The Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex led all U.S. metro areas in population growth from July 2022 to July 2023, adding approximately 152,600 new residents, or about 418 residents a day, according to recent U.S. Census Bureau data. This surge brought its total population to 8,100,000. Other cities in the South and Southwest, including Houston with a 139,800 increase, Atlanta (now the 6th largest metro) with 68,600 new residents, and Phoenix with 49,200, also saw significant growth. In contrast, traditional metropolitan giants like New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago experienced declines, with decreases of 65,500, 71,000, and 16,600, respectively. Approximately 60% of U.S. counties gained population during this period, marking an increase from the previous year.
Texas cities dominate the list of fastest growing US metro areas as people leave New York, Los Angeles and Chicago https://t.co/CykStqnjxs
Texas cities dominate the list of fastest growing US metro areas as people leave New York, Los Angeles and Chicago https://t.co/Vn2xyvuFkd
The DFW Metroplex is leading all U.S. metro areas in population growth. https://t.co/470qzeXFBG
Dallas-Fort Worth lead all metro areas in population growth in 2023, according to newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau Adds 152,000 and now weβre at 8,100,000
Dallas DFW area has surpassed entire nation in population growth. 152K new citizens added last year alone. With Plano and Frisco adding most residents . Total 8000000 residents in the metro now .
Austin slips from spot as No. 1 fastest-growing large metro area, census data shows https://t.co/vsTLvt2VwS
BIG D! The Dallas Fort Worth area leads all metro areas in population growth, adding 152,000 new residents. @Dallas_Matters @DallasTexasTV https://t.co/35xgPFgC3P
Is Austin still the fastest growing metro in the US? Nope. But it's still booming https://t.co/qZXmTd0bHl
These were the fastest-growing counties in Texas in 2023, according to new Census Bureau estimates Read more: https://t.co/RallFjrrqm
The Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex experienced the largest metropolitan population growth in the nation last year, adding approximately 418 residents a day, according to recent U.S. Census Bureau data. https://t.co/eGLYzOf3d6
I don't even know if Chicago has a decade left as the 3rd-biggest metro area in the US. 4th-place Dallas was closing the gap at a rate of 150k per year pre-COVID, and that pace has only accelerated since. Oh, and Houston in 5th place has been right on Dallas' tail. https://t.co/fSIiMR4MZk https://t.co/YMD8FhsZvL
Unsurprisingly, America's fastest-growing cities are all in the South or Southwestβwith the Texas Triangle alone adding nearly 400k people Atlanta gained 68k (surpassing DC & Philadelphia), Orlando gained 55k (surpassing St. Louis), and Austin gained 50k (surpassing Pittsburgh) https://t.co/xEJekqysIA https://t.co/x9WKVQdnY9
How much did Dallas-Fort Worth grow last year? Explore the latest Census data https://t.co/ocQwNk4PCu
π Approximately 60% of U.S. counties gained #population from 2022 to 2023, an increase from the 52% of counties that experienced population growth between 2021 and 2022. Get more #CensusData highlights from new #PopulationEstimates out today: https://t.co/c3Qpj0boiu https://t.co/L7T0vs8P2t
From July 2022 - July 2023, population changes for the 10 largest US metros: - NYC π» 65.5k - LA π» 71k - Chicago π» 16.6k - Dallas π’ 152.6k (!) - Houston π’ 139.8k - Atlanta, π’ 68.6k, now 6th largest - DC π’ 39.1k - Philly π’ 3.4k - Miami π’ 43.4k - Phoenix π’ 49.2k
Revised metro-area job data is out today!βhere's growth since COVID: Fastest gains: Austin (17.7%), Raleigh (12.1%), Dallas (10.6%), Tampa (10.2%), Phoenix (9.8%) Largest drops: Milwaukee (-1.9%), Baltimore (-1.8%), San Francisco (-1.7%), Pittsburgh (-1.6%), Cleveland (-1.2%) https://t.co/aZh56sXpmK
Texas and Florida have led the way in job creation since the pandemic-related lockdowns. #jobsreport #economy #txlege #fllege @GregAbbott_TX @RonDeSantis https://t.co/ESYo0XWtIX