Bay Area population dropped again in 2023, but it’s the smallest drop since exodus began

Another year, and another census update showing the Bay Area’s population has dropped.

But the newest population estimates for July 1, 2023, released this week by the U.S. Census Bureau, show the losses were the smallest the region has seen since the pandemic marked the beginning of a dramatic exodus that is now slowing and showing signs of reversing.

Of the core Bay Area counties, San Francisco was the only one that saw an increase in population in 2023 after having the most dramatic drop early in the pandemic.

Russell Hancock, president of Joint Venture Silicon Valley, has some theories about why the recent trend is reversing, especially in San Francisco.

“We seem to be turning a corner on the work-from-home phenomenon,” Hancock said. And like others, he sees the explosion in buzz around AI technologies such as ChatGPT as a big magnet for San Francisco and Silicon Valley. “If you’re a person who is into big data, machine learning, massive computational processing, futuristic stuff, this is where you would want to be.”

In the rest of the Bay Area, counties are still losing residents year over year. That puts them in the minority of counties in the country. According to the bureau’s analysis of all counties, about 60% (1,876) of U.S. counties gained population from 2022 to 2023, an increase from the 52% of counties (1,649) that experienced population growth between 2021 and 2022.

California’s population, like the Bay Area’s, has continued to decline. According to statewide population estimates, released in December 2023, the Golden State was among eight states that saw a population drop from 2022 to 2023, losing 75,000 residents that year.

“Domestic migration patterns are changing, and the impact on counties is especially evident,” said Lauren Bowers, chief of the Census Bureau’s Population Estimates Branch.

The average county-level population increase was 0.29% in 2023, nearly twice the average increase of 0.17% in 2022. While Bay Area counties might be behind the curve, they’re headed in the same direction. Every Bay Area county lost fewer residents in 2023 than the previous year.

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