Stylized illustration of the Raleigh skyline with abstract elements representing technology, healthcare, and advanced manufacturing

Raleigh Ranks Among Top U.S. Metros for In-Migration in 2025

Raleigh is not just growing — it’s competing nationally for new residents, according to real relocation data.

We track migration data closely because population in-migration is a direct demand signal for housing and local retail. For a broader explanation of why this matters for real estate investing, see Why Population In-Migration Matters for Real Estate Investing in North Carolina.

National Scale In-Migration

  • The U-Haul Growth Index ranks the Raleigh metro #8 in the U.S. for net inbound households in 2025.
  • This ranking is based on actual moves, not forecasts.

Migration Drivers
Employment is the central pull. Raleigh’s tech, healthcare, and advanced manufacturing job markets are expanding, and households are relocating for stable, long-term work.

Who’s Moving
Working-age adults — especially Gen X and millennials — make up the bulk of inbound movers, many relocating from neighboring states. This cohort often rents first and values proximity to jobs and daily services.

Real Estate Implications

  • Workforce housing: sustained demand from job-related relocations supports occupancy stability.
  • Neighborhood retail: a growing population with daily spending needs increases baseline consumption at grocery-anchored and service retail nodes.

Short Take
Raleigh’s migration is not incidental — it’s a structural inlet of households driven by employment, not trend narratives. That foundation directly supports fundamentals for the asset types we prioritize.

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