FY2022 AFCARS All 51 jurisdictions AFCARS + NCANDS

States: V

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.

2 states starting with "V"

How Letter V States Compare in the Foster Care System

The 2 states catalogued under the letter V together account for 6,312 children currently in foster care, an average of roughly 3,156 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 56.5%. Virginia carries the largest share within this letter group, with 5,856 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 V · Interpretation: blended averages only; see individual state pages for trend data and definitions.

State In Care
Vermont 456
Virginia 5,856

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