US Population Change by State: Who's Growing, Who's Shrinking, and Why It Matters

May 26, 2026
Demographics
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Census
Demographics
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Population is not a static number. It is a living signal – one that tells us where economic opportunity is concentrating, where housing markets are under pressure, where schools need to be built, and where roads, hospitals, and public services may be stretched thin or left underused. Understanding US population change by state is not merely an academic exercise. It shapes congressional representation, federal funding allocations, business investment decisions, and the everyday quality of life for tens of millions of Americans.

The United States has always been a nation in motion. From the westward expansion of the 19th century to the Sun Belt boom of the late 20th century, Americans have consistently relocated in search of better economic conditions, lower costs of living, warmer climates, and new opportunities. Today, that movement continues – but the patterns have shifted in ways that carry significant implications for both the states gaining residents and those losing them.

Using data from the American Community Survey (ACS) 2020–2024 5-Year Estimates, this article examines US population change by state, identifies the fastest-growing and fastest-shrinking states, and explores the domestic and international migration forces driving those changes.

National Trends: A Country Still Growing, But Unevenly

At the national level, the United States continues to grow. The ACS 2020–2024 5-Year Estimates place the total US population at approximately 335 million, reflecting continued – if uneven – population change across states. But that headline number masks a deeply divided geographic story.

The map below shows total population by state as of the ACS 2020–2024 5-Year Estimates. The concentration of population in California, Texas, Florida, and New York is immediately apparent – but so is the vast swath of lower-density states across the interior West and Great Plains.

Between the ACS 2015–2019 and 2020–2024 5-Year Estimates, most states recorded population gains. However, a meaningful cluster of states – including West Virginia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Illinois, and Alaska – recorded state population decline. The divergence between growing and shrinking states has widened over the past decade, and the forces behind that divergence are structural, not cyclical.

Three broad national trends stand out:

  1. The South and Mountain West are absorbing the bulk of US population growth. States like Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and the Mountain West corridor (Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Montana) are growing at rates that far outpace the national average.
  2. The Midwest and Northeast are largely stagnant or declining. States like Illinois, West Virginia, Mississippi, and Louisiana are losing residents in absolute terms, while others like Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania are growing only marginally.
  3. California – long the nation's population engine – has effectively flatlined. With a net population change of just 3,880 people between the two survey periods, California's era of demographic dominance appears to be over, at least for now.

Fastest-Growing and Fastest-Shrinking States

The state-level data on US population change reveals a striking geographic divide. Here are the ten fastest-growing states by percentage change between the ACS 2019 and ACS 2024 5-Year Estimates:

State 2019 Population 2024 Population Change % Change
Idaho 1,717,750 1,934,262 +216,512 +12.60%
Utah 3,096,848 3,392,331 +295,483 +9.54%
Florida 20,901,636 22,416,077 +1,514,441 +7.25%
Nevada 2,972,382 3,184,612 +212,230 +7.14%
Texas 28,260,856 30,188,424 +1,927,568 +6.82%
Delaware 957,248 1,021,191 +63,943 +6.68%
Montana 1,050,649 1,116,875 +66,226 +6.30%
Washington 7,404,107 7,816,116 +412,009 +5.56%
South Carolina 5,020,806 5,296,225 +275,419 +5.49%
Tennessee 6,709,356 7,066,383 +357,027 +5.32%

Idaho leads all states in population growth rate at 12.6% – a remarkable figure for a state that many Americans would not have identified as a top destination even a decade ago. Utah follows at 9.54%, continuing its long run as one of the nation's most consistently fast-growing states. Florida and Texas, the two perennial Sun Belt giants, added the largest absolute numbers: 1.5 million and 1.9 million new residents, respectively.

On the other end of the spectrum, the states recording population loss by state tell an equally important story:

State 2019 Population 2024 Population Change % Change
Puerto Rico 3,318,447 3,234,309 -84,138 -2.54%
West Virginia 1,817,305 1,778,373 -38,932 -2.14%
District of Columbia 692,683 681,294 -11,389 -1.64%
Mississippi 2,984,418 2,946,779 -37,639 -1.26%
Louisiana 4,664,362 4,611,961 -52,401 -1.12%
Illinois 12,770,631 12,694,798 -75,833 -0.59%
Alaska 737,068 735,706 -1,362 -0.18%

West Virginia's continued decline – now at -2.14% – reflects decades of economic contraction tied to the coal industry, an aging population, and persistent outmigration of working-age adults. Illinois, despite being home to Chicago, one of the nation's great metropolitan areas, has lost nearly 76,000 residents – a consequence of high taxes, cost of living pressures, and a business climate that has pushed both residents and employers toward lower-cost states.

What's Driving US Population Change by State: Domestic vs. International Migration

Population change by state is driven by two forces: natural increase (births minus deaths) and net migration (people moving in minus people moving out). In recent years, migration – both domestic and international – has become the dominant driver of state-level population change.

Domestic In-Migration

The map below shows the share of each state's population that moved there from a different state within the past year. States with darker shading are receiving a higher proportion of domestic migrants – a pattern that clearly favors the South, Mountain West, and parts of the Southeast.

Florida and Texas dominate domestic in-migration, each attracting well over half a million people from other states in a single year (649,031 and 588,975, respectively). North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, and Tennessee are also pulling in large numbers of domestic migrants, reflecting the broader Sun Belt realignment underway in American demography.

International In-Migration

The map below shows the share of each state's population that moved there from abroad within the past year. The geographic pattern here is notably different from domestic migration – gateway states like California, New York, Florida, and Texas attract the largest shares of international arrivals, reflecting established immigrant communities, major international airports, and diverse labor markets.

California still attracts the highest number of international migrants of any state (266,806), which helps explain why its population has not declined despite significant domestic outmigration. New York tells a similar story: it continues to attract international newcomers even as it loses domestic residents to other states. This distinction is critical for understanding state population trends – a state can be simultaneously losing Americans and gaining foreign-born residents, with the net effect masking both trends.

Total In-Migration by State

The top states for total in-migration (domestic plus international) are:

State Moved from Different State Moved from Abroad Total In-Migrants
Florida 649,031 237,173 886,204
Texas 588,975 237,843 826,818
California 434,469 266,806 701,275
New York 289,410 138,671 428,081
North Carolina 322,292 59,800 382,092
Georgia 287,804 59,436 347,240
Virginia 266,225 58,897 325,122
Arizona 257,199 48,538 305,737
Pennsylvania 247,463 57,813 305,276
Illinois 207,224 76,198 283,422

Economic, Social, and Policy Impacts of US Population Change by State

Population change across US states is never just a demographic story. It carries profound economic, social, and policy consequences.

For growing states, rapid population influx creates pressure on housing supply, infrastructure, schools, and public services. Idaho's 12.6% growth rate has contributed to dramatic home price increases in the Boise metro area, pricing out long-term residents and creating affordability challenges that the state's policy apparatus is still struggling to address. Texas and Florida face similar dynamics at a much larger scale.

For shrinking states, population loss creates a different but equally serious set of challenges. A declining tax base makes it harder to fund public services. Fewer working-age residents means lower labor force participation and reduced economic output. Rural hospitals close. Schools consolidate. Infrastructure deteriorates. West Virginia, Mississippi, and Louisiana are all grappling with these dynamics in real time.

At the federal level, population change directly determines congressional apportionment. The 2020 Decennial Census resulted in Texas gaining two congressional seats and Florida gaining one, while states like California, New York, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania each lost a seat. If current trends continue through the 2030 Census, the political map will shift further toward the South and Mountain West.

For businesses and investors, population data is a leading indicator of market opportunity. Retailers, healthcare systems, real estate developers, and employers all use state and local population change data to guide location decisions, workforce planning, and capital allocation.

Conclusion: What's Next for US Population Change by State?

The US population change by state story of the 2020s is, at its core, a story about the redistribution of people, economic activity, and political power. The Sun Belt and Mountain West are consolidating their position as the nation's demographic center of gravity. The Midwest and parts of the Northeast face the compounding challenges of outmigration, aging populations, and economic restructuring. And gateway states like California and New York are navigating a new reality in which international immigration can no longer fully compensate for domestic population losses.

Looking ahead, several forces will shape the next chapter of state population change in the US: the continued rise of remote work and its effect on location decisions, the affordability crisis in previously fast-growing metros, climate-related migration pressures, and the trajectory of international immigration policy.

What is certain is that population data by state – collected rigorously, analyzed carefully, and communicated clearly – will remain one of the most important tools available to policymakers, researchers, businesses, and citizens trying to understand where America is headed. Social Explorer's suite of demographic data tools, built on the American Community Survey, the Decennial Census, and dozens of other authoritative sources, is designed to make that understanding accessible to everyone.

Ready to explore the data for yourself? Start your free trial of Social Explorer today and get instant access to interactive maps, state-level population trends, migration patterns, and hundreds of demographic variables drawn from the ACS, Decennial Census, and more. Whether you're a researcher, policymaker, journalist, or business professional, Social Explorer gives you the tools to turn census data into clear, actionable insights.