Congressional leaders protest outside of the U.S. Capitol on March 26, Equal Pay Day 2026, to advocate for closing the gender wage gap. (Courtesy of Rep. Robin Kelly via X)

Families across the United States depend on womenโ€™s earnings at levels not seen in prior generations, yet new data shows that women working full time, year-round continue to be paid less than men in every state, with even wider disparities affecting Black women and Latinas.

According to a newly released fact sheet from the National Women’s Law Center, women working full time, year-round were typically paid 81 cents for every dollar paid to men in 2024, a decline from prior years that left women earning a median of $13,570 less annually.

The gap grows larger when all workers are considered. When part-time and part-year workers are included, women were paid just 76 cents for every dollar paid to men in 2024. The data shows that pay inequality is not only persistent, but widening, with serious consequences for families that depend on womenโ€™s wages to cover housing, child care, groceries, and other basic needs.

โ€œNo matter how you slice it, women in the U.S. who work full time are paid less than men,โ€ the authors stated.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro advocates for womenโ€™s equity in Congress. She introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act in hopes of strengthening the Equal Pay Act of 1963. (Courtesy of Rep. Rosa DeLauro via X)

The wage gap affects women across all racial and ethnic groups, but the scale of the disparity varies significantly.

Black women working full time, year-round typically make only 65 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men. When part-time and part-year workers are included, that number drops to 63 cents. 

Latinas face an even larger gap. They are typically paid 58 cents on the dollar compared to white, non-Hispanic men in full-time, year-round work.

The long-term consequences are significant. Based on current wage patterns, Latinas entering the workforce today stand to lose $1,344,800 over a 40-year career compared to white, non-Hispanic men. 

White, non-Hispanic women also experience a gap, earning about 77 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men in full-time, year-round work, and about 73 cents when all workers are included.

โ€œExtremists are attacking diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, also known as DEI, and are using anti-DEI hysteria to undermine core civil rights protections,โ€ the authors wrote. โ€œFor our democracy to work for all of us, not just the rich and powerful few, we must work to counter the rise of authoritarianism and protect the right to vote.โ€

A woman working full time, year-round stands to lose an estimated $542,000 over a 40-year career due to the wage gap. 

For women of color, the losses are even greater. Black women stand to lose more than $1.1 million over a lifetime, while Latinas face losses exceeding $1.3 million.

Mothers working full time, year-round are typically paid 74 cents for every dollar paid to fathers, translating to about $20,000 less per year. Women earn less than men in 94 percent of occupations, and disparities persist across industries and education levels.

โ€œWith women paid only 81 cents for every dollar paid to men, itโ€™s clear that we have a long way to go to make the workplace fair for women in the United States,โ€ the authors concluded.

Wage Gap Across the DMV

The disparities are experienced across the District of Columbia region, where the wage gap varies by state and demographic group.

In D.C., women working full time, year-round typically make 88 cents for every dollar paid to men. However, Black women earn just 51 cents for every dollar paid to white men.ย 

In Maryland, women earn about 89 cents for every dollar paid to men. Black women earn about 68 cents, while Latina women earn about 50 cents compared to white men. 

In Virginia, women earn about 83 cents for every dollar paid to men. Black women earn about 61 cents, and Latina women earn about 58 cents compared to white men.

The economic consequences extend beyond wages. 

For families headed by single mothers and living in poverty, numbers vary with 43.3% in the District, nearly 22.7% in Maryland and 26.1% in Virginia. 

โ€œToday is Equal Pay Day, marking how far into 2026 women have to work to earn what men did in 2025,โ€ Rep. Jennifer McClellan (D) of Virginia wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, on March 26. โ€œFor moms, women of color and women with disabilities, this day falls even further into the year. Women deserve equal pay for equal work, but for the second year in a row, the pay gap has widened and women working full-time, year-round earn 81 cents for every dollar men earn.โ€

Freedom Fighting for Equal Pay: ‘Pay Us What We Deserve’ย 

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and the Democratic Womenโ€™s Caucus teamed up to advocate for wage equity on Equal Pay Day 2026.

Rep. Robin Kelly speaks at the Equal Pay for Equal Work protest on March 26 in Washington, D.C. (Courtesy of Rep. Robin Kelly via X)

โ€œOn average, women earn just 76 cents for every dollar paid to menโ€”and the gender wage gap is even wider for women of color,โ€ DeLauro wrote on X on March 26, including photos from a protest in support of closing the wage gap. โ€œI won’t stop fighting until Congress passes my Paycheck Fairness Act [and] ends this disparity for good!โ€

Last year, DeLauro and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act in hopes of strengthening the Equal Pay Act of 1963. 

โ€œWe are in a cost-of-living crisis โ€” this must end,โ€ DeLauro said in a 2025 statement. โ€œEqual pay for equal work is a simple concept โ€” men and women in the same job deserve the same pay. It is time we make it real it for the millions of American women who are being unfairly undervalued in the workplace.โ€

Rep. Robin Kelly (D) of Illinois joined the large group of Congressional leaders and activists on March 26, advocating for compensation and employment equity, particularly for women of color.โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter if a Black woman has a PhDโ€”she still earns less than a man doing the same work,โ€ Kelly wrote on X. โ€œAs a Black woman with a PhD, thatโ€™s more than concerning. Pay us what we deserve. Period.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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