
By: Dennis Richmond, Jr.
For most of American history, women were told their future depended on men — a husband, a father, a boss, or a provider. In 2026, that idea is down the drain. Across America, women are graduating from college in record high numbers, earning their own money, buying their own homes, and building lives that no longer require male permission. From New York to Alabama, from Black women to white women, from Christian churches to Muslim mosques, the message is becoming clear: women don’t need men the way they once did — and everyone knows it.
According to data from the Pew Research Center, women now earn more college degrees than men at every level of higher education in the United States. Based on recent national education statistics, nearly half of women ages 25 to 34 have a bachelor’s degree, compared with roughly one-third of men in the same age group. Researchers also report that women have earned most bachelor’s degrees in America for more than 40 years, and the gap continues to grow.
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, women make up most students on college campuses across the country, with millions more women enrolled than men. Based on enrollment trends over the last decade, this difference is expected to continue, meaning the next generation of professionals — teachers, doctors, lawyers, journalists, scientists, and business leaders — will include more women than ever before.
Education has led to massive independence, and independence has changed the way women live. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, more women than ever are living alone, delaying marriage, or choosing not to marry at all. In large cities like New York as well as smaller towns across the South, women are building careers first and deciding later whether they even want a partner. Based on labor statistics, women now make up nearly half of the American workforce and are present in almost every profession, from medicine and law to construction, politics, and technology.
This change crosses race, religion, and region. According to federal education reports, Black women are among the most educated groups in the United States. Based on college completion data, Asian American women and white women graduate at very high rates, while Latina women have also increased college attendance dramatically over the past two decades. In churches, mosques, and community centers across the country, women are working, studying, leading, and supporting themselves in ways that were rare just a generation ago.
But independence does not mean life is easier. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, women still earn less money on average than men.
For some folks the “women don’t need men,” reality is major progress. For others, it is confusing, stressful, and really frightening. Family dynamics, dating, and expectations are changing.
But one fact is clear. Women are winning in America.
Dennis Richmond, Jr. (@NewYorkStakz) is a journalist, historian, and educator from Yonkers, NY. He writes to uplift unheard voices, honor history, and inspire change.



