in North America
- Extends from Alabama to Newfoundland
- Includes sub-ranges: Blue Ridge, Great Smokies, White Mountains, Green Mountains, Catskills, Adirondacks (geologically debated)
- The Appalachian Trail runs 2,190 miles from Georgia to Maine
- Contestants sometimes confuse the Appalachians with specific sub-ranges
Mojave Desert (5 clues, 80% wrong, TOP STUMPER)
The hardest geographic feature in the dataset. Four out of five contestants miss it. The Mojave occupies parts of California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. Contestants often guess "Sonoran" or "Sahara" or just blank.
- Contains Death Valley and Joshua Tree National Park
- Characterized by Joshua trees
- Edwards Air Force Base and Area 51 are in the Mojave
- Memory hook: Mojave = Movie desert, countless films are shot here; Joshua trees are the visual signature
Inland Features Quick Reference
| Feature | Clues | Correct % | Location | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Death Valley | 10 | 100% | CA/NV | Lowest point in North America |
| The Cascades | 9 | 89% | CA/OR/WA | Volcanic range, Ring of Fire |
| The Adirondacks | 9 | 56% | New York | Largest protected area in lower 48 |
| Pikes Peak | 7 | 100% | Colorado | Inspired "America the Beautiful" |
| Great Salt Lake | 8 | 100% | Utah | Largest saltwater lake in W. Hemisphere |
| Lake Tahoe | 8 | 100% | CA/NV | Largest alpine lake in North America |
| Lake Champlain | 7 | 100% | NY/VT | "Sixth Great Lake" |
| Rio Grande | 7 | 100% | CO/NM/TX | U.S.-Mexico border river |
| The Appalachians | 7 | 71% | AL to Canada | Oldest major range in N. America |
| Mojave Desert | 5 | 20% | CA/NV/UT/AZ | Joshua trees, Death Valley |
Stumpers & Tricky Answers
These are the answers that trip up contestants most often, all with at least 5 appearances and a wrong rate above 25%. If you can nail these, you'll pick up points that most players leave on the table.
The Full Stumper Drill Table
| Answer | Appearances | Wrong % | Why It's Hard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mojave Desert | 5 | 80% | Contestants default to "Sonoran" or go blank; Mojave is less famous than its contents (Death Valley, Joshua Tree) |
| Nebraska | 5 | 80% | Often described via geography (Great Plains, Platte River) rather than name; contestants guess Kansas or Iowa |
| Maui | 11 | 70% | Hawaiian island confusion, contestants guess Oahu, Kauai, or the Big Island |
| Padre Island | 7 | 57% | "Barrier island" doesn't scream Texas to most people; contestants guess Outer Banks or other East Coast islands |
| Washington (state) | 6 | 50% | Confusion with Washington, D.C.; clues about the state get guessed as the capital |
| Oregon | 6 | 50% | Often described via features (Crater Lake, Columbia Gorge) and contestants guess Washington or California |
| Mount Rainier | 6 | 50% | Contestants know it's in the Pacific Northwest but guess Mt. St. Helens or Mt. Hood instead (FJ 2024: "14,410', one of North America's highest volcanoes") |
| Buffalo | 6 | 50% | Clues describe the city via geography (Lake Erie, Niagara Falls region) and contestants guess Rochester, Syracuse, or Erie |
| The Adirondacks | 9 | 44% | Contestants confuse with Catskills, Berkshires, or Green Mountains; forget Adirondacks are in New York |
| New Jersey | 7 | 43% | Described via geographic features (barrier islands, Pine Barrens) rather than stereotypes; contestants guess Delaware or Maryland |
| Nome | 5 | 40% | Alaskan city on the Bering Sea; contestants guess Anchorage, Fairbanks, or Juneau |
| NYC | 5 | 40% | Clues that describe New York City through geographic features (islands, harbors) rather than cultural landmarks |
| Lake Huron | 5 | 40% | Great Lakes confusion, contestants can name Superior, Michigan, and Erie but forget Huron and Ontario |
| Delaware | 5 | 40% | Small state, often described by its position (first state, Delmarva Peninsula) and contestants guess Maryland |
| Oklahoma | 10 | 33% | Described by panhandle shape or geographic position; contestants guess Texas or Kansas |
| North Dakota | 7 | 33% | Remote state; clues mention Theodore Roosevelt NP or Badlands and contestants guess South Dakota or Montana |
| Tennessee | 10 | 30% | Borders 8 states (tied with Missouri for most); contestants miscalculate or confuse border states |
| The Appalachians | 7 | 29% | Contestants name a sub-range (Blue Ridge, Smokies) instead of the full range |
| Iowa | 7 | 29% | Midwestern state described by rivers (Mississippi, Missouri) or agriculture; contestants guess Nebraska or Illinois |
Memory Hooks for the Toughest Stumpers
Mojave (80% wrong): Think Joshua trees. If the clue mentions Joshua trees, a desert in California, or land speed records (Bonneville is nearby), it's the Mojave. "Mo-HAVE some Joshua trees."
Nebraska (80% wrong): The Platte River is Nebraska's signature. "The Platte is Ne-BRASS-ka's river." Also: Chimney Rock (Oregon Trail landmark) is in Nebraska, not Oregon.
Maui (70% wrong): Haleakala volcano = Maui. "Maui has the HALE-a big volcano." Maui is the second-largest Hawaiian island; not the biggest (Big Island), not the most urban (Oahu).
Padre Island (57% wrong): World's longest barrier island, in Texas. "The FATHER of barrier islands is the longest one."
Mount Rainier (50% wrong): The tallest peak in the Cascades at 14,410 feet. It's a volcano, visible from Seattle on clear days. "RAIN-ier is the REIGN-ing champ of the Cascades."
The Adirondacks (44% wrong): In NEW YORK, not New England. Lake Placid Olympics = Adirondacks. "Lake Placid had the Olympics ADIROND-ack in 1980."
Lake Huron (40% wrong): Use the mnemonic HOMES (Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior). Huron is the second-largest Great Lake by surface area. It's between Michigan and Ontario, Canada.
Final Jeopardy Patterns & Study Tips
With 45 Final Jeopardy clues from 1984 to 2026, U.S. Geography is one of the most active FJ categories. The clues follow several distinct, repeating patterns.
Pattern 1: State Superlatives
The single most common FJ angle, "Which state is the largest/smallest/highest/most [something]?"
- Georgia (1985): "The largest state in area east of the Mississippi"
- Hawaii (1989): "The smallest state in land area of those not in the original 13 colonies"
- Florida (1990): "Alaska has the longest seacoast & this state is second"
- Alaska (2001): "The only U.S. state that touches 2 oceans"
- Hawaii (2004): "With a common nickname that refers to its size, the largest island in the U.S." (the Big Island)
- Maryland (2018): "The only state named for a woman & whose capital is also named for a woman" (Mary-land, Annapolis for Queen Anne)
Takeaway: Know the "only," "largest," "smallest," "first," and "most" for every state you can. Superlatives are FJ gold.
Pattern 2: "Which 2 States..." Questions
The show loves asking about pairs of states that share a distinction.
- Louisiana & Minnesota (1984): "The 2 states on both sides of the Mississippi"
- Missouri & Tennessee (2026): "The 2 states that border the most others" (8 each)
- Cheyenne & Santa Fe (2023): "Interstate 25 connects these 2 state capitals, 1st & 2nd in elevation"
Takeaway: Study state pairs, which 2 states border the most others, which 2 capitals are highest, which 2 states touch both X and Y.
Pattern 3: Geographic Features
FJ clues about specific landforms, bodies of water, or natural wonders.
- Lake Tahoe (1994): "At 193 square miles, this mountain lake is the largest alpine lake in the U.S."
- The Grand Canyon (2008): "It's 277 miles long, it's up to 18 miles wide..."
- Mount Rainier (2024): "At 14,410', it's one of North America's highest volcanoes"
Pattern 4: Cities & Unique Designations
- Washington, D.C. (2014): "This city of 650,000 people is the most populous U.S. city not found in a U.S. state"
- Area codes 212, 213, 312 (2025): "When area codes were introduced, 3 very populous areas got the ones quickest to dial" (New York, Los Angeles, Chicago)
The Most Important FJ Answers
Based on frequency and the recurring patterns, these are the answers most likely to come up in a future U.S. Geography FJ:
| Answer | FJ Appearances | Key Angle |
|---|---|---|
| Alaska | 2+ | Superlatives (size, coast, oceans) |
| Hawaii | 2+ | Island superlatives, smallest non-original-13 |
| Georgia | 1 | Largest east of Mississippi |
| Florida | 1 | Second-longest coastline |
| Louisiana | 1 | Both sides of Mississippi |
| Maryland | 1 | Named for a woman |
| Missouri/Tennessee | 1 | Most bordering states (8 each) |
| Lake Tahoe | 1 | Largest alpine lake |
| The Grand Canyon | 1 | Dimensions clue |
| Mount Rainier | 1 | Highest Cascade volcano |
| Washington, D.C. | 1 | Most populous non-state city |
Study Tips for U.S. Geography
1. Master the superlatives table
For every state, know: highest point, lowest point, largest city, capital, nickname, number of bordering states, and any "only" or "most" distinction. The show disproportionately tests extremes.
2. Think in borders
Many clues (especially FJ) hinge on which states border what. Key border facts: - Missouri and Tennessee each border 8 states (the most) - Maine borders only 1 state (New Hampshire) - Alaska and Hawaii border no other states - The Four Corners: Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico
3. Know your water
Rivers, lakes, bays, and sounds are recurring answer categories: - Mississippi River: Borders or passes through 10 states - The 5 Great Lakes: HOMES (Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior) - Rio Grande: CO-NM-TX border with Mexico - Chesapeake Bay: Largest estuary, MD/VA - Puget Sound: Washington state's Pacific inlet
4. Don't neglect the stumpers
The answers in the Stumpers section are where you gain an edge. Most contestants know Alaska, Florida, and Cape Cod. Fewer know the Mojave, Padre Island, or why the Adirondacks are in New York. Drilling the 19 stumper answers is high-value study time.
5. Study the Hawaiian islands individually
Maui's 30% correct rate shows that contestants treat Hawaii as one blob. Learn the four main islands: - Hawaii (Big Island): Largest, Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, Kilauea - Oahu: Most populated, Honolulu, Pearl Harbor, Waikiki - Maui: Second-largest, Haleakala, "The Valley Isle" - Kauai: "The Garden Isle," Na Pali Coast, oldest main island
6. Use the round distribution strategically
Since 59% of clues appear in the Jeopardy round, U.S. Geography is more likely to show up early. In practice rounds, prioritize speed of recall for state facts, you'll need it for the rapid-fire J round more than the deliberate DJ round.
- California 41x
- Alaska 39x
- Florida 35x
- Hawaii 33x
- Maine 32x
- Louisiana 32x
- Georgia 32x
- the Colorado 32x
- New Mexico 30x
- Texas 29x
- North & South Carolina 66.7%
- Wichita 66.7%
- the Wabash 66.7%
- the Santa Fe Trail 66.7%
- the Blue Ridge Mountains 66.7%
- Nantucket 66.7%
- Burlington 66.7%
- the Snake River 50.0%
| Answer | Clues | Stumper | Avg $ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | California | 41 | 9.8% | $420 | |
| 02 | Alaska | 39 | 13.2% | $339 | |
| 03 | Florida | 35 | 15.2% | $506 | |
| 04 | Hawaii | 33 | 0.0% | $331 | |
| 05 | Georgia | 33 | 9.7% | $700 | |
| 06 | Maine | 32 | 9.4% | $728 | |
| 07 | Louisiana | 32 | 15.6% | $509 | |
| 08 | the Colorado | 32 | 6.2% | $556 | |
| 09 | New Mexico | 30 | 7.1% | $482 | |
| 10 | Texas | 29 | 6.9% | $617 | |
| 11 | Michigan | 29 | 6.9% | $645 | |
| 12 | Arizona | 28 | 21.4% | $643 | |
| 13 | Wyoming | 27 | 3.8% | $812 | |
| 14 | Vermont | 24 | 0.0% | $591 | |
| 15 | Rhode Island | 24 | 4.3% | $717 | |
| 16 | New Jersey | 23 | 13.6% | $714 | |
| 17 | Minnesota | 23 | 13.6% | $641 | |
| 18 | George Washington | 23 | 13.0% | $578 | |
| 19 | Virginia | 22 | 9.5% | $662 | |
| 20 | Pennsylvania | 22 | 9.1% | $714 |