North Carolina overview
Income interruption risk context for North Carolina.
This profile explains how personal profile, occupational exposure, geographic context, and financial resilience combine to shape income interruption risk in North Carolina. It is educational and directional, not predictive.
At a glance
Income interruption risk score
Directional 0-100 score relative to peer locations (higher means higher risk).
Cities tracked
772 profiles in the directory.
Largest city
Charlotte
Population reference
1,436,613 residents
Why it matters in North Carolina
Benefit rules and local industries shape the income gap.
State benefits set the replacement floor, local job mix influences exposure, and household dependency plus savings determine how quickly the gap becomes stressful.
Who is most exposed
Who tends to feel income interruptions first.
In North Carolina, these profiles often experience the income gap sooner because replacement income is partial, delayed, or uncertain.
Single-income households
When most essentials rely on one paycheck, even short disruptions can tighten cash flow quickly.
Self-employed and contract workers
Coverage can be less consistent, and variable income makes waiting periods harder to bridge.
Physically demanding roles
Injury frequency and recovery time can be higher, and light-duty pivots are not always available.
High fixed-cost households
Housing, debt, and childcare obligations reduce flexibility when replacement income is partial or delayed.
Core risk dimensions
View overviewPersonal profile
Income interruption risk shifts with age, employment type, and how many people rely on the same paycheck.
Occupational exposure
Physical strain, injury frequency, and the ability to pivot roles influence the likelihood and duration of income interruption.
Geographic context
State benefits and local policy context shape how quickly income support appears and how long it lasts.
Financial resilience
Savings runway and fixed expenses determine how much interruption a household can absorb.
When income pauses
The first weeks set the trajectory.
Most households feel the gap after paid leave ends and before benefits begin. Savings runway and replacement caps determine the severity of the transition.
Preparation options
Narrow the income gap before it opens.
Focus on understanding employer coverage, state benefit timelines, and the savings runway required to cover fixed expenses.
Review employer coverage
Identify replacement percentages and duration limits.
Map state benefits
Confirm waiting periods and maximum weekly caps.
Build runway
Set savings targets based on core expenses.
Cities in North Carolina
View all citiesCharlotte
1,436,613 residents
Mecklenburg County
Raleigh
1,150,010 residents
Wake County
Winston-Salem
434,231 residents
Forsyth County
Durham
411,362 residents
Durham County
Greensboro
345,858 residents
Guilford County
Fayetteville
326,821 residents
Cumberland County
Concord
297,379 residents
Cabarrus County
Asheville
295,040 residents
Buncombe County
Wilmington
275,128 residents
New Hanover County
Hickory
200,500 residents
Catawba County
Gastonia
189,767 residents
Gaston County
Cary
176,686 residents
Wake County
RiskIQ network
Related risk context for North Carolina
These links focus on the most relevant connected risk topics for this location.