Headline Roundup • July 4th, 2026
US Death Rate Falls to Record Low in 2025, CDC Reports
Summary from the AllSides News Team
The death rate in the United States reached a record low in 2025, according to data released by the CDC, with declines across every age group and for both men and women.
The Details: The CDC's "Mortality in the United States: Provisional Data, 2025" estimates that 3,094,593 people died in the country last year. According to the report, the death rate fell to 689.2 deaths per 100,000 people, a 4.6% decrease from 2024 and the lowest rate ever recorded. Heart disease and cancer remained the two leading causes of death, followed by unintentional injuries. The CDC also reported that influenza and pneumonia rose to the eighth leading cause of death, while suicide dropped from the tenth to the eleventh leading cause. Death rates remained highest among men, older adults and Black Americans.
Leading Causes of Death: The three leading causes of death in 2025 were heart disease (694,708 deaths), cancer (622,832 deaths) and unintentional injuries (184,265 deaths). Compared with 2024, the top seven causes of death remained unchanged, while influenza, pneumonia and kidney disease moved higher in the rankings.
For Context: The CDC report contains provisional data, meaning the numbers are early estimates that may be updated as additional death records are processed. It also includes mortality trends by age, sex, race and Hispanic origin, showing declines across all age groups in 2025. Compared to 2024, the first seven leading causes of death remained the same, but the last three were different, according to The Hill. In 2024, the leading causes of death also included nephritis, chronic liver disease and suicide.
How The Media Covered It: Media coverage across the political spectrum was largely similar, centering on the CDC's report that the US death rate reached a record low in 2025. CNN (Lean Left bias) emphasized the implications for life expectancy and broader public health trends, while the New York Post (Lean Right) focused more on declining overdose and COVID-19 deaths and the increase in influenza deaths.
Written by the AllSides staff (of humans). Learn more. Support our mission.
Featured Coverage of this Story
Tens of thousands of Americans dodged death last year, new data shows.
The US death rate has fallen to the lowest point on record ahead of America 250, as fatal overdoses and COVID fatalities continued to plunge.
The death rate fell 4.6% last year to 689.2 deaths per 100,000, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
New mortality data from the federal government suggests that life expectancy probably hit another record high in 2025, as death rates have continued to fall since the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
There were about 689 deaths for every 100,000 people in the US in 2025, according to a new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — the lowest rate recorded in more than a century of tracking. The age-adjusted rate has fallen 22% since 2021, landing about 4% lower than it was just before the...

(AP Photo/Ben Gray)
The U.S. death rate fell to a record low in 2025, according to provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released Thursday.
According to the Vital Statistics Rapid Release report, the death rate in 2025 was 689.2 per 100,000 people, representing a 4.6 percent drop from 2024 as well as the lowest recorded death rate in the country's history.
AllSides Picks
Blog
State Mandates Capping Insulin Costs: A Help or Hindrance?
The Alliance for Civic Engagement
June 15th, 2026
Red Blue Translator
Big Pharma
Red Blue Translator
Single Payer - Socialized Medicine
More News about Healthcare on AllSides
News from the Left
News from the Center
News from the Right
Just The News