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In 2026, the number of adolescents aged 10 to 19 in the United States is expected to edge down to about 41.9 million, extending a gradual decline rather than signaling a sharp demographic break. This contraction primarily reflects the smaller birth cohorts of the late 2000s and 2010s aging into adolescence, a consequence of long-running national fertility declines that accelerated after the Great Recession and continued through the pandemic era. While immigration has added some younger residents to the US population, tighter enforcement and lower net inflows in the first half of the 2020s have limited its ability to replenish this age group.Between 2021 and 2026, the adolescent population slipped from 43.0 million to 41.9 million, falling at a CAGR of 0.92%. This mirrors the drop in births that hit child cohorts first and is showing up in teen demographics. The steepest declines in the current period coincide with when the smallest post-recession birth cohorts moved into the 10-to-19 bracket, compressing numbers even as overall US population growth remained marginally positive. Short-lived rebounds in adolescent counts largely reflected timing effects and modest improvements in immigration flows, rather than any meaningful recovery in fertility. Broader social and economic forces have reinforced this downtrend. Rising educational attainment and labor-force participation among women, pervasive urbanization and higher housing and childcare costs have all contributed to delayed and reduced childbearing, shrinking the cohorts that now populate the teen years. Political polarization over immigration has kept migrant inflows volatile and policy-dependent, limiting the scope for younger arrivals to offset domestic fertility shortfalls.Taken together, these dynamics have produced a modest but persistent decline in the US adolescent population over the five years through 2026. Lower fertility remains the central driver, with immigration providing only partial relief in a more tightly regulated environment that restricts the volume and composition of new arrivals.
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1980-2032
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The number of adolescents aged 10 to 19 in the US in 2026 was 41.91 million.
The number of adolescents aged 10 to 19 in the US declined by -0.53% in 2026.
IBISWorld’s data and analysis on number of adolescents aged 10 to 19 in the US includes forecasted growth rates over the next five years.