About 1.6 million people in the United States are transgender, and 43% of them are young adults or teenagers, according to a new report providing the most recent national estimates of this population.
The analysis, relying on government health surveys conducted from 2017 to 2020, estimated that 1.4% of 13- to 17-year-olds and 1.3% of 18- to 24-year-olds were transgender, compared with about 0.5% of all adults.
Those figures revealed a significant rise among younger people: The estimate of transgender people 13 to 25 nearly doubled since the researchers' previous report, published in 2017, though the reports used different methods.
The data point to a stark generational shift. Young people increasingly have the language and social acceptance to explore their gender identities, experts said, whereas older adults may feel more constrained. But the numbers, which vary widely from state to state, also raise questions about the role of peer influence or the political climate of the community.
"It's developmentally appropriate for teenagers to explore all facets of their identity; that is what teenagers do," said Dr. Angela Goepferd, medical director of the Gender Health Program at Children's Minnesota hospital, who was not involved in the new analysis. "And, generationally, gender has become a part of someone's identity that is more socially acceptable to explore."
Goepferd, who is nonbinary, noted that many teenagers would not necessarily want or need medications or surgeries to transition to another gender, as was typical of older generations.
The surveys, created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, did not ask younger teenagers about nonbinary or other gender identities, which also have been rising in recent years. But nearly one-quarter of the adults in the surveys who said they were transgender identified as "gender nonconforming," meaning they did not identify as a transgender man or woman.
"We as a culture just need to lean into the fact that there is gender diversity among us," Goepferd said. "And that it doesn't mean that we need to treat it medically in all cases, but it does mean that we as a society need to make space for that."