Bevölkerungszuwächse und -verluste im US-Bundesstaat 2021–2024. Ist dieses Muster in erster Linie eine Reaktion auf Covid oder hat die Pandemie nur bestehende Trends beschleunigt?
Bevölkerungszuwächse und -verluste im US-Bundesstaat 2021–2024. Ist dieses Muster in erster Linie eine Reaktion auf Covid oder hat die Pandemie nur bestehende Trends beschleunigt?
The other factor is that some of those who stayed hadn’t the wherewithal to move, even if they wanted to.
MysteriousTruck6740 on
There’s a lot of rural dark red, and a lot of deep blue in warm climates. Hard to extrapolate just off of a map, but that won’t stop the comment section from doing it.
otter685 on
Delaware and Connecticut being the only states with one direction is interesting.
MatthewBakke on
Off to do some per capita math
PhilosopherNo7409 on
LA went to Phoenix
Ice_Lychee on
I would definitely use percent changes rather than absolute population numbers
On_my_last_spoon on
Well the drop in Kings, Queens, and Bronx counties account for the increase in New Jersey for sure!
MonkeyKing01 on
Covid. People moved from urban areas with no parks and hard to get outside to open areas. They moved to places where housing was cheap, they could work remote and get outside.
That is all reversing now, especially as they realize how bad the places they moved to are and as companies want employees back in the office.
janitorial-duties on
Give us per capita!!!

Automatic-Gazelle801 on
Baltimore county and city in a sea of blue
Jason250072 on
I don’t think anyone will notice in L.A.
Juidawg on
Monroe county PA is most certainly confusing
Wide_Air_4702 on
Why is everyone moving to Florida?
avamomrr on
Why anyone would move south is a mystery.
wombatgeneral on
COVID led to work from home, and between that and the insane cost of living in CA/NY, people have been leaving for more affordable areas.
A lot of the growth is in cities. The economy is pretty bad in rural areas and a lot of them are declining unless its near a major metro area.
Spaciousrug21 on
Covid f’d Hillsborough county up. It’s not the same. I left after over 10 years there and it was so nice to leave.
JerryCat11 on
No one wants to move to Appalachian Kentucky or WV, but they sure love moving to Tennessee
vaporicer1 on
Affordability chart, people are moving to lower cost of living areas
ccaste281 on
The crazy thing is that three of the top 10 counties are in the Houston area. So that is 527,000 additional people to the Houston area.
FrozenChihuahua on
The color scheme really pops aesthetically in the Minneapolis area. I just like the way the colors look with the counties there. Didn’t know there was a population drop in the twin cities proper.
Badfish1060 on
For Jefferson County Alabama (the red one in middle toward the top), it’s been an ongoing trend for many years. It’s people moving to suburbs.
MattWheelsLTW on
I don’t know about the effect that COVID had, but as far as Collin and Denton county TX, those trends were already happening. They are the two counties that are just north of the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex and have been expanding a lot over the last few years. There was a lot of open space that is now being filled by housing developments and businesses. From my limited knowledge, it’s going to keep getting bigger. DFW is already a little bigger than Houston, and I think it will eventually include the areas between DFW and Denton/McKinney
Shacreme on
People are moving into Massachusetts?
Edit: I grew up east of the I-495, honestly I couldn’t have asked for a better upbringing (it’s one of my favorite areas in the country), but Massachusetts even Worcester is pretty expensive so just a bit surprised.
sidnynasty on
Weird to see my home county on this list
ZachNighthawk on
I wonder why much of the Denver area grew considerably, with the exception of the major decline in Jefferson County.
GreenDavidA on
Cries in Cleveland
ChosenBrad22 on
Florida seems to be on an absolute heater. Which is weird cuz all I read about on Reddit is how awful of a state it is.
hibbledyhey on
lol look at the remote worker flight from St. Paul and Minneapolis into the surrounding 7 county metro area. We flee, but we don’t flee *too far*
Bigbozo1984 on
Why the hell are people moving to Houston?!
Brit_xoxo on
I love these charts that show people leaving liberal areas just so I can go to the comments and read every other comment asking for “SOURCE?” And “Akchually this is wrong” lollll
Put3socks-in-it on
People just really hate Illinois. Even if state lines weren’t drawn you’d still be able to tell the outline by this map
One_Assist_2414 on
You can really see how Illinois is dominated by Chicago, and how everyone who lives outside the city is fleeing to other states. Not that even the city has been doing too hot, the red and blue counties largely balance out, and the city has been stagnant for decades.
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The other factor is that some of those who stayed hadn’t the wherewithal to move, even if they wanted to.
There’s a lot of rural dark red, and a lot of deep blue in warm climates. Hard to extrapolate just off of a map, but that won’t stop the comment section from doing it.
Delaware and Connecticut being the only states with one direction is interesting.
Off to do some per capita math
LA went to Phoenix
I would definitely use percent changes rather than absolute population numbers
Well the drop in Kings, Queens, and Bronx counties account for the increase in New Jersey for sure!
Covid. People moved from urban areas with no parks and hard to get outside to open areas. They moved to places where housing was cheap, they could work remote and get outside.
That is all reversing now, especially as they realize how bad the places they moved to are and as companies want employees back in the office.
Give us per capita!!!

Baltimore county and city in a sea of blue
I don’t think anyone will notice in L.A.
Monroe county PA is most certainly confusing
Why is everyone moving to Florida?
Why anyone would move south is a mystery.
COVID led to work from home, and between that and the insane cost of living in CA/NY, people have been leaving for more affordable areas.
A lot of the growth is in cities. The economy is pretty bad in rural areas and a lot of them are declining unless its near a major metro area.
Covid f’d Hillsborough county up. It’s not the same. I left after over 10 years there and it was so nice to leave.
No one wants to move to Appalachian Kentucky or WV, but they sure love moving to Tennessee
Affordability chart, people are moving to lower cost of living areas
The crazy thing is that three of the top 10 counties are in the Houston area. So that is 527,000 additional people to the Houston area.
The color scheme really pops aesthetically in the Minneapolis area. I just like the way the colors look with the counties there. Didn’t know there was a population drop in the twin cities proper.
For Jefferson County Alabama (the red one in middle toward the top), it’s been an ongoing trend for many years. It’s people moving to suburbs.
I don’t know about the effect that COVID had, but as far as Collin and Denton county TX, those trends were already happening. They are the two counties that are just north of the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex and have been expanding a lot over the last few years. There was a lot of open space that is now being filled by housing developments and businesses. From my limited knowledge, it’s going to keep getting bigger. DFW is already a little bigger than Houston, and I think it will eventually include the areas between DFW and Denton/McKinney
People are moving into Massachusetts?
Edit: I grew up east of the I-495, honestly I couldn’t have asked for a better upbringing (it’s one of my favorite areas in the country), but Massachusetts even Worcester is pretty expensive so just a bit surprised.
Weird to see my home county on this list
I wonder why much of the Denver area grew considerably, with the exception of the major decline in Jefferson County.
Cries in Cleveland
Florida seems to be on an absolute heater. Which is weird cuz all I read about on Reddit is how awful of a state it is.
lol look at the remote worker flight from St. Paul and Minneapolis into the surrounding 7 county metro area. We flee, but we don’t flee *too far*
Why the hell are people moving to Houston?!
I love these charts that show people leaving liberal areas just so I can go to the comments and read every other comment asking for “SOURCE?” And “Akchually this is wrong” lollll
People just really hate Illinois. Even if state lines weren’t drawn you’d still be able to tell the outline by this map
You can really see how Illinois is dominated by Chicago, and how everyone who lives outside the city is fleeing to other states. Not that even the city has been doing too hot, the red and blue counties largely balance out, and the city has been stagnant for decades.