Fall River, MA vs Quincy, MA
Side-by-side fiscal comparison · U.S. Census Bureau data (2023)
Quincy, MA and Fall River, MA spend within 14.6% of each other per resident — $47,287 versus $41,251 — so on the headline spending-per-capita measure the two cities are effectively neck and neck.
Quincy, MA edges Fall River, MA on the Fiscal Health Score by 2 points — 43/100 (grade D) to 41/100 (grade D). At a margin this narrow the grade is close enough that the factor-level detail matters more than the composite.
On debt, Fall River, MA carries the lighter load at $585 per resident versus $1,638 for Quincy, MA. Both cities pour the most per-resident dollars into the same function: education leads in Fall River, MA at $28,175 per resident and in Quincy, MA at $21,538.
On the revenue side both lean hardest on intergovernmental transfers — 15% of total revenue in Fall River, MA and 18% in Quincy, MA.
Summary
Quincy spends 12.8% more per capita than Fall River ($6,036/person difference). Quincy, MA has the stronger Fiscal Health Score (D, 43/100).
Fiscal Health Score
Key Metrics
Per Capita Spending by Department
Revenue Breakdown (Per Capita)
| Sales Tax | $165 | $100 |
| Intergovernmental | $5,430 | $15,074 |
| Charges & Fees | $1,459 | $2,340 |
| Other | $4,494 | $3,310 |
Spending Breakdown (Per Capita)
| Fire Protection | $265 | $464 |
| Highways & Roads | $0 | $774 |
| Education | $28,175 | $21,538 |
| Public Welfare | $581 | $778 |
| Health | $178 | $374 |
| Hospitals | $602 | $1,076 |
| Parks & Recreation | $211 | $661 |
| Housing | $2,452 | $3,703 |
| Sewerage | $127 | $587 |
| Utilities | $1,773 | $2,689 |
| Other | $6,887 | $14,644 |
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Source: Census Annual Survey of State and Local Government Finances, 2026.