Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Over 545,000 New Yorkers left the state in 2022 —headed for Florida, Texas and farther

 

It’s an Empire State of decline.

Beset by high taxes and quality of life woes, 545,498 New Yorkers left for other states in 2022, according to US Census data.

Top destinations included Florida — the most popular choice — followed by New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania as well as more distant states like Texas and California.

The exodus was partly offset by more people moving to the Empire State in 2022 than any year over the last decade, with 301,000 new residents making the transition.

Despite that uptick, New York still suffered a net population loss of 244,000.

The departures have yet to impact New York City housing costs, with median rents continuing to hover near all-time post COVID-19 highs.

According to a recent report from real estate company Elliman, Manhattan median rents stood at $4,350 in September — up from $4,022 during the same period last year. 

The departures have yet to impact New York City housing costs, with median rents continuing to hover near all-time post COVID-19 highs.

According to a recent report from real estate company Elliman, Manhattan median rents stood at $4,350 in September — up from $4,022 during the same period last year. 

The departures have yet to impact New York City housing costs, with median rents continuing to hover near all-time post COVID-19 highs.


According to a recent report from real estate company Elliman, Manhattan median rents stood at $4,350 in September — up from $4,022 during the same period last year. 

A Post analysis of the census bureau’s state-to-state migration figures shows a steady decline from New York each year since 2012, with departures vastly outpacing inbound moves and roughly 4.6 million people waving goodbye to New York over the past decade

Roughly 2,700,000 people relocated to New York over that span — resulting in a net population loss of 1.9 million residents.

Compared to 2012, the number of exits in 2022 was up a startling 34%. That year, 405,00 people left the state, while 270,000 moved in — a less marked loss of 135,000 residents.

New York Migration data 2022, per US census bureau:

  • Florida: 91,201
  • New Jersey: 75,103
  • Connecticut: 50,670
  • Pennsylvania: 44,807
  • California: 31,255
  • Texas: 30,890
  • North Carolina: 25,024
  • Massachusetts: 21,186
  • Virginia: 17,516
  • Georgia: 16,535
  • South Carolina: 15,537
  • Illinois: 12,072
  • Maryland: 9,453
  • Colorado: 8,526
  • Ohio: 8,431
  • Michigan: 6,161
  • Tennessee: 5,821
  • District of Columbia: 5,647
  • Arizona: 5,071
  • Washington: 4,732
  • Delaware: 4,603
  • Indiana: 4,124
  • Alabama: 3,827
  • Nevada: 3,795
  • Oregon: 3,712
  • Minnesota: 3,196
  • Vermont: 3,196
  • Louisiana: 2,946
  • Maine: 2,885
  • Puerto Rico: 2,847
  • Missouri: 2,742
  • New Mexico: 2,467
  • Alaska: 2,430
  • Rhode Island: 2,324
  • Utah: 2,236
  • Kentucky: 2,200
  • New Hampshire: 1,939
  • Kansas: 1,865
  • Oklahoma: 1,840
  • Wisconsin: 1,626
  • Hawaii: 982
  • West Virginia: 949
  • Idaho: 880
  • Arkansas: 666
  • Nebraska: 554
  • North Dakota: 526
  • Wyoming: 463
  • Montana: 441
  • Iowa: 381
  • Mississippi: 113
  • South Dakota: 52



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The interesting part is that there is a housing boom in N.Y.C. And the rents are only going up. There's probably something wrong with this data

Joe Magdeburger said...

How many of them said Asher yotzer after they left. And please, if you leave, do not spread leftist infestation