Are More Working-Class Residents Leaving New York City Than Wealthy Residents?

Affordability concerns — especially housing and the cost of raising a family — are major drivers of population loss in New York state.

Ferdi Ferhat Özsoy   ·   July 29, 2025
| Photo: Billy Grace Ward; Illustration: New York Focus

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YES.

Working-class New Yorkers are leaving New York City at significantly higher rates than wealthy residents.

According to research by the Fiscal Policy Institute, affordability concerns — especially housing and the cost of raising a family — are major drivers of population loss in New York state. The report notes that 90 percent of this loss comes from New York City, with Black and Hispanic residents, households with young children, and low- to middle-income families most likely to leave.

In contrast, wealthy New Yorkers have left the state at much lower rates, with the exception of a temporary surge in their migration rates in 2020 and 2021 that was likely induced by the Covid-19 pandemic. In typical years, the average New Yorker has been four times more likely to leave the state than the top 1 percent of earners.

New York City added about 87,000 residents from July 2023 to July 2024, according to the US Census Bureau, but this growth was primarily due to international migration. The city’s planning department also attributed this growth to natural increase and new arrivals, not the return of displaced working-class residents.

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Sources:

  • Fiscal Policy Institute, Migration Pt. 2 (June 2024): Link

  • U.S. Census Bureau, Vintage 2024 Population Estimates (May 2025): Link

  • NYC Office of the Mayor, "Mayor Adams Celebrates ..."(May 2025): Link

  • NYC Department of City Planning, Population Estimates and Trends (May 2025): Link

  • NYC Comptroller Brad Lander, Testimony on Rent Freeze Proposal (April 24, 2025): Link

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Ferdi Ferhat Özsoy is a strategic program leader with over a decade of experience building global partnerships, leading fact-checking initiatives, and advancing civic integrity across 80+ countries. He specializes in grantmaking, community building, and mission-driven operations at the intersection of journalism, technology, and… more
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