Millennials are the most popular and the most picked on generation.

Born between 1981 and 1996, they represent the largest living generational category. The Pew Research Center has depicted millennials as educated, socially conscious, technologically savvy, health conscious, hardworking and entitled.

They are not afraid to question authority. They have delayed marriage or never married. And they have put off having children, studies have concluded. A 2018 study by Brookings noted that they are also the most diverse adult generation in American history.

Because they were hammered by the Great Recession, millennials are reluctant to buy homes and therefore more likely to move in with their parents and stay awhile, research says.

Brookings found fewer millennials as a percentage of the overall population in Florida cities such as Tampa and Miami. In the Northeast, there are fewer millennials in cities such as Pittsburgh. In the Midwest, there are fewer in Cleveland and Detroit. But are these really bad places for them?

To find out, WalletHub compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia according to five key aspects: a city’s affordability, its education and health, its quality of life, its economic health and its civic engagement. The study used 34 key metrics, ranging from share of millennials to millennial population growth to average monthly earnings for millennials to the millennial unemployment rate to millennials’ voter turnout rate.

Each of the metrics was graded on a 100-point scale, with a score of 100 representing the most favorable conditions for millennials. WalletHub then determined each state’s (and D.C.’s) weighted average across all metrics to calculate its overall score and used the resulting scores to rank-order its sample.

The following are WalletHub’s worst states for millennials, with No. 1 being the worst:

10. Kentucky
The state had an overall score of 41.94. It ranked 10th for affordability, 39th in education & health, 45th for quality of life, 36th for economic health and 44th for civic engagement.