Reading a headline such as “If You Don’t Make $100K, You Can’t Afford the Median Rent in Boston” could potentially raise one’s eyebrows; what it costs to live in the Boston area is, for some, absurd. For others, millionaires specifically, $100,000 rent is quite affordable.

Massachusetts has a lot of those – millionaires. (Well, millionaire households, that is.)

According to a new report from Phoenix Marketing International, the Commonwealth ranks among the top 10 states in the country for millionaires per capita. In fact, three New England states cracked the top ten in PMI’s report – Connecticut and New Hampshire being the other two to join the Bay State.

With 6.66 percent of its households found to have $1 million or more in total assets, Massachusetts came in 7th, edging its northern neighbor, New Hampshire, which ranked 8th with 6.65 percent of its households considered millionaires. Connecticut, surely aided by its small geographic size and its close proximity to New York City, ranked 2nd on the list, with 7.23 percent of its households having more than a million dollars in assets.

PMI used trend data from online interviews with more than 10,000 investors to put together its top 10 ranking. The data was then weighed according to overall household populations. Based on the data, Massachusetts has a total of 174,114 millionaire households out of a total of 2,612,989 households. Connecticut has 99,966 millionaire households but only half as many of the total number of households – 1,382,026 – that the Commonwealth has.

Here’s the full ranking all, including all 50 states and Washington D.C.