Indiana, PA

Census place 4236816 · pop 14,212

D58/ 100
😐 Meh
B
in PA
📍 Pennsylvania ranks #37 of 50 states →
🏆 Disaster35/100 · top 5%
🚽 Income$40,857 · bottom 3%
Taxes
2.08% property · US 0.99%6.34% sales · US 7.00%3.07% flat income · US 4.63%

Sales & income are statewide.

The breakdown — worst first

Median household income$40,8573

U.S. median $67,857 · worse than most cities

$40,857 median household income · Median household income — a proxy for local economic health.

Income inequality0.525

U.S. median 0.43 · worse than most cities

Gini 0.52 (0 = equal, 1 = unequal) · Gini index of household income (0 = equal, 1 = unequal).

Homeownership44.7%8

U.S. median 67.2% · worse than most cities

44.7% own their home · Share of occupied homes that are owner-occupied.

Property-tax burden2.08%9

U.S. median 0.99% · worse than most cities

2.08% of home value paid in property tax · Median real-estate taxes paid as a share of home value.

Poverty rate21.7%14

U.S. median 12.1% · worse than most cities

21.7% live in poverty · Share of residents living below the federal poverty line.

Unemployment rateCounty-level4.2%30

U.S. median 3.6% · worse than most cities

4.2% unemployment · Share of the labor force out of work. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Broadband access90.6%42

U.S. median 90.0% · worse than most cities

90.6% of homes have broadband · Share of households with a broadband internet subscription.

Population growth (5yr)+6.5%70

U.S. median +2.4% · better than most cities

+6.5% population change (5yr) · 5-year population change — are people moving in, or fleeing?

Bachelor's degree or higher48.9%81

U.S. median 24.3% · better than most cities

48.9% have a bachelor's degree or higher · Share of adults 25+ with a bachelor's degree or higher.

Air quality (AQI)County-level37 AQI81

U.S. median 42 AQI · better than most cities

37 median AQI · Median air quality index — lower is cleaner air. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Unhealthy air daysCounty-level0 days85

U.S. median 1 days · better than most cities

0 unhealthy-air days per year · Days per year with unhealthy air (AQI above 100). Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Housing cost$135,60090

U.S. median $214,900 · better than most cities

$135,600 median home value · Median home value — how expensive it is to buy in. Higher = less affordable.

Commute time16 min94

U.S. median 24 min · better than most cities

16 min average one-way commute · Average one-way commute to work, in minutes.

Rent$1,050/mo95

U.S. median $1,756/mo · better than most cities

$1,050/mo typical rent · Typical monthly rent (Zillow Observed Rent Index, all home types).

Natural disaster riskCounty-level35/10095

U.S. median 77/100 · better than most cities

35/100 FEMA risk (higher = riskier) · FEMA National Risk Index — wildfire, flood, earthquake, heat and more. Published by county, not city — every city in the county shares this figure.

Not measured for Indiana: Crime, Obesity, Mental, Inactive, Smoking, Uninsured, Property crime. Not every public source covers every city — EPA air monitors and Zillow rent only reach some places, and national crime data is still being added.

Frequently asked

Is Indiana, PA a good place to live?
By the numbers, Indiana scores 58/100 — a D (Meh) on Shcity, which ranks U.S. cities on public data across 15 metrics like crime, cost, jobs and health. Its strongest area is natural disaster risk and its weakest is median household income. Pennsylvania overall ranks #37 of 50 states. Whether it's "good" depends on what you value — re-weight the factors to score it your way.
Is Indiana, PA expensive to live in?
Indiana has a median home value of $135,600 and typical rent around $1,050/mo — more affordable than most U.S. cities.
What's the biggest downside of living in Indiana, PA?
Its weakest measured area is median household income ($40,857) — 3/100, worse than most U.S. cities.
What is Indiana, PA best at?
Its strongest measured area is natural disaster risk (35/100) — 95/100, better than most U.S. cities. (A county-level figure.)

Sources: U.S. Census (ACS), CDC PLACES, FBI Crime Data Explorer, BLS, EPA AirData, FEMA National Risk Index, and Zillow.