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Where Americans moved in 2025
Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:46 am
Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:46 am
Pretty insane to see the level of growth in the South. I'm surprised about NC, although the negative could be a typo. Missouri is the only negative value associated with SEC states.


Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:49 am to gamecockman12
Please stop coming to Tennessee. No one wants anymore growth
Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:50 am to VFL67
quote:
Please stop coming to Tennessee. No one wants anymore growth
A few of my friends in Tennessee are always complaining about people moving there.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:57 am to gamecockman12
Not a good thing. The initial movers may be well intentioned but the family just brings their shithole voting pattern with them.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 8:58 am to gamecockman12
quote:
A few of my friends in Tennessee are always complaining about people moving there.
Its awful. Traffic is insane, the airports are overcrowded, and local culture is dying. People just move to TN for a tax break now and don't care about the actual state. Its destroying the wildlife in the state and pricing out people that have been raised in the state
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:04 am to gamecockman12
quote:
A few of my friends in Tennessee are always complaining about people moving there.
I live in Maryville and it’s bad. This place is completely different than a decade ago. Tons of New Yorkers and Californians
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:07 am to gamecockman12
I’m betting at least half of Bama’s growth came in Baldwin County (Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Foley, Fairhope, Spanish Fort). It’s busting at the seams. Most of the other half probably Huntsville metro. Complete opposite ends of the state.
This post was edited on 3/10/26 at 9:09 am
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:08 am to VFL67
quote:Let’s paint the state another color than orange. Ugly color.
Please stop coming to Tennessee. No one wants anymore growth
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:10 am to gamecockman12
Are the colors backwards or is that on purpose? Are they suggesting Texas will become a "blue" state once all of the nutjobs from Ca. relocate there?
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:12 am to gamecockman12
Midwest, west coast and Atlantic upper hemoraging people. Not much movement into Florida anymore.
This post was edited on 3/10/26 at 9:16 am
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:12 am to gamecockman12
Its not insane at all. There is an easily detectable pattern.
The unfortunate part is they bring their voting habits with them when they move.
The unfortunate part is they bring their voting habits with them when they move.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:14 am to gamecockman12
Those three extra people is what pushed Lane to accept the LSU job.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:23 am to lewis and herschel
quote:
Not a good thing. The initial movers may be well intentioned but the family just brings their shithole voting pattern with them.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:24 am to rich4pres
quote:
I live in Maryville and it’s bad. This place is completely different than a decade ago. Tons of New Yorkers and Californians
South Carolina gets the Ohio transplants. It's insane.

Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:25 am to gamecockman12
There was a major catastrophe in NC at the end of 2024.
Also, there’s this thing about change. It happens.
Also, there’s this thing about change. It happens.
This post was edited on 3/10/26 at 9:30 am
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:27 am to VFL67
quote:
Its awful. Traffic is insane, the airports are overcrowded, and local culture is dying. People just move to TN for a tax break now and don't care about the actual state. Its destroying the wildlife in the state and pricing out people that have been raised in the state
Same in South Carolina. It's ridiculous.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:28 am to Diamondawg
quote:
Are the colors backwards or is that on purpose? Are they suggesting Texas will become a "blue" state once all of the nutjobs from Ca. relocate there?
I'm not sure actually. I just saw it on Twitter.
Posted on 3/10/26 at 9:28 am to gamecockman12
I mean, these numbers are interesting but the totals without context don't mean a lot.
55,000 people leaving New York sounds like a lot until you take into account that their total population is over 20 million. So I'd be curious WHO is leaving?
Blue collar or white collar?
What financial category?
People who have been there for a long time or people who already move quite often (be it for their jobs, or just a tendency to move a lot)?
That said, South Carolina is hardly surprising - they've done a lot to encourage growth. They're enticing a lot of people away from North Carolina.
55,000 people leaving New York sounds like a lot until you take into account that their total population is over 20 million. So I'd be curious WHO is leaving?
Blue collar or white collar?
What financial category?
People who have been there for a long time or people who already move quite often (be it for their jobs, or just a tendency to move a lot)?
That said, South Carolina is hardly surprising - they've done a lot to encourage growth. They're enticing a lot of people away from North Carolina.
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