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More people are packing up and moving down south. According to an annual report from U-Haul, Texas topped its list of states to which the most Americans moved in 2025.
The rental truck company calculates its "Growth Index" according to the net number of customers who rented a truck, trailer, or U-Box moving container in one state and dropped them off in another. The index is compiled from over 2.5 million annual one-way transactions across the U.S. and Canada.
In 2025, Texas was the number one growth state for the seventh time in 10 years. Last year, it came in second behind South Carolina. Also in the 2025 top five: Florida, North Carolina, and Tennessee. The top 10 includes Washington, Arizona, Idaho, Alabama, and Georgia. See the full list below.
2025 Growth States, According to U-Haul
- Texas
- Florida
- North Carolina
- Tennessee
- South Carolina
- Washington
- Arizona
- Idaho
- Alabama
- Georgia
- Oregon
- Montana
- Arkansas
- Oklahoma
- Maine
- Utah
- Kentucky
- South Dakota
- Minnesota
- Nevada
- Mississippi
- New Mexico
- Colorado
- Vermont
- Indiana
- Wisconsin
- Alaska
- Hawaii
- Missouri
- Wyoming
- Louisiana
- New Hampshire
- Delaware
- West Virginia
- Iowa
- Virgina
- Kansas
- North Dakota
- Nebraska
- Rhode Island
- Michigan
- Connecticut
- Ohio
- Pennsylvania
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- New York
- New Jersey
- Illinois
- California
Eight of the top 10 states are located in the South, while eight of the top 10 bottom states—those with the least amount of move-ins—are northern states.
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According to the findings, Oregon had the largest year-over-year jump, ranking 11th as a net-gain state in 2025 after ranking 34th as a net-loss state in 2024. Other notable gainers include Mississippi, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Louisiana, and Montana. Ohio had the largest drop on the index, falling 29 positions to 43rd as a net-loss state in 2025 after ranking 14th as a net-gain state in 2024.
“We continue to find that life circumstances—marriage, children, a death in the family, college, jobs, and other events—dictate the need for most moves,” said John “J.T.” Taylor, U-Haul International president, in a release.
