Which US religious groups are most highly educated?

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Hindus and Jews are much more likely to have a four-year college degree than Americans in other religious groups, according to Pew Research Center’s 2023-24 Religious Landscape Study (RLS).

Seven-in-ten Hindus and 65% of Jews have a bachelor’s degree or more education. That compares with 35% of U.S. adults overall.


How educational attainment varies by religion in the U.S.

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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How educational attainment varies by religion in the U.S.

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

groupHave a bachelor’s degree or more
All U.S. adultsall35
Hinduother groups70
Jewishother groups65
Orthodox Christianother groups45
Muslimother groups44
Buddhistother groups41
Mainline Protestantother groups40
Religiously unaffiliatedother groups37
Latter-day Saint (Mormon)other groups36
Catholicother groups35
Evangelical Protestantother groups29
Historically Black Protestantother groups24

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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On the other end of the spectrum, lower shares of evangelical Protestants (29%) and members of historically Black Protestant denominations (24%) hold college degrees. The shares of college graduates for several other religious groups range from 35% to 45%.

Educational differences by Christian subgroups

Because the RLS is a huge survey, with 36,908 respondents, we can also look at differences within larger religious traditions. For example, we can look at 11 types of evangelical Protestantism, seven groups within mainline Protestantism and two denominations in the historically Black Protestant tradition.

However, the survey did not have enough people in some smaller denominations to show their results separately. For instance, we do not have enough respondents to show separate results for the Church of the Nazarene (in the evangelical tradition), the Disciples of Christ (in the mainline tradition) or the African Methodist Episcopal Church (in the historically Black Protestant tradition).

About this research

This Pew Research Center analysis looks at the shares of college graduates in different religious groups in the United States. We compare those shares across religious groups and with the U.S. general population.

Why did we do this?

Pew Research Center conducts high-quality research to inform the public, journalists and leaders. Studying religion in the United States is a key part of the Center’s long-standing research.

Learn more about Pew Research Center.

How did we do this?

This analysis uses findings from 36,908 U.S. adults who participated in the Center’s 2023-24 Religious Landscape Study. We conducted the survey from July 17, 2023, to March 4, 2024.

The RLS was made possible by The Pew Charitable Trusts, which received support from the Lilly Endowment Inc., Templeton Religion Trust, The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations and the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust.

Evangelical Protestants

Among all evangelical Protestants, 29% have a college degree or more, which is slightly below the national average.

Among the evangelical denominations we could analyze, those with the highest shares of college graduates were the Global Methodist Church (57%) and the Presbyterian Church in America (57%). At the other end of the spectrum, 18% of people in the Assemblies of God have a college degree.


How educational attainment varies among evangelical Protestants

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

* The survey included interviews with 118 members of the Global Methodist Church, with an effective sample size of 80 and a 95% confidence level margin of error plus or minus 10.9 percentage points. This margin of error conservatively assumes a reported percentage of 50.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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How educational attainment varies among evangelical Protestants

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

otherCollege degree or more
All U.S. adultsall35
All evangelical Protestantsother groups29
Global Methodist Church*other groups57
Presbyterian Church in Americaother groups57
Nondenominational evangelicalother groups44
Interdenominational in the evangelical traditionother groups42
Nondenominational charismaticother groups39
Nondenominational fundamentalistother groups36
Lutheran Church-Missouri Synodother groups35
Churches of Christother groups25
Southern Baptist Conventionother groups23
Independent Baptist in the evangelical traditionother groups20
Assemblies of Godother groups18

* The survey included interviews with 118 members of the Global Methodist Church, with an effective sample size of 80 and a 95% confidence level margin of error plus or minus 10.9 percentage points. This margin of error conservatively assumes a reported percentage of 50.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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Mainline Protestants

Four-in-ten mainline Protestants are college graduates. That’s slightly higher than the share among U.S. adults overall.

The share of college graduates is especially high among members of the Episcopal Church (67%). Far fewer people who identify with the American Baptist Churches USA are college graduates (13%).


How educational attainment varies among mainline Protestants

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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How educational attainment varies among mainline Protestants

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

groupCollege degree or more
All U.S. adultsall35
All mainline Protestantsother groups40
Episcopal Churchother groups67
Presbyterian Church (USA)other groups58
Interdenominational in the mainline traditionother groups50
United Church of Christother groups48
United Methodist Churchother groups42
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)other groups39
American Baptist Churches USAother groups13

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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Members of Historically Black Protestant Churches


How educational attainment varies within historically Black Protestantism

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

* The survey included 159 interviews with members of the Church of God in Christ, with an effective sample size of 78 and a 95% confidence level margin of error plus or minus 11.1 percentage points. This margin of error conservatively assumes a reported percentage of 50.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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How educational attainment varies within historically Black Protestantism

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

groupCollege degree or more
All U.S. adultsall35
All members of historically Black Protestant churchesother groups24
National Baptist Convention, USAother groups24
Church of God in Christ (COGIC)*other groups10

* The survey included 159 interviews with members of the Church of God in Christ, with an effective sample size of 78 and a 95% confidence level margin of error plus or minus 11.1 percentage points. This margin of error conservatively assumes a reported percentage of 50.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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About a quarter of members of historically Black Protestant Churches (24%) hold a college degree or more. That’s lower than the national average.

Looking at some of the largest denominations in the historically Black Protestant tradition, about a quarter of members of the National Baptist Convention, USA, are college graduates (24%), as are 10% of adults in the Church of God in Christ (COGIC).

Catholics

How educational attainment varies among Catholics

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

* Estimates for Asian Catholics are representative of English speakers only.
Note: White and Asian Catholics include those who report only being one race and are not Hispanic. Hispanic Catholics are of any race. The Religious Landscape Study did not include enough Black Catholics to show their results separately here.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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How educational attainment varies among Catholics

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

groupCollege degree or more
All U.S. adultsall35
All Catholicsother groups35
White Catholicsother groups43
Hispanic Catholicsother groups20
Asian Catholics*other groups53

* Estimates for Asian Catholics are representative of English speakers only.
Note: White and Asian Catholics include those who report only being one race and are not Hispanic. Hispanic Catholics are of any race. The Religious Landscape Study did not include enough Black Catholics to show their results separately here.

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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Among U.S. Catholics, 35% are college graduates, matching the share for all U.S. adults. Our previous research has found that Catholics’ social and political views and religious practices tend to vary by race and ethnicity, and the same is true when it comes to education.

For example, 53% of Asian Catholics have a bachelor’s degree or more education, as do 43% of White Catholics. That compares with 20% of Hispanic Catholics.

While the RLS did not include enough Black Catholics to show their results separately, analysis of 2019-20 Pew Research Center survey data shows that 38% of Black Catholics (defined as those who report being one race and are not Hispanic) were college-educated.

Educational differences among the religiously unaffiliated


How educational attainment varies among the religiously unaffiliated

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

Chart

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER



How educational attainment varies among the religiously unaffiliated

% of U.S. adults who have a bachelor’s degree or more education

groupCollege degree or moreSome collegeHigh school degreeLess than high school
All U.S. adultsall3530287
All religiously unaffiliatedunaffiliated3731266
Agnosticunaffiliated5333131
Atheistunaffiliated4830211
Nothing in particularunaffiliated2931318

Source: Religious Landscape Study of U.S. adults conducted July 17, 2023-March 4, 2024.

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Among religiously unaffiliated Americans, there are notable differences between those who say they are atheists or agnostics and those who describe their religion as “nothing in particular.”

Agnostics (53%) and atheists (48%) are more likely than U.S. adults overall to have completed college. By contrast, people who describe their religion as “nothing in particular” (29%) are less likely than Americans overall to have a bachelor’s degree.

Note: Refer to our detailed table for more information on educational attainment by religious group. This is an update of a post originally published Nov. 4, 2016. That post was written by former senior researcher Caryle Murphy.

RECOMMENDED CITATION:

Tevington, Patricia. 2026. “Which U.S. religious groups are most highly educated?” Pew Research Center. doi: 10.58094/3e09-yq16.

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Stacy Rosenberg

Stacy Rosenberg

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