February 19, 2025

2025 Florida Child Well-Being Index

Fostering Child Well-Being: Florida’s Future Depends on the Health and Well-Being of All Children

The policy choices we make today should lay the foundation for children to become thriving adults who will join the workforce and contribute to their communities. Smart investments will help cultivate strong families who — in turn — will raise strong, healthy children. To guide these policy choices, we need timely, relevant data that documents the challenges and successes facing Florida’s children and families. That is the impetus behind the Florida 2025 Child Well-Being Index. This year, Florida Policy Institute (FPI) highlighted child food insecurity, which affects as many as 35.3 percent of all children in the most impacted county.

The child well-being rankings were developed using KIDS COUNT® data to show where more investments can be made. The outcomes in communities are not accidental. Counties with higher rankings tend to be well-resourced places where families can afford to invest in nutritious food, high-quality education, and other opportunities for their children.

Counties that rank near the middle tend to have a mixture of well-resourced and less well-resourced areas, such as some larger counties that have a combination of big cities with suburban and rural areas. Counties with lower rankings tend to be places that have borne the brunt of the state’s disinvestment in public services and where people face historic barriers to economic opportunity as a result of the policy decisions made.

The Child Well-being Index (CWBI) provides counties with a snapshot of 16 indicators of child and family well-being organized into four domains: Economic Well-Being, Education, Health, and Family and Community.  These 16 indicators do not contribute to well-being independently; rather, they interact with each other to influence outcomes that are to the benefit or detriment of Florida’s children.

Although Florida lawmakers have made investments in areas affecting child well-being, children’s access to quality, nutritious food remains out of reach for many parents. This causes tremendous hardship and economic instability for families across the state. Nearly one in five Florida children, more than 800,000, experienced food insecurity in 2022-23. 

All communities can access shared prosperity when we make wise investments in children and families and have policies in place that close opportunity gaps. As laid out in FPI’s Roadmap to Shared Prosperity, data-driven policymaking and investments in the following areas can help to move the needle for Florida’s kids:

  • Prioritizing child well-being and quality of life by preserving and expanding basic household supports like nutrition, housing, and income assistance.
  • Nurturing children by investing in affordable, quality early learning; thriving public schools; and well supported teachers.
  • Building a stronger workforce by expanding access to higher education and job training.
  • Ensuring all Floridians have access to affordable, quality health care.

Click here to download shareable graphics by county

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