At a Glance
- Major Gender Shift: Men are significantly outpacing women in church attendance since the pandemic, reversing a long-standing trend in Barna’s decades of tracking. The 2025 gender gap is the largest recorded so far (43% for men vs. 36% among women).
- Married Dads Show Up; Moms Step Back: Among parents of kids under 18, married dads have the highest show-up rate at church compared to all other parents. Only 1 in 4 single moms (24%) attend church weekly—significantly trailing other married moms and dads.
- Why It Matters: These shifts reveal new patterns of participation and disengagement among key groups that may reshape the fabric of church life in the years to come.
- Leadership Consideration: How will churches adapt to support the growing faith engagement of young men—and the growing disengagement of women, particularly single mothers? How can leaders assess what people are experiencing inside the church that shapes whether they return?
For decades, women have outnumbered men in church attendance and have often led the way in spiritual participation. But a significant shift is occurring in American Christianity that demands attention: Women—particularly younger women—are attending church less frequently than men. This reversal isn’t just a numerical milestone; it signals a broader cultural and spiritual turning point.
While men traditionally have been less likely to participate in church life, the current data, released as part of Barna’s ongoing State of the Church initiative with Gloo, tells a different story—one that points both to signs of renewal in the Church and to specific, concerning areas of decline.
This article explores the generational and gender dynamics now reshaping American church attendance. As women’s engagement patterns change, the effects on church communities, leadership, and culture are likely to be profound. These are trends the Church can’t afford to overlook.
1. A Dramatic Reversal in Attendance
Men and women’s church attendance trends have crossed over time. In the early 2000s, women were more regular attenders than men by a wide margin. Over the years, however, women’s attendance steadily declined, while men’s remained more stable. In other words, churches are losing women more than they are gaining men, with the exception of 2025 when male attendance spiked upward.
As of 2025, 43 percent of men and 36 percent of women report attending church regularly, based on reported weekly attendance. In five of the last six years, men have outpaced women in this key measure of religious engagement, and the 2025 gap is the largest measured.
2. Young Men Lead the Shift
Looking at gender and age over the last 15 years, we discovered a few illuminating trends.
- Regular church attendance is on the rise for all young adults. Since 2019 both Gen Z and Millennials were the least likely generation to frequently attend church. Today, they are the most engaged.
- Though there’s a slight uptick in attendance among older generations, their weekly attendance, especially for women, lags far below younger adults. When seen with 15 years of perspective, it’s clear that the Boomer generation overall is slowing down their church engagement, most significantly among older women.
- Across every generation, women are trailing men in weekly church attendance, especially among Gen X and Millennials.
What’s Driving the Shift?
The reasons behind the shift in women’s church attendance are complex and layered. Experts point to a convergence of factors affecting Gen Z women:
- Increased burdens of work and caregiving: Many young women are juggling careers, side gigs, and unpaid domestic responsibilities—all while earning less than their male peers. Instead of being a place of sanctuary and spiritual renewal, church often adds to the already full plate of demands on women’s lives.
- Changing social dynamics: With more women delaying marriage or remaining single, they often feel isolated in congregations that cater to nuclear families. (Learn more about the latest marriage, family and relationship trends in The State of Today’s Family, Barna’s upcoming study produced in partnership with Gloo and a network of trusted partners of the Flourishing Families Initiative.)
- Cultural mismatch: Some researchers suggest the decline in women’s church attendance may stem from a growing disconnect between traditional, hierarchical church structures and the values of younger women—many of whom now identify as liberal politically. In a culture that increasingly affirms women’s leadership and agency, churches that limit women’s roles may feel out of step, leaving gifted women feeling sidelined.
- Church culture and leadership failures: High-profile scandals involving male church leaders, along with toxic teaching and exclusionary practices, have eroded trust—especially among women. “When women see repeated examples of moral failure, abuse, or hypocrisy in church leadership, it deepens their disillusionment,” says David Kinnaman, CEO of Barna Group.

 
                                    