29 percent of people 25 or older have an associate’s degree or higher in Norwich city

29 percent of people 25 or older have an associate’s degree or higher in Norwich city
0Comments

29 percent of people 25 years or older had an associate’s degree or higher in Norwich city in 2020, according to data obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau.

This was 18.8 percent lower than the state average of 47.8 percent. In 2020 the total municipality population reached 39,112.

88.7 percent of the population had at least a high school diploma or the equivalent.

Degree distribution in Norwich city for 2020*
Degree Number of people Percentage of population
No degree 3,140 11.3
Regular high school diploma 8,422 30.3
GED or alternative credential 1,985 7.2
Some college, less than 1 year 2,294 8.3
Some college, 1 or more years, no degree 3,853 13.9
Associate’s degree 2,113 7.6
Bachelor’s degree 3,552 12.8
Master’s degree 1,746 6.3
Professional school degree 520 1.9
Doctorate degree 128 0.5

*All data is for residents who were at least 25 years old in 2020.



Related

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney Serving Connecticut%27s 2nd District - Official U.S. House headshot

Rep. Joe Courtney addresses AUKUS review, Epstein files vote, and health care concerns

Rep. Joe Courtney used his official social media accounts on September 1-2, 2025 to discuss national security reviews concerning AUKUS, call for a vote on releasing Epstein investigation files, and highlight constituent concerns over health care…

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney Serving Connecticut%27s 2nd District - Official U.S. House headshot

Rep. Joe Courtney urges action on tariffs and workforce funding

U.S. Congressman Rep. Joe Courtney commented on recent tariff rulings, federal workforce program funding, and local manufacturing success through a series of posts between August 30 and September 1, 2025.

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney Serving Connecticut%27s 2nd District - Official U.S. House headshot

Rep. Joe Courtney criticizes Trump administration over Revolution Wind project halt

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney used social media between August 23-25, 2025 to criticize an order by the Trump Administration halting work on the Revolution Wind project due to national security concerns and also highlighted a local art initiative in Vernon.