Full comparison across 7 data dimensions from official U.S. government sources.
Reading the Delaware vs Hawaii Comparison
Delaware and Hawaii are compared here using the state-tier cuts of the same federal feeds that supply the metro pages, BEA Regional Price Parities, HUD Fair Market Rent averages, BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics rolled up to the state, FBI Uniform Crime Reports at state resolution, NCES school counts, and Department of Labor childcare cost filings. The overall cost index is 99.8 in Delaware against 110.0 in Hawaii, a 10.1-point gap on a scale where 100 is the national average, points above 100 mean goods and services cost more than the typical U.S. bundle, points below mean less. Two-bedroom Fair Market Rent averages $1,559/mo in Delaware vs $2,433/mo in Hawaii, a statewide headline that masks wide intra-state spread, rural counties and core metros inside the same state often differ by a factor of two or more.
BLS reports a median salary of $71,613 across 461,220 jobs in Delaware versus $73,975 across 605,850 jobs in Hawaii. After adjusting through BEA Regional Price Parities, $100,000 earned in Delaware has the same in-state purchasing power as $110,163 in Hawaii - the single most important lens for comparing nominal salaries between states, because wages and rents usually move together. On public safety, FBI UCR reports violent-crime rates of 367.8 per 100,000 residents in Delaware vs 230.5 in Hawaii, with property-crime rates of 1772.7 and 2052.6 respectively, state-level rates blend urban, suburban and rural incidence, so local readings inside either state will deviate substantially from these averages.
NCES reports 223 public schools in Delaware at a 14.1:1 student-teacher ratio against 295 schools at 14.3:1 in Hawaii. Charter share, a signal of school-market structure, is 10.3% in Delaware vs 12.5% in Hawaii. The practical frame: no two states score the same across cost, housing, wages, safety, and schools at once, and a state that "wins" on one dimension routinely loses on another. The tables below break each dimension out so a household can weight the ones that matter for its own situation, cost-of-living purchasing power for retirees, schools for families, wages for career relocators, rent for renters not buying, rather than collapsing them into a single winner-takes-all verdict. All figures trace back to federal agencies named in each section.
Data from BEA, HUD, FBI UCR, BLS OES, NCES, DOL, and EPA. Not affiliated with the U.S. Government.