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You know that tight feeling in your chest when you start a new job? That’s stress.
And there are certain places in Hawaii that have more to stress out about then just their first day at work.
There are things like dealing with ever-longer commutes, working longer and longer hours, and just trying to find a job in the first place. But which places in Hawaii take being stressed to the next level?
It turns out the good people of Maili have earned the dubious distinction of being the most stressed out place in Hawaii. The city is at the top of the pack of the 10 most stressed out places in the Aloha State:
How We Measured Stress In Hawaii (Without Stressing Out)
In order to measure stress, we selected a set of six criteria that reflect its root causes for most people and used them to look at the 96 places in Hawaii with a population over 2,000 according to the 2010-2014 American Community Survey:
Percentage of population with a long commute (over 30 minutes)
Unemployment Rate
Hours worked
Population density
Percentage of income spent on rent
Percentage of population without health insurance
The higher any of these was, the more stressful the people of the place are.
Our data is from the U.S. Census’ American Community Survey for 2010-2014.
We ranked each place from 1 to 96 (with one being the most stressed side of the scale) in the six individual criteria. These ranks were then averaged into a Stress Score, the lowest of which was the most stressed out place in the Aloha State.
Below, we’ll take a look at the standout stress stats for each top 10 most stressed places, and wrap the whole thing up with a detailed ranking of all 96 places we analyzed.
1. Maili
Population: 9,399People With High Rent: 74.4% People With Long Commute: 72.3% People Without Insurance: 6.9%
2. Iroquois Point
Population: 3,639People With High Rent: 58.3% People With Long Commute: 68.2% People Without Insurance: 4.4%
3. Makaha
Population: 8,663People With High Rent: 56.0% People With Long Commute: 70.5% People Without Insurance: 5.8%
4. Ewa Beach
Population: 14,291People With High Rent: 49.7% People With Long Commute: 67.7% People Without Insurance: 7.2%
5. Waianae
Population: 12,694People With High Rent: 61.8% People With Long Commute: 68.0% People Without Insurance: 6.1%
6. Ocean Pointe
Population: 10,502 People With High Rent: 62.1% People With Long Commute: 68.5% People Without Insurance: 4.5%
7. Nanakuli
Population: 12,181People With High Rent: 58.9% People With Long Commute: 60.1% People Without Insurance: 6.4%
8. Anahola
Population: 2,122People With High Rent: 64.0% People With Long Commute: 55.2% People Without Insurance: 11.5%
9. Pupukea
Population: 5,498People With High Rent: 54.1% People With Long Commute: 51.1% People Without Insurance: 12.6%
10. Ewa Gentry
Population: 22,663 People With High Rent: 57.9% People With Long Commute: 60.9% People Without Insurance: 5.1%
Chris Kolmar is a co-founder of Zippia and the editor-in-chief of the Zippia career advice blog. He has hired over 50 people in his career, been hired five times, and wants to help you land your next job.
His research has been featured on the New York Times, Thrillist, VOX, The Atlantic, and a host of local news.
More recently, he's been quoted on USA Today, BusinessInsider, and CNBC.