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U.S. Death Rate Hits Record Low of 689 per 100,000 in 2025

Published Jul 3, 2026
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Summary:
  • The age-adjusted death rate in the United States fell to approximately 689 per 100,000 people in 2025, a record low.
  • COVID-19 deaths plummeted to 20,685, down from 47,541 the year before and far below the nearly half a million who died in 2021.
  • The decline was widespread across age, gender, and racial groups, except for American Indian and Native peoples.

The United States just saw its lowest death rate in history. But the data is provisional, and public health officials are still watching for final numbers. The drop is real, but not everyone benefited.

Record Low Death Rate

That number is adjusted for age, meaning it accounts for the fact that the population is getting older. It shows a 4.6% drop from 2024.

Each year, fewer Americans are dying from the biggest killers.

Why the Death Rate Fell

The decline happened because two big killers became less deadly. Drug overdose deaths also fell, according to the report. Combined with the steep drop in COVID-19 deaths, the overall death rate reached a new low. In recent years, the typical American's life expectancy has increased, partly because overdose fatalities have fallen and the COVID-19 pandemic has subsided.

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This improvement builds on a trend that began after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the age-adjusted death rate surged to above 800 per 100,000 due to the virus and drug overdoses. The subsequent decline reflects the combined effects of widespread vaccination, improved treatments, and public health measures targeting the opioid crisis. However, the data also shows that chronic diseases like heart disease and cancer are becoming more deadly, underscoring the need for sustained prevention efforts.

Nearly every age group, gender, and racial group saw better survival rates. The improvements were broad, but not universal.

Who Was Left Behind

Not all groups shared in the gains. Researchers did not say why, but the gap is important for public health officials to study.

According to the report, death rates were highest among men, Black individuals, and older adults. Heart disease and cancer stayed as the top two causes of death nationally, and their rates kept rising from 2024 to 2025.

The Broader Context

The researchers cautioned that these are preliminary figures and may be revised. For instance, data on unintentional injuries often arrives later, and reporting times vary by region. Nonetheless, the results offer an early glimpse into changing mortality patterns and can guide public health authorities in crafting measures to enhance the nation's health.

What to Watch

Public health officials will use these findings to design new policies. They want to keep pushing the death rate lower. But the provisional nature of the data means we should wait for the final report.

The drop in deaths is a sign of progress, but it comes with a reminder that not everyone is on the same path. The record low is a milestone, but the work is not done.

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