County Profile

The Runway Lenoir County, North Carolina

A $400 million Navy facility and 3.5% unemployment exist five miles from the most distressed census tract in North Carolina.

The airstrip at Global TransPark near Kinston, North Carolina. A $400 million facility on the coastal plain.
The runway at Global TransPark, Kinston. Four hundred million dollars of investment, five miles from the most distressed census tract in North Carolina. North Carolina Department of Transportation / CC BY 2.0
Serious 68.2 · Lenoir County, North Carolina · 54,895 people · 17th most distressed in North Carolina

Behind on your mortgage or facing eviction? Take a 2-minute assessment to see your options.

In June 2024, the U.S. Navy broke ground on a 700,000-square-foot aircraft maintenance complex at the North Carolina Global TransPark in Kinston. Four hundred million dollars. Four hundred and forty-four new jobs. C-130 transport planes arriving for depot-level overhaul by end of fiscal year 2026.

Five miles north, in East Kinston, a UNC School of Government study identified the most severely distressed census tract in North Carolina. Poverty rate near 29%. No public transit connects the two.

That distance is what the data here measures. Not whether investment is arriving. It is. Whether the people who’ve lived through the last thirty years of Lenoir County can reach it.

Every economy in Lenoir County has been physical. Tobacco defined the place for a century. Then DuPont opened the world’s first commercial polyester plant here in 1953, invested $40 million, added 5,000 people to Kinston’s population, and peaked at 3,600 employees by 1975. The plant still operates. It makes Sorona fiber now, not Dacron. By 2004, the workforce was 33.

The sequence from there reads like a controlled demolition. Tobacco quota reductions in the mid-1990s cut 35% of the quota before the storms even arrived. Eight thousand manufacturing and tobacco jobs disappeared in less than a decade. Then Hurricane Floyd hit in September 1999, the deadliest North Carolina hurricane of the twentieth century. Water rose 27 feet in Kinston. In Lincoln City, the historically Black neighborhood along the Neuse River, the flood destroyed 800 homes.

What happened next is the part that compounds everything that follows. FEMA offered buyouts. Ninety-seven percent of residents accepted. Four hundred and twenty homes demolished. The land cleared. But Lincoln City wasn’t just structures. It was a network. Shared rides to work. Cooperative childcare. Neighbors who’d been there for generations. That infrastructure didn’t relocate. It dissolved.

Then Hurricane Matthew in 2016, then Florence in 2018. The fourth major flood in twenty-one years, each one stacking physical and financial damage on top of the last.

The concept that organizes all of Lenoir County’s data is the runway. The Global TransPark has an 11,500-foot one, long enough to land a C-130. The county is building an economic runway. The question is who can get to it.

Unemployment in Lenoir County is 3.5%. Average weekly wages run $963, which puts annual earnings around $50,000. Business applications surged 67.5% between 2019 and 2024. By the conventional indicators, the labor market is working.

But 39.4% of residents have debt in collections. The poverty rate is 23.1%. Nearly one in three children lives below the poverty line. The median household income of $51,601 is 85.6% of the North Carolina median.

People are employed. They’re still broke. The Economic Policy Institute identified Lenoir County as the most unequal in North Carolina. The top 1% earns an average of $677,422. The bottom 99% earns $28,782. A ratio of 23.5 to 1.

The Global TransPark’s on-site employees average $75,000 a year. The county average is $50,091. Same runway, two economies.

The disability rate is the number that stopped me. Twenty-three percent. Nearly one in four people in Lenoir County has a disability. That’s the 93rd percentile nationally.

This is the legacy of a physical labor economy. Tobacco farming. Poultry processing. Manufacturing floors. Decades of work that breaks bodies. And when bodies break, the medical system converts the damage into debt. Medical debt in collections runs 13.9%, worse than 97% of U.S. counties. The NC Justice Center reported that Lenoir County ranked among the top counties nationally for medical debt burden.

Then there’s SNAP participation at 25.9%. Uninsured at 10.2%.

The bankruptcy filings tell you what people do when the debt becomes unmanageable. Lenoir County had 56 filings in 2025, a rate of 102 per 100,000. That’s a modest number. What’s not modest is the composition. Forty-nine of those 56 filings — 87.5% — were Chapter 13. That’s the bankruptcy where you get to keep your house.

People aren’t liquidating. They’re restructuring. Using the bankruptcy court as a way to hold onto what they have while the debt gets reorganized. In a county where homeownership runs 59.3% and the median home is worth around $190,000, the house is the only asset worth protecting.

The thing about Lenoir County is that the counterforce is real. It’s not a press release or a political promise. The Navy is actually building that 700,000-square-foot facility. Electrolux announced a $23.7 million expansion in October 2025, adding 74 jobs at its dishwasher plant. West Pharmaceutical Services invested $70 million, adding 70 jobs. Lenoir Community College is building a $25 million Aviation Center of Excellence at the TransPark to train the workforce these employers need. The Interstate 42 designation will eventually connect Kinston to the I-40 corridor.

And then there’s what Kinston produces that has nothing to do with aircraft maintenance. Maceo Parker was born here. The founding fathers of James Brown’s band came out of these tobacco warehouses. Vivian Howard opened Chef & The Farmer in a former mule stable downtown and won a Peabody, a Daytime Emmy, and a James Beard Award. A 12-block arts district has 50 homes for artists. Chris Suggs became the youngest elected official in North Carolina history at 21.

The investment is arriving. The culture is alive. The runway is long enough. Whether 55,000 people — a quarter of them disabled, a third of them with debt in collections, most of them without a bachelor’s degree — can get from where they are to where the jobs are is the open question.

Lenoir County scores 68.2 on the County Distress Index. Serious zone. Seventeenth most distressed in North Carolina out of 100 counties. North Carolina’s Department of Commerce classifies it Tier 1, the most economically distressed designation. Every neighboring county — Greene, Wayne, Duplin, Jones, Pitt, Craven — scores Elevated or Serious. This is eastern North Carolina.

The primary driver is Income & Poverty at 89.7. Worse than roughly nine in ten U.S. counties. Debt & Delinquency runs 82.8. Community Vulnerability scores 79.4. Employment & Wages, at 34.0, is the one domain below the national median. People are working.

The indicators to watch are the gap between Employment & Wages and Income & Poverty. If the TransPark jobs, the Electrolux expansion, the aviation training pipeline, and the Interstate 42 connection translate into broadly distributed income gains, that poverty rate moves. If the gains concentrate at the top of the income distribution — as the 23.5-to-1 ratio suggests they’ve been doing — Lenoir County keeps building a runway that most of its residents watch from five miles away.

The Numbers Behind the Score

The CDI measures five domains of financial distress. Lenoir County’s primary drivers are Income & Poverty and Debt & Delinquency — both in the top 11% nationally. Employment & Wages scores below the median, which is the structural paradox.

Income & Poverty Primary driver 89.7
Poverty Rate 93
Income vs. State Median 83
Child Poverty Rate 93
Debt & Delinquency 82.8
Debt in Collections 93
Medical Debt 97
Student Loan Delinquency 96
Auto Loan Delinquency 79
Credit Card Delinquency 95
Bankruptcy Filing Rate 37
Community Vulnerability 79.4
Uninsured Rate 66
Disability Rate 93
Housing Cost Burden 55.0
Rent-Burdened (30%+) 50
Severely Rent-Burdened (50%+) 47
Mortgage-Burdened (30%+) 30
Homeownership Rate 94
Rent-to-Income Ratio 54
Employment & Wages 34.0
Unemployment Rate 41
Wage-to-Rent Ratio 23
Business Formation Rate 38

Scores are percentile-based: 50 = national median, higher = more distressed. The median line is shown on each bar.

Neighbors and Peers

Every county bordering Lenoir scores Elevated or Serious. Greene County, directly to the north, scores worse. Its population peers span Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Nevada.

Neighboring Counties

County Score Zone vs. Lenoir County
Lenoir County, NC 68.2 Serious
Greene County, NC 70.9 Serious +2.7
Wayne County, NC 66.9 Serious -1.3
Duplin County, NC 66.8 Serious -1.4
Jones County, NC 64.9 Elevated -3.3
Pitt County, NC 62.5 Elevated -5.7
Craven County, NC 57.2 Elevated -11.0

Population Peers

County Score Zone vs. Lenoir County
Lamar County, TX 68.2 Serious -0.0
Wilson County, NC 68.3 Serious +0.0
Mohave County, AZ 68.3 Serious +0.1
Floyd County, GA 68.4 Serious +0.2
Tangipahoa Parish, LA 68.5 Serious +0.3

Key Metrics

For researchers and journalists. All data from the County Distress Index unless noted.

Metric Value Source
County Distress Index score 68.2 / 100 (Serious) CDI
Income & Poverty domain 89.7 / 100 (primary driver) CDI
Debt & Delinquency domain 82.8 / 100 CDI
Community Vulnerability domain 79.4 / 100 CDI
Employment & Wages domain 34.0 / 100 (below median) CDI
Debt in collections rate 39.4% Urban Institute
Median household income $51,601 (85.6% of NC median) Census SAIPE 2023
Poverty rate 23.1% (child: 32.0%) Census SAIPE 2023
Disability rate 23.0% ACS 2023
Unemployment rate 3.5% BLS LAUS 2025
Average annual pay $50,091 BLS QCEW
TransPark avg salary $75,000 NC Aviation Report 2025
Chapter 13 share of bankruptcies 87.5% (49 of 56) US Courts 2025
SNAP participation 25.9% ACS 2023
Population trend 54,895 (down 6.4% since 2010) Census

Suggested citations:

“Lenoir County’s Employment & Wages domain scores 34.0 — well below the national median — while its Income & Poverty domain scores 89.7, worse than roughly nine in ten U.S. counties. The county has 3.5% unemployment and 39.4% of residents with debt in collections — a gap that reveals how employment alone fails to resolve structural distress.” — American Default Research, 2026.

“With 87.5% of bankruptcy filings under Chapter 13 — the chapter that allows filers to keep their homes — Lenoir County residents are using the courts to hold onto assets while managing debt accumulated from decades of physical labor, medical costs, and repeated natural disasters.” — American Default Research, 2026.

Download Data

Export all distress indicators for Lenoir County as a CSV file.

Find Help in Lenoir County

Find an Attorney

North Carolina State Bar Lawyer Referral Service offers a lawyer referral service for bankruptcy, foreclosure defense, and consumer rights.

Free Legal Aid

Legal aid organizations serving Lenoir County residents at no cost.

Self-Help Resources

NC Courts Self-Help Resources — Foreclosure Official NC court system resources for foreclosure proceedings and borrower rights
NCHFA Homeowner Resources Assistance programs, counselor referrals, and HAF information

American Default Research does not endorse, rate, or rank any provider. Verify attorney credentials with your state bar.