How America Moves

Smith County, MS

Migration of people and income, 20222023 filing years

Between the 2022 and 2023 filing years, Smith County, MS saw a net loss of 22 tax-filing households and a net loss of 53 individuals. On net, the area lost $2.0M in associated adjusted gross income (AGI, nominal dollars). The largest inflow came from Jones County; the largest outflow went to Simpson County. These figures cover federal income tax filers only and do not indicate why people moved.

Net income (AGI)
-$2.0M
nominal dollars
Net households
-22
tax returns
Net people
-53
exemptions

Income (AGI) in and out

Moved in$13.1M
Moved out$15.0M
Net -$2.0M (nominal)

Where movers came from

  1. 1Jones County, MS46$1.3M
  2. 2Simpson County, MS36$1.9M
  3. 3Covington County, MS32$1.3M
  4. 4Scott County, MS31$1.4M
  5. 5Jasper County, MS23$944.0K
  6. 6Rankin County, MS22$1.0M

Where movers went

  1. 1Simpson County, MS39$2.0M
  2. 2Jones County, MS36$1.6M
  3. 3Covington County, MS35$1.3M
  4. 4Rankin County, MS30$2.1M
  5. 5Scott County, MS27$1.2M

Net migration by year

Net 2012–2023: +$107.0K (-98 people)
20122023
Net AGI and net people by year (nominal dollars)
YearNet AGINet people
2012+$1.8M+91
2013+$461.0K+23
2014-$220.0K+43
2015-$1.6M-87
2016+$756.0K+51
2017-$50.0K+26
2018+$923.0K-76
2019-$2.9M-134
2020+$3.1M+25
2021+$735.0K+17
2022-$889.0K-24
2023-$2.0M-53

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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.