This is a new area of study, and there aren't many statistics available yet.
For transgender people
As 2016 there is a report (Gates, 2016) that finds the number to be 0.6% of the population, double the 2011 number, representing 1.4 million Americans. This number will necessarily be quite low because many trans people will decline to be surveyed, many are not yet self-identified for a variety of reasons, and the Williams Institute only looked at adults 18 and over.
The apparent population doubling seen from the 2011 to the 2016 report is likely due to increased awareness amongst the trans population and improved survey techniques. (As a measure of the former, applications to gender clinics have been roughly doubling, year over year (Lyons, 2016), for several years now. Transgender medical services in many countries are increasingly swamped.)
It seems quite likely that we’ll see another big jump in the estimated population with the next report.
For Genderqueer people
There aren't any large scale studies yet. But according to Huffington Post, there was a study called "The National Transgender Discrimination Survey (NTDS)" which was a joint project of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the National Center for Transgender Equality, provided the opportunity for survey participants to identify their gender as “male,†“female,†“part time as one gender, part time as another,†or “a gender not listed here.â€
Most survey participants identified as “male†or “female,†but over 800 (13 percent) selected “a gender not listed here†and chose to write in their own gender. “Hybrid,†“either/or,†“both/and,†and “mosaic†are just a few of the ways these genderqueer participants described their gender.
I heard that it's about 1/10,000 for mtf and 1/30,000 for ftm.
0.6%
0.3%
As of 2020, Latinos make up approximately 18% of the total U.S. population. This makes Latinos the largest ethnic minority group in the country.
As of 2021, the percentage of white individuals in the US prison population is around 30%.
Alaska has the smallest population, so it also has the fewest transgender people.
Approximately 1-2% of the population in the United States are redheads. This percentage may vary slightly depending on the source of the data.
20%
It is difficult to determine an exact percentage as the definition of "celebrity" can vary, but a very small fraction of the US population is considered to be celebrities. The vast majority of the population are not public figures or well-known in the media.
2%
1.22% of the total US population lives in Oregon.
4.06% of the total US population lives in Pennsylvania.
2.15% of the total US population lives in Washington.
2.03% of the total US population lives in Tennessee.
1.53% of the total US population lives in Alabama.