FY2022 AFCARS All 51 jurisdictions AFCARS + NCANDS

States: C

Federal AFCARS and NCANDS data structured for browsing. Each metric is sourced from the most recent ACF release and cross-referenced against the agency methodology notes.

3 states starting with "C"

How Letter C States Compare in the Foster Care System

The 3 states catalogued under the letter C together account for 63,195 children currently in foster care, an average of roughly 21,065 children per state in this group. A smaller grouping that still reflects a meaningful slice of the national system, and pages here share an above-average blended reunification rate of 53.5%. California carries the largest share within this letter group, with 52,847 children in care — a volume that can reflect state population, child-welfare reporting rigor, or the concentration of high-need communities rather than any single policy outcome.

Foster-care metrics at a letter-group level are most useful as a navigation aid, not a ranking: children's experiences are shaped by state statutes, court capacity, kinship placement availability, and the prevalence of reunification services. Two neighboring states can report similar in-care populations but very different aging-out, reunification, or kinship-care outcomes. When comparing across this cluster, we recommend pairing the in-care count with reunification rate and aging-out rate together — any single metric in isolation can mislead. Click through to a state page to see the five-year trajectory, demographic breakdown, and the AFCARS data vintage that anchors the figures.

Source: AFCARS (Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System) via U.S. Children's Bureau · Scope: States beginning with the letter C · Interpretation: blended averages only; see individual state pages for trend data and definitions.

State In Care
California 52,847
Colorado 7,134
Connecticut 3,214

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details.

Source: U.S. ACF — AFCARS Foster Care Reports Foster care placement, exit, and outcome statistics · 2025