Rankings
Biggest gainers and losers by net migration, 2022–2023 filing years.
Biggest gainers
- 1Florida+$20.6B
- 2Texas+$5.3B
- 3South Carolina+$4.1B
- 4North Carolina+$3.9B
- 5Tennessee+$2.7B
- 6Arizona+$2.7B
- 7Nevada+$1.5B
- 8Idaho+$980.6M
- 9New Hampshire+$743.5M
- 10Georgia+$678.5M
- 11Colorado+$671.3M
- 12Delaware+$562.0M
- 13Alabama+$545.3M
- 14Montana+$498.6M
- 15Maine+$493.5M
- 16Utah+$460.2M
- 17Arkansas+$445.8M
- 18South Dakota+$258.4M
- 19Oklahoma+$251.5M
- 20Wyoming+$145.1M
- 21Vermont+$87.4M
- 22Rhode Island+$34.3M
- 23Hawaii+$11.0M
- 24West Virginia+$9.5M
- 25Mississippi-$64.9M
Biggest losers
- 1California-$12.9B
- 2New York-$10.6B
- 3Illinois-$6.1B
- 4Massachusetts-$4.2B
- 5New Jersey-$2.8B
- 6Pennsylvania-$2.3B
- 7Maryland-$1.9B
- 8Ohio-$1.7B
- 9Minnesota-$1.5B
- 10Michigan-$1.0B
- 11Virginia-$934.9M
- 12District of Columbia-$864.1M
- 13Louisiana-$806.0M
- 14Washington-$549.4M
- 15Oregon-$525.9M
- 16Connecticut-$495.3M
- 17Kansas-$368.6M
- 18Indiana-$353.2M
- 19Iowa-$271.1M
- 20Nebraska-$245.6M
- 21Missouri-$234.9M
- 22Alaska-$211.2M
- 23North Dakota-$145.0M
- 24Kentucky-$121.2M
- 25Wisconsin-$108.7M
Ranked by net income (agi) (nominal $). Net = arrivals minus departures. Source: IRS migration data; figures cover tax filers, AGI is nominal.