June 18, 2026 – San Diego, CA – When it comes to San Diego County’s youth, there’s the good, the bad and the unequal. Persistent disparities continue to fall hardest on Black, Hispanic, LGBTQ+ and others furthest from opportunity. Plus, COVID-19 created educational and health gaps that have yet to fully close, says a new report today from the Policy & Innovation Center, San Diego’s nonprofit think tank. There are also bright spots that the region can work to maintain and increase, such as school enrollment, graduation rates and employment.
The Youth Well-being Report, the region’s most comprehensive to date, covers the state of the County’s youth ages 0-24, and tracks where San Diego is making progress and where it’s falling short. Funded by San Diego Foundation, Prebys Foundation and the City of San Diego Office of Child and Youth Success, the report tracks educational access, economic stability, physical and mental health, victimization and risky behaviors among San Diego County’s nearly 1 million youth over the last 18 years.
An interactive web platform and actionable, evidence-backed policy recommendations accompany the report to provide the tools to act on what the data shows.
The data shows urgent disparities among local youth and some progress, drawing the most recent available data from 2005 to 2023:
- More than 1 in 5 San Diego Unified high school students reported suicidal ideation, and 1 in 10 reported having attempted suicide (2023).
- San Diego County’s unhoused student population surpassed 21,000 in 2023.
- Sexual dating violence among San Diego Unified high school students rose from 10% in 2013 to 15% in 2023 – higher than the national average.
- More than 95% of San Diego County high school students graduated in 2023, yet Black and Hispanic students remained far more likely to attend high-poverty schools than their White peers.
- Preschool enrollment has been stable, ranging from 45% to 55% since 2005, and racial group disparities have narrowed over time.
- Frequent cigarette use has all but stopped, going from 4% in 2005 to 0.5% in 2021.
“This isn’t the final word on the state of youth in San Diego; it’s the beginning,” said Alicia L. Jurek, PIC’s director of research and lead report author. “As more data is released, we can keep the report and interactive data platform updated so people can respond to San Diegans’ needs. We can also add greater depth to the report, such as breaking down the information geographically and analyzing more nutrition indicators such as hydration and healthy food intake.”
The report’s findings are broken down by race, sex, age, disability, immigration status and sexual orientation, showing that many of the challenges our youth face are concentrated in certain areas, such as relatively lower academic performance among boys and lower mental health among girls. The data is benchmarked against county, state, and national figures to show how San Diego youth compare with their peers across California and the nation.
“The findings in this report remind us that youth well-being does not happen in isolation or happenstance – it is shaped by the systems, conditions, and opportunities we create together as a community,” said Dr. Novien Yarber, Senior Learning Officer at the Prebys Foundation. “We see this report as a catalyst for a data-informed regional conversation and a call to ensure every young person in San Diego has equitable access to the education, workforce pathways and support they need to thrive.”
“Education, health and economic opportunity are deeply connected to youth success. This report helps us better understand the experiences of young people across our region and reminds us that supporting youth requires all of us working together,” said Dean Gerdeman, Assistant Director of Education Initiatives at San Diego Foundation. “Behind every data point is a young person with goals, talents and aspirations, and continued investment in their success is an investment in San Diego’s future.”
“The data uncovered in the Youth Well-being Report helps the City of San Diego better identify and understand where our young people need us the most,” said Program Coordinator for the Office of Child and Youth Success Tara Ryan. “This report, and especially the dashboard, will help us make decisions that impact young San Diegans today and for generations, by focusing on increasing equity, access and efficiency across our communities.”
This report gives policymakers, educators, funders and service providers a critical tool to make data-informed decisions, target resources, support grant applications and respond to the community’s most pressing needs.
To read the report and check out the interactive dashboard, visit thinkpic.org/youth-wellbeing.
About Policy & Innovation Center
The Policy & Innovation Center (PIC) is a think tank and social-impact incubator. PIC conducts research and policy analysis to identify creative solutions to our communities’ biggest problems, and builds cross-sector, multijurisdictional partnerships to advance those solutions. Founding partners include the Brookings Institution, County of San Diego, and San Diego Foundation. For more information, visit ThinkPIC.org.
About San Diego Foundation
San Diego Foundation believes in just, equitable and resilient communities where every San Diegan can prosper, thrive and feel like they belong. We partner with donors, nonprofits and regional leaders to co-create solutions that respond to community needs and strengthen San Diego. Since our founding in 1975, our community foundation has granted $2 billion to nonprofits to improve quality of life in San Diego County and beyond.
About Prebys Foundation
Prebys Foundation is a private foundation based in San Diego County dedicated to building a more vibrant, equitable, and resilient region. Through investments in arts and culture, medical research, youth success, and health and well-being, the foundation partners with organizations and leaders across San Diego County to help communities thrive. Learn more at prebysfdn.org.
About City of San Diego Office of Child and Youth Success
The Office of Child and Youth Success (OCYS) is dedicated to prioritizing San Diego’s youngest residents to thrive. OCYS works to expand access to resources and high-quality programs, strengthen systems and partnerships, create space and opportunity for youth voice, and prioritize young people in City planning and policymaking. For more information, visit www.sandiego.gov/child-youth-success.
Media Contacts
Olivia Stafford/ Sandy Young, J. Walcher Communications
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