Midwest Gains Population in All 12 States as Lower Costs Draw New Migrants
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 1
Midwest Gains Population in All 12 States as Lower Costs Draw New Migrants
1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 1
Summary
All 12 Midwest states added residents from July 2024 to July 2025, making the region the only one where every state posted population growth after decades of decline.
Lower costs are driving the shift: one Washington transplant bought an 11-acre Ohio farm for under $350,000, citing land, feed and vet bills at roughly half West Coast levels.
Migration is reaching smaller Republican-leaning counties as well as metros; Greene County, Ohio, gained more than 1,270 domestic migrants in 2024 after losing residents through much of the 2010s.
California remains a major source of movers—more than 8,000 people went to Ohio in 2024 and 14,000 to Michigan—while New York and New Jersey sent over 13,000 to Ohio.
The inflow could gradually soften Midwestern politics, but analysts say current numbers are still too small to quickly reshape states where 4 million to 4.5 million votes are cast in a midterm.
Can the Midwest's infrastructure handle a population boom without repeating the affordability crises of coastal cities?
Is the heartland a true climate refuge, or will this population boom strain its vital water and land resources?
Is the Midwest's revival a sustainable economic shift or just a temporary escape from high coastal costs?
2025 Midwest Population Rebound: Migration Trends, Housing Impacts, and Regional Outlook
Overview
In 2025, the Midwest saw a historic population reversal, with all 12 states in the region gaining residents for the first time in over a decade. This 0.3% region-wide increase marks a dramatic turnaround from years of population losses and challenges the long-held view of Midwest decline. The main driver of this shift was a substantial reversal in net domestic migration, as more people moved into the Midwest after years of out-migration. This influx of new residents has injected new energy into the region, signaling a decade-defining change for the Midwest.