U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Skip Header
Search data, events, resources, and more

American Community Survey 5-Year Data 2022

Variable Changes

Variables, and the values they represent, may change over time. Use this 2022 5YR API Changes document as a guide for which variables have changed from the prior year for 2022 ACS 5-Year Detailed Tables, Data Profiles and Subject Tables. See below for a description of each change type.

  • No Change - The variable has not changed from the prior year (most variables).
  • Updated - That variable has changed from the prior year and a matching variable for the current year has been found.
  • No Match - The variable has changed from the prior year and no matching or comparable variable has been found.

For table changes, check the ACS product changes webpage for source table changes.

Label Changes to 2022 ACS 5-Year Geographies

With the 2022 ACS 5-Year data now available, please note that there are label changes to some geographies found in the 2022 5-Year ACS API.  While there are no underlying changes to how these geographies are defined, the change in the label does impact the syntax of the geography portion of the API queries, meaning that queries using these geographies from the 2020 5-Year ACS or earlier will not work.  If you use any of these geographies in your queries, please be sure to update the geographic syntax prior to retrieving data from the 2022 5-Year ACS API.

The impacted geographies are: CLICK HERE.

Geography Note

The 2018-2022 ACS 5-year data products that report data related to Congressional Districts are based on the 118th Congress. The Census Bureau does not collect congressional district boundaries from the states during the congressional session that aligns with the decennial census. Additional explanation can be found in our geographic user note.

Annotation Variables

In September 2016, ACS released annotation variables that return character representations of each estimate. Many annotations return as null. However, if an annotation variable returns a value, it provides important information about the estimate or margin of error. For example, if an estimate variable (variable ending in “E”) returns “-888888888”, the annotation variable will return “(X)”. Looking at the Notes on ACS Estimates and Annotation Values, this means the estimate is not applicable or not available. For a complete list of return values and their annotations, see Notes on ACS Estimates and Annotation Values.

Page Last Revised - February 6, 2024
Is this page helpful?
Thumbs Up Image Yes Thumbs Down Image No
NO THANKS
255 characters maximum 255 characters maximum reached
Thank you for your feedback.
Comments or suggestions?

Top

Back to Header