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CT · Milford city

Personal profile in Milford city .

Income interruption risk shifts with age, employment type, and how many people rely on the same paycheck.

This pillar describes directional exposure in Milford city , Connecticut and does not provide individualized predictions.

Focus areas

Relative risk score56
  • Age band and working years
  • Employment type (employee vs self-employed)
  • Household income dependency
Directional 0-100 score relative to peer locations (higher means higher risk).

Signals DisabilityRiskIQ reviews

Workers age 45-64

Share of workers in higher-claim years; larger shares can raise risk.

Relative signal score77

Self-employed workers

Share of workers without employer coverage, which can widen gaps.

Relative signal score53

Single-worker households

Share of households relying on one paycheck; fewer backups means higher risk.

Relative signal score37

Why this pillar matters in Milford city

These drivers shape how income interruption shows up in Milford city , from timing to how hard it is to return to work.

Local signal showing higher income interruption risk: Workers age 45-64.
Local signal showing lower income interruption risk: Single-worker households.
Age mix affects claim frequency and recovery time.
Self-employed workers often lack employer coverage.
Single-income households have fewer income backups.

How to read signals

Higher age 45-64 share can mean more exposure.
Higher self-employed share can signal coverage gaps.
Higher single-worker share can widen the income gap.

Questions to ask

  • Who relies on this income and how much?
  • What coverage exists outside of savings?
  • How long could essentials be covered without pay?

Practical actions

  • Confirm employer or individual disability coverage.
  • Build a buffer tied to household dependency.
  • Reduce fixed costs that are hardest to pause.

Data sources

  • US Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates

Update cadence

  • Updated when new ACS 5-year estimates are released.

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