Female Annual Income chartfor Teenagers 17 years old

Average Annual Income for 17 year old women
For most 17 year old women in America, Annual Income measurements fall between US$4,629 and US$11,110. The median Annual Income for women in this age group is US$7,715, according to the Federal Reserve's 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances and anonymised data from users.
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Chart Insights
At 17, are you starting to understand how your early earning decisions will shape the income trajectory of the next two decades? The median annual income for 17-year-old women stands at $6,970, with most women in this group earning between $3,345 at the 25th percentile and $12,197 at the 75th percentile. At this stage, income is typically from part-time work, summer employment, or the early stages of a first full-time role - highly variable and still ramping up. Women earn approximately 83% of what men earn at the same stage, a gap that reflects a combination of occupational concentration, career interruptions for caregiving, and structural pay differences that persist across industries and education levels. The average income is higher than the median at $10,106, pulled upward by high earners in the top decile whose incomes are not representative of the typical experience. NettleWorth uses the median as its primary benchmark because it gives you the most accurate picture of where most women your age actually stand.
Milestones and Peer Comparisons
At 17, most young women are earning early-career income from part-time or entry-level work. The pay gap between men and women is narrowest at this age - typically under 5% for the same role - making the early career the ideal time to establish income and savings patterns before the gap widens. The financial habits established now, particularly consistent saving and deliberate career investment, have a multiplying effect that compounds dramatically across the following three decades. Earning around $6,970 places you at the median for 17-year-old women, while an income above $12,197 puts you in the top quarter of your age group.
Tips and Growth Factors
At 17, the most important income-related financial actions are those that protect and grow your future earning power. Investing in skills and credentials - whether through education, certifications, or on-the-job experience - is the highest-return investment available at this age. Save 15-20% of every paycheck before spending the rest: the discipline of paying yourself first, established early, becomes automatic by the time you reach the higher-income years where it matters most. Avoid lifestyle inflation with each income increase: the gap between what you earn and what you spend is the engine of all wealth building.
Data Sources and Methodology
All statistics on this page are derived from reputable sources, including the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, anonymised data from NettleWorth users, and our own research.
Annual income percentiles presented on this page are generated using a robust, age-based modelling framework calibrated to reflect realistic patterns of income growth, peak earning, and post-retirement income across the lifespan. The approach applies smoothing techniques aligned with Bureau of Labor Statistics and Census Bureau income data. We use a range of separate percentiles (from the 2nd to the 99th) that are calculated for every age and demographic group, with demographic adjustments built into the model to reflect currently observed population-level trends.
Primary data sources include the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Population Survey (2024), U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (2024), the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances (2022 release), and the Social Security Administration wage index data. Income figures are specified for U.S. residents in USD as gross pre-tax annual income.
Further details on our assumptions and our transparent methodology are described in our documentation for those seeking deeper insight into the modelling process and its limitations. Get in touch to discuss further or if you believe an error has been made somewhere.
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