Statistics: Demographics: Geographic Mobility: USA, 2006

Renters Four Times More Likely to Move Than Homeowners

From the release announcement:

The U.S. Census Bureau has released a series of 34 tables on the 40 million Americans who moved between 2005 and 2006, including characteristics of movers by type of move.

The package of tables, Geographical Mobility: 2006, describes migration in the United States in 2006. Other data include the annual rate of moving, the distance moved and differences in extent and type, for example, from the Northeast to the South or from the suburbs to a principal city.

Published annually at the national and regional levels, these tables reveal trends about migration in the United States. Characteristics of movers include data by race and Hispanic origin, age, marital status, educational attainment, labor force status, occupation and industry group, income and poverty status.

These estimates are from the Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 2006 Current Population Survey.

Some of this year’s findings include the following:

* In 2006, 39.8 million United States residents moved within the previous one-year period.
* The moving rate remained statistically unchanged from 2005 at 14 percent.
* Nearly half of the reasons given for moving (18.4 million) were housing related, such as wanting a bigger or smaller house.
* The West had the highest moving rate (16 percent), followed by the South (15 percent), the Midwest (13 percent) and the Northeast (10 percent).
* Hispanics had the highest moving rate (18 percent), followed by blacks (17 percent), Asians (14 percent) and non-Hispanic whites (12 percent).

Direct to Documents (Look for Detailed Tables - Geographical Mobility: 2005 to 2006)
You’ll also find links to past reports

Source: U.S. Census