Advertisement

Business

This North Texas city was just named the happiest in America

The analysis factored in depression rates, income growth, daily leisure time, divorce rates, hate crimes, weather and 26 other indicators of happiness.

The happiest city in America isn't in sunny, coastal California or even the cozy well-off suburbs of the Northeast but right here in North Texas, according to an analysis by WalletHub.

What exactly makes for a happy city?

To answer that, the folks at WalletHub tapped into findings of a relatively modern development in the psychological field called positive-psychology, or the scientific study of what makes life worth living.

Advertisement

The analysis factored in depression rates, income growth, daily leisure time, divorce rates, hate crimes, weather and 26 other indicators of happiness to determine which cities in the U.S. showed the strongest signs of measurable happiness.

Business Briefing

Become a business insider with the latest news.

Or with:

Topping the list is Plano.

Advertisement

WalletHub considers its study a reference for anyone looking to relocate in the U.S. A number of companies like Toyota, which moved its headquarters and thousands of employees from California to the Dallas suburb, have already noticed Plano's promise.

Plano posted consistently high scores for emotional and physical well-being, community and environment, and income and employment. Grand Prairie came in seventh, and Irving, Fort Worth, Garland and Arlington all scored in the top 50. Dallas finished 68th.

Austin, with its beautiful lakes and natural rolling hills, landed at 14th.

Advertisement

But a closer look at what critics say about positive-psychology could provide some relief to anyone dismayed by their hometown's ranking.

According to a paper published in the Society for Existential Analysis Journal, aspects of positive-psychology like the propensity to be upbeat and optimistic also can be correlated with a sense of disillusionment. Growing research shows that individuals with depressive tendencies may have a more accurate grasp on reality, according to the same paper.

Are residents in Plano, where divorce rates are low and incomes are high, really the happiest in the nation or is it all an illusion? Given recent research suggesting happiness is linked to a longer life, the big question for any would-be psychologists out there is: Does it matter?