Clay County, IA
Migration of people and income, 2022–2023 filing years
Between the 2022 and 2023 filing years, Clay County, IA saw a net gain of 9 tax-filing households and a net gain of 11 individuals. On net, the area lost $1.3M in associated adjusted gross income (AGI, nominal dollars). The largest inflow came from Dickinson County; the largest outflow went to Dickinson County. These figures cover federal income tax filers only and do not indicate why people moved.
Income (AGI) in and out
Where movers came from
- 1Dickinson County, IA70$4.5M
- 2O'Brien County, IA26$1.5M
- 3Buena Vista County, IA21$986.0K
- 4Palo Alto County, IA21$965.0K
Where movers went
- 1Dickinson County, IA42$3.0M
- 2Buena Vista County, IA36$1.6M
- 3Palo Alto County, IA34$1.5M
- 4O'Brien County, IA21$1.1M
Net migration by year
| Year | Net AGI | Net people |
|---|---|---|
| 2012 | -$2.1M | -47 |
| 2013 | -$1.1M | +11 |
| 2014 | +$1.6M | +96 |
| 2015 | -$1.4M | -115 |
| 2016 | -$3.0M | -50 |
| 2017 | -$2.8M | -159 |
| 2018 | -$3.3M | -94 |
| 2019 | -$3.0M | -18 |
| 2020 | -$4.9M | -92 |
| 2021 | +$1.9M | +104 |
| 2022 | +$235.0K | +79 |
| 2023 | -$1.3M | +11 |
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Source: IRS Statistics of Income migration data (public domain). Covers federal income tax filers only; AGI is nominal (not inflation adjusted). These numbers describe movement of filers and their reported income, not why people moved or economic loss. Methodology and caveats.