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Here's how each US state's population changed between 2016 and 2017 because of people moving in and out

Jan 12, 2018, 16:38 IST

Workers with Johnson and Daly Moving and Storage move a piece of furniture into a truck while moving a family August 3, 2010 in Tiburon, California. Since 2006, statistics show that homeownership is slowly declining, dropping to 66.9 percent in the second quarter of this year. It is estimated that with a continued decline, homeownership could drop to 62 percent by 2012.Justin Sullivan/Getty

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  • The US Census Bureau recently released population estimates for the 50 states and DC.
  • The release included data on how many people moved into and out of each state.
  • The Northeast and Midwest tended to have more people move out than move in, while the South and West tended to have the opposite.


The US Census Bureau recently released its 2017 population estimates for each of the 50 states and Washington DC. In addition to data on how state populations grew or shrank overall between 2016 and 2017, the Bureau also included information on the components of population change.

One of those components is net domestic migration, or the number of people who moved into a state from another state, minus the people who moved out of that state. Unlike other parts of population change like natural change from births and deaths or international migration, domestic migration is by definition zero-sum: Everyone who moves to a state from another state leaves their state of origin.

Northeastern and Midwestern states tended to lose population to domestic migration, as more people moved out than moved in. Meanwhile, Western and Southern states mostly saw gains from other parts of the country. That is consistent with population migration trends in the US that go back decades.

Here's each state's net domestic migration between July 1, 2016 and July 1, 2017, adjusted for the state's 2016 population:

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Business Insider/Andy Kiersz, data from US Census Bureau

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