Eviction Risk in El Camino , Pueblo
1 census tracts · pop 3,061 · pop-weighted composite 5.7/10 · range 5.7–5.7
El Camino is a white-hispanic neighborhood in Pueblo with 1 census tract and a population of 3,061 residents. The neighborhood's pop-weighted eviction-risk score of 5.7/10 (Moderate tier) blends state law, county-level filing rates, parent-city politics, and tract-specific rent burden + poverty. 72% of renters here pay at least 30% of household income on rent, and 72% are severely cost-burdened (≥50% of income).
El Camino vs. parent city, state, and U.S.
Composite landlord eviction-risk score (0–10 scale).
Neighborhoods with similar eviction risk
Same county, closest by composite score.
El Camino vs Pueblo
How this neighborhood stacks against the citywide average.
Racial & ethnic composition
White-Hispanic Neighborhood — 3,087 residents across all tracts in El Camino. Source: ACS 5-year 2023 (B03002).
- Hispanic / Latino 42.9%
- White (non-Hispanic) 52%
- Black (non-Hispanic) 3.2%
- Asian (non-Hispanic) 0.3%
- Other / Multiracial 1.6%
1 tracts in El Camino
Ranked highest-risk first. Click for per-tract detail.
| Tract | Score | Pop | Rent burden | Median rent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 08101002808 | 5.7 | 3,061 | 72% | — |
CDC SVI percentile: 12
Pop-weighted across 1 tracts. Higher = more vulnerable to disaster, displacement, and rent shocks. Source: CDC/ATSDR SVI 2022.
About El Camino
What is the eviction-risk score for El Camino?
El Camino scores 5.7/10 (Moderate tier) across 1 census tracts. The pop-weighted composite blends state law, county filing rates, parent-city politics, and tract-specific rent burden and poverty signals.
How does El Camino compare to Pueblo overall?
El Camino scores 0.3 points higher than Pueblo overall (5.4/10). Rent burden: 72% vs 32% citywide.
What percentage of El Camino residents are renters?
3% of El Camino households are renter-occupied (vs 39% in Pueblo). The neighborhood has 3,061 residents.
Is El Camino a high social-vulnerability area?
El Camino sits in the 12th percentile nationally on the CDC Social Vulnerability Index (low vulnerability). The index combines poverty, unemployment, household composition, racial/ethnic minority share, and housing/transportation factors across all US census tracts.