Track Covid-19 in New York City, New York
Track Covid-19 in New York City
Daily Covid-19 admissions in the New York City area
Primary series vaccination rate
Bivalent booster rate
An updated vaccine is recommended for adults and most children. Statewide, 3% of vaccinations did not specify a home county.
Nearby hospitals
Share of I.C.U. beds occupiedAbout this data
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Notes: The hospitals map shows the average I.C.U. occupancy at nearby hospitals in the most recent week with data reported. The data is self-reported to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services by individual hospitals. It excludes counts from hospitals operated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Indian Health Service. Numbers for hospitalized patients are based on inpatient beds and include I.C.U. beds. Hospitalized Covid-19 patients include both confirmed and suspected Covid-19 patients. The C.D.C. stopped reporting data on cases in May 2023.Reported hospitalizations, deaths and other trends by county
This table is sorted by places with the most Covid hospital admissions per 100,000 residents in the last seven days. County-level hospitalization data is for all hospital service areas that intersect with a county. Because data on deaths is reported slowly, the table shows data from the most recent dates with meaningful figures. Charts show a 14-day change and each is on its own scale.
Recent weekly cases | Per 100,000 | 14-day change | Pos. Positivity | Hospital Admissions Daily Avg. | Per 100,000 | 14-day change | Weekly DeathsWeek of Dec. 31 to Jan. 6 | Per 100,000 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York CityNew York City | 1,909 | 22 | –5%
| 2.4% | 65 | 0.7 | –28%
| 59 | 0.7 |
Manhattan › | 419 | 25 | –14%
| 3.1% | 35 | 1.8 | –17%
| 8 | 0.5 |
Bronx › | 259 | 18 | –15%
| 2.0% | 42 | 1.3 | –26%
| 5 | 0.3 |
Staten Island › | 146 | 29 | +1%
| 3.5% | 6 | 1.2 | –38%
| 3 | 0.6 |
Queens › | 496 | 21 | –11%
| 3.0% | 46 | 1.1 | –19%
| 12 | 0.5 |
Brooklyn › | 589 | 22 | +13%
| 1.6% | 41 | 0.9 | –19%
| 15 | 0.5 |
About this data
Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Census Bureau (population and demographic data). Notes: Hospital admissions data for each county shows the average number of Covid-19 patients admitted within any hospital service areas that intersect with the county, and it is updated once a week. Recent trends data for deaths may be incomplete. All-time death figures show deaths with Covid-19 listed as the underlying cause on the death certificate from 2020 to present. Deaths in recent weeks may not be included due to lags in reporting. State-level data on deaths is updated more frequently than county-level data. The C.D.C. stopped reporting case data on May 11, 2023, so all-time cases includes data from 2020 until that date.How trends have changed in New York City
About this data
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Notes: Weekly county death data prior to Jan. 2021 was not reported by the C.D.C. and is sourced from reporting by The New York Times. Hospitalization data is a weekly average of Covid-19 patients in hospital service areas that intersect with New York City. Hospitalization numbers early in the pandemic are undercounts due to incomplete reporting by hospitals to the federal government.Vaccination rates by county
Uptake of the bivalent booster is low across most of the country, despite being the government’s recommended level of protection against the virus. Bivalent booster coverage is highest among seniors, one of the most vulnerable groups. County data does not include breakdowns for some age groups below. Statewide, 3% of vaccinations did not specify the person’s home county.
Completed primary series | Bivalent booster rate | Booster rates 5 to 11 | 12 to 17 | 18 to 64 | 65+ | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York CityNew York City | 84% | 16% | — | — | — | 32% |
Manhattan › | 93% | 28% | — | — | — | 50% |
Queens › | 91% | 14% | — | — | — | 31% |
Brooklyn › | 77% | 13% | — | — | — | 22% |
Staten Island › | 77% | 10% | — | — | — | 28% |
Bronx › | 78% | 10% | — | — | — | 28% |
About this data
Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Andrew A. Beveridge, Social Explorer (analysis of U.S. Census Bureau population and demographic data). Note: No C.D.C. data is available for some counties.Historical trends in New York City
The data in these charts has been archived and they are no longer being updated.
About this data
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The data in these charts has been archived and they are no longer being updated. Weekly county case data prior to Jan. 2021 was not reported by the C.D.C. and is sourced from reporting by The New York Times. The C.D.C. stopped reporting data on cases in May 2023. Test positivity data is based only on test results reported to the federal government and is a seven-day average.Credits
By Jon Huang, Samuel Jacoby, Jasmine C. Lee, John-Michael Murphy, Charlie Smart and Albert Sun. Additional reporting by Sarah Cahalan, Lisa Waananen Jones, Amy Schoenfeld Walker and Josh Williams. See a full list of contributors to The Times’s Covid-19 data reporting here.
About the data
Data on this page is reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Population and demographic data is from the U.S. Census Bureau. Hospitalization data is reported by individual hospitals to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and it includes confirmed and suspected adult and pediatric patients. The C.D.C. does not provide complete vaccinations data for some counties and caps its vaccination rate figures at 95 percent.
The C.D.C. may make historical updates as more data is reported.
The C.D.C. stopped reporting data on Covid cases in May 2023.
City-wide test positivity data is reported by the New York City Health Department. Test positivity data for individual boroughs is reported by the C.D.C.