Business & Tech
MD An Unpopular Place To Move To, Says New U-Haul Index
The Southeast leads the list of states that the most people are moving to, a report by U-Haul says. See where Maryland ranks.
The Southeast leads the list of states that the most people are moving to, led by Florida and Texas, a report by U-Haul says. But does that love extend to Maryland?
The U-Haul Growth Index for 2025 is compiled from well over 2.5 million annual one-way transactions across the U.S. and Canada. The rankings are determined by an analysis of one-way customer transactions during 2025.
While rankings may not correlate directly to population or economic growth, the U-Haul index is a gauge of how well states, metros and cities are attracting and maintaining residents, the company claims.
“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. “But other factors can be important to people who are looking to change their surroundings. In-migration states are often appealing to those customers.”
Few Americans chose to move to Maryland in 2025. The state ranked No. 45 as a move-in state last year, down three slots from No. 42 in 2024.
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Meanwhile, one Virginia city ranked among the top 15 for growth cities. Fredericksburg was the No. 13 U-Haul growth city for its net gain of one-way customers. That rank is a move up two slots from a year ago.
Conversely, Virginia overall ranked 36th for people moving into a state, falling 19 places from a year ago.
The city of Ocala, Florida, retained the title of No. 1 U-Haul growth city, a distinction it also held for 2024 and 2022, the moving company said.
The top 10 2025 U-Haul Growth States are (numbers in parentheses are the 2024 rank):
- Texas (2)
- Florida (4)
- North Carolina (3)
- Tennessee (5)
- South Carolina (1)
- Washington (7)
- Arizona (6)
- Idaho (10)
- Alabama (16)
- Georgia (15)
The five states with the least inbound migration were: California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts.
The state attracting the fewest newcomers was California.
"While California’s exodus of do-it-yourself movers was greater than any other state, it saw a smaller net loss in 2025 than in 2024," U-Haul said.
Biggest movers
Oregon enjoys the largest year-over-year climb on the index, ranking 11th as a net-gain state in 2025 after ranking 34th as a net-loss state in 2024 — a jump of 23 positions. Other notable gainers include Mississippi (+18 spots), Colorado (+17), Nevada (+15), New Mexico (+15), Louisiana (+13) and Montana (+12).
Ohio has the largest YOY 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. Virginia (-19 spots), Indiana (-17), Iowa (-12), Delaware (-12) and Nebraska (-10) also see a double-digit drop in the rankings.
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