The New Oregon Trail, circa. 2006

United Van Lines studyIf you hadn’t noticed, people from out of state are moving here in droves….that is, if ‘droves’ means moving vans.

Oregon leads the nation in percentage of inbound interstate moves in a study conducted by United Van Lines.

In the 29th annual ‘migration’ study by the moving company, Oregon had the highest ratio of inbound moves in the country at 63.6%. This was the 18th year of inbound migration of 55% or more for the state.

The study tracked 226,353 interstate household moves in 2005 within the 48 contiguous states, plus D.C. The mountain west (Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, etc.) and the southeastern U.S. (the Carolinas, Tennessee, Kentucky, etc.) had the highest influx of new arrivals (blue states), while states such as Michigan, New York, New Jersey, and California saw some of the highest ratios of outbound moves (yellow states).

High Inbound States (blue)
Oregon
63.6%
Idaho
61.9%
Washington, DC
61.4%
North Carolina
61.3%
Nevada
60.1%
Arizona
60.1%
South Carolina
59.0%
Alabama
58.9%
Tennessee
58.0%
Kentucky
55.3%
High Outbound States (yellow)
North Dakota
67.8%
Michigan
63.9%
New Jersey
60.4%
Indiana
59.9%
New York
59.8%
Illinois
58.4%
Louisiana
57.9%
Rhode Island
57.0%
Pennsylvania
56.0%
California
55.7%

It’s just another indicator of strong real estate prospects in the area.

Full release at United Van Lines. Additional reporting by The New York Times and the Portland Business Journal.

Comments

2 Responses to “The New Oregon Trail, circa. 2006”

  1. re:PDX - Portland Oregon Real Estate » Squeeze versus Sprawl on October 3rd, 2006 6:47 pm

    [...] If you hadn’t heard, the U.S. is quickly gaining on the 300 million mark in population. So, with the western U.S. experiencing a high rate of inbound moves, our civic leaders have real challenges when considering growth strategies, environmental impact, and livability factors. [...]

  2. re:PDX - Portland Oregon Real Estate » Oregon Continues to be Magnetic to Moving Vans on January 15th, 2007 8:17 pm

    [...] Last year, Oregon topped the study. It was the 19th straight year for Oregon to have more entrants than exiters. [...]

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