Washington · Infrastructure & Trust

Net Migration in Washington

Net inflow of U.S. residents moving from other states, per 10,000 residents; positive means more arrivals than departures.

3 per 10K in 2024

#27 of 50 · Middle tier (higher is better)

Washington is worse than the 50-state median (6 per 10K). That's a gap of 3 per 10K.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

2001 – 2024 · Washington only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About net migration

What this measures: Net inflow of US residents moving in from other states, per 10,000 residents. Positive means more arrivals than departures.

Why it matters: Net migration is the long-run revealed preference of where people choose to live, summing up cost, jobs, climate, and culture.

Watch out: Excludes international migration and births minus deaths. Total population change can move differently than this net domestic number.

Recent trend

YearWashingtonUS median
201435 per 10K-12 per 10K
201559 per 10K-12 per 10K
201693 per 10K-12 per 10K
201787 per 10K-7 per 10K
201863 per 10K-4 per 10K
201950 per 10K-3 per 10K
2021-20 per 10K19 per 10K
2022-4 per 10K4 per 10K
2023-22 per 10K8 per 10K
20243 per 10K6 per 10K

Washington vs. neighboring states

Same metric (net migration), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateNet MigrationNational rank
Oregon -3 per 10K #31 of 50
Idaho 83 per 10K #2 of 50

How Washington compares (2024)

Top 5 best

#1South Carolina125 per 10K
#2Idaho83 per 10K
#3Delaware78 per 10K
#4North Carolina75 per 10K
#5Tennessee67 per 10K

Bottom 5

#46Illinois-44 per 10K
#47Alaska-51 per 10K
#48California-61 per 10K
#49New York-61 per 10K
#50Hawaiʻi-65 per 10K

Source and methodology

Source: Census PEP · Direction: higher is better · Unit: per 10K

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

Related Infrastructure & Trust metrics for Washington

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