Financial Toolset
Personal Finance

Equivalized Income

Household income adjusted for the number of adults and children, recognizing that larger households share costs and don't need proportionally more money.

Also known as: household-adjusted income, equivalent income, adjusted household income

What You Need to Know

Equivalized income adjusts household income to reflect that a family of four doesn't need 4× the income of a single person to maintain the same living standard. This is because households share major expenses like housing, utilities, and transportation.

How It Works (OECD-Modified Scale):

  • First adult: 1.0
  • Additional adults: 0.5 each
  • Children (under 14): 0.3 each

Example: Family with $100,000 income:

  • 2 adults + 2 children = equivalence factor of 2.1 (1.0 + 0.5 + 0.3 + 0.3)
  • Equivalized income: $100,000 ÷ 2.1 = $47,619 per equivalent adult

This $47,619 represents the income a single person would need to have the same standard of living.

Why It Matters:

  • Fair Comparisons: Compares living standards across different household sizes
  • Global Income Rankings: The Global Income Percentile Calculator uses this to fairly rank you against worldwide households
  • Policy Decisions: Governments use it to determine poverty thresholds and benefits eligibility

Real-World Impact: A single person earning $50,000 and a family of four earning $105,000 have roughly equivalent living standards after accounting for shared household costs.

The Bottom Line: Raw household income doesn't tell the full story—equivalized income shows your actual purchasing power per person after accounting for shared costs.