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Our charts are updated daily after our core data sets are updated. In order to interpret the numbers and discover trends, we recommend looking at charts that show a time series to make up for occasional data anomalies and reporting backlogs. For that reason, 7-day average lines are also helpful when analyzing charts.

United States Overview

On March 714-day trend

  • 1,170,059 new tests
  • 41,835 new cases
  • 40,199 currently hosp.
  • 842 new deaths
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New cases change in 7-day average

In ME, cases are rising
In WI, cases are falling
In VT, cases are rising
In NH, cases are falling
In WA, cases are falling
In ID, cases are falling
In MT, cases are falling
In ND, cases are rising
In MN, cases are falling
In IL, cases are falling
In MI, cases are rising
In NY, cases are falling
In MA, cases are falling
In OR, cases are falling
In NV, cases are falling
In WY, cases are falling
In SD, cases are rising
In IA, cases are falling
In IN, cases are falling
In OH, cases are falling
In PA, cases are falling
In NJ, cases are rising
In CT, cases are falling
In RI, cases are falling
In CA, cases are falling
In UT, cases are falling
In CO, cases are rising
In NE, cases are rising
In MO, cases are falling
In KY, cases are falling
In WV, cases are falling
In VA, cases are falling
In MD, cases are falling
In DE, cases are falling
In AZ, cases are rising
In NM, cases are falling
In KS, cases are falling
In AR, cases are falling
In TN, cases are falling
In NC, cases are falling
In SC, cases are falling
In DC, cases are falling
In OK, cases are falling
In LA, cases are falling
In MS, cases are falling
In AL, cases are rising
In GA, cases are falling
In GU, cases are falling
In MP, cases are rising
In HI, cases are falling
In AK, cases are rising
In TX, cases are falling
In FL, cases are falling
In PR, cases are rising
In VI, cases are falling
In AS, cases are

Cases are rising in 6 states, staying the same in 16 states, and falling in 34 states.

For every state, we calculate the current seven-day average of cases, and compare that to the seven-day case average of the previous week. States cases are considered rising if that change is over 10%, staying the same if between 10% and -10%, and falling if below -10%.

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Regions displayed in our charts are defined by the US Census. Population estimates used in per capita charts are also from the US Census: we use the American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates for 2019. See our FAQ for other answers to charts questions.

These charts are updated daily after our core data sets are updated. You are free to use these charts in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License and for any use in support of journalism, healthcare, medical research, and public health research. Please attribute The COVID Tracking Project at The Atlantic and include the Creative Commons license information. See our data license and our Terms and Conditions for more information.