You would think that with all of the luxuries afforded by Massachusetts, whether an unparalleled education or a job at a growing startup, residents would be more willing to donate time and money to charity. A new poll from Gallup alludes that the Commonwealth is the 26th most charitable (or perhaps, 24th least charitable) state in the country.

Gallup conducted a survey of 600 random adults in each of the 50 states between June and December 2013. They asked every participant if they had personally donated money to charity or volunteered time working for an organization in the previous month. In the Bay State, 66 percent responded in the affirmative to monetary donations, 38 percent to volunteered time and a paltry 32 percent to both.

The most philanthropic state according to this poll is Utah, followed by Minnesota, Hawaii, South Dakota and our neighbors to the north, New Hampshire. Forty-eight percent of Utah residents donated both money and time in the past month. Of the participants from the Granite State, 70 percent donated money, 41 percent time and 38 percent both.

The least giving states are Nevada and Kentucky, where just 24 percent of participants donated both time and money; New York, Mississippi and Arizona, 26 percent to both; Arkansas, North Carolina and West Virginia, 28 percent; and our sibling to the south, Rhode Island, with 29 percent.

Gallup found a strong correlation between states with positive well-beings and tendency to donate to charity. Interestingly, the small Cape Cod city of Barnstable appeared often in terms of communities with high marks for wellness – like low levels of obesity and high marks for community satisfaction.

It’s not all bad news though, Bay Staters. As Gallup writes, “Americans as a whole do show impressive figures for their acts of kindness compared with the rest of the world.”