Texans just can't quit Texas
From Lone Star State to Lodestone State: Texas Remains Attractive to Natives and Newcomers
Setting the stage:?Originally launched in 2020, our 7th Texas Voter Poll was conducted at the end of August.
Texas, Our Texas: 77% of surveyed voters told us they don’t plan to leave the Lone Star State anytime in the next few years.
Heading for the exits:?Meanwhile, 10% told us that they plan to leave Texas while 25% of those staying said they had considered moving.
The case for staying:?Meanwhile, 79% told us they were not planning or considering a move out of Texas.?
Most Texans choose to stay put ??
A Texas 2036 analysis of population migration data kept by the Internal Revenue Service found that 10 million Texas households representing 21.3 million Texans did not move between 2020 and 2021.
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The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas wrote an attention-grabbing study this summer diving into the relative ability of states to hold on to their native residents. They termed this a state’s “stickiness”.
And they found that Texas is the nation’s stickiest state with 82% of those born there still living there. The next stickiest state was North Carolina with a 75.5% stickiness rate, followed by Georgia (74.2%), California (73%) and Utah (72.9%)
Dive deeper: Factors playing into states’ stickiness include higher than average job growth and below average state and local taxes. In Texas’ case, the Dallas Fed additionally notes that the sheer size of the state might also play a factor. Why??Moving out of Texas costs more.
Not From Texas? Texas Wants You Anyway ??
The state is projected to add 5 million residents by 2036 with migration from other states as the driving force behind the boom.
Case example: The Austin-Round Rock metropolitan area exemplifies the impact of in-migration?from high income metro areas from out of state.
Explore more:?We've created an “Understanding Texas” online tool?that allows you to look in-depth about the migration patterns both into and out of Texas' metro areas.