This table shows the population changes, up or down, for the various states and the District of Columbia, from July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019. The data are from the U.S. Census Bureau. [1]
Percent increase (decrease) | State |
---|---|
2.1 | Idaho |
1.7 | Arizona |
1.7 | Nevada |
1.7 | Utah |
1.3 | South Carolina |
1.3 | Texas |
1.2 | Colorado |
1.2 | Washington |
1.1 | Florida |
1.0 | Georgia |
1.0 | North Carolina |
0.9 | Delaware |
0.9 | Oregon |
0.8 | Montana |
0.8 | Tennessee |
0.7 | South Dakota |
0.6 | District of Columbia |
0.6 | Minnesota |
0.5 | Indiana |
0.5 | Nebraska |
0.5 | New Hampshire |
0.5 | North Dakota |
0.4 | Maine |
0.4 | Oklahoma |
0.4 | Virginia |
0.3 | Alabama |
0.3 | Arkansas |
0.3 | Missouri |
0.3 | Wisconsin |
0.2 | Iowa |
0.2 | Maryland |
0.2 | New Mexico |
0.2 | Wyoming |
0.1 | California |
0.1 | Kansas |
0.1 | Kentucky |
0.1 | Massachusetts |
0.1 | Ohio |
0.1 | Rhode Island |
0.0 | Michigan |
0.0 | New Jersey |
0.0 | Pennsylvania |
-0.1 | Vermont |
-0.2 | Connecticut |
-0.2 | Louisiana |
-0.2 | Mississippi |
-0.3 | Hawaii |
-0.4 | Illinois |
-0.4 | New York |
-0.5 | Alaska |
-0.7 | West Virginia |