Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Pandemic movers were seeking affordabil­ity

But USPS data shows they didn’t want to go too far

- By Zach Wichter Bankrate.com

The full year data is in, and it’s officially time to put the “cities are dead” narrative to bed.

Yes, it’s true: Generally, more people left major cities than moved to them over the course of the strange year that was 2020, but in terms of raw numbers, the population changes were minimal, according to United States Postal Service mail forwarding data.

A separate Bankrate/ YouGov nationwide survey found that 16% of respondent­s moved in 2020, but that rate jumped to 32% for Gen Z-ers and 26% for millennial­s. People said they moved to be closer to friends or family, to seek a better cost of living or in search of more space.

The top three cities for move outs: New York (Manhattan), Houston and Austin each lost a net of fewer than 15,000 citizens. The rest of the top 10 all lost under 10,000 residents overall, according to the Postal Service.

The USPS data has some limitation­s. The 12,681,085 change-of-address requests that Bankrate analyzed, which covered Jan. 1 through Dec. 31, 2020, were compiled by zip code and only registered moves within or between zip codes with at least 10 requests over that period. For example, if three people or families moved from Bethpage, NY 11714 to Myrtle Beach, SC 29577, that pair would not show up in the dataset, but if 11 people or families made that same move, it would. Even so, the numbers provide some good insights into moving patterns during the pandemic.

Here are the biggest

2020 moving trends the USPS numbers reveal:

Movers preferred smaller cities or lessdense neighborho­ods

Take Manhattan as a case study.

Over the course of

2020, New York’s densest borough lost a net of about 12,000 residents to other zip codes. Of those who moved out, more than a third went just across the East River to Brooklyn, the city’s most populous borough.

Brooklyn, however, is less dense than Manhattan, so movers may have gone in search of some breathing room.

Ray Rodriguez, the regional mortgage sales manager for New York at TD Bank, said those responses mirrored what he was seeing in his job.

“In New York City the outer boroughs are very well alive,” he said. “People who are used to living an urban lifestyle are going to continue an urban lifestyle. I’m thinking of two of my employees who purchased condos in the city, they upgraded to have outdoor space.”

Less-dense outlying areas were top destinatio­ns for move-outs from every major city that topped the USPS data.

Gen Z-ers and millennial­s most likely to move

A Bankrate/YouGov poll showed that 10% of Americans moved or relocated due to COVID in 2020 and were still relocated as of February. Some 6% moved but had returned as of then. And 84% of those polled did not move during the year.

About 18% of movers during 2020 sought out new housing because they wanted more space, with Gen Z-ers and millennial­s being the most likely to move, at 18% and 17%, respective­ly. Blacks were a third more likely to have moved and not returned compared with whites.

Here are some of the top trends the survey revealed:

■ 31% moved to be closer to family/friends

■ 27% wanted more affordable living

■ 21% relocated for their job

■ 18% needed more space

■ 17% wanted a different climate

■ 17% moved because they now have the ability to work remotely from anywhere

Movers didn’t stray too far from home

Those who did move during the pandemic mostly stayed pretty close to the homes they were leaving.

Of the 12,681,085 change of address requests for popular moves, just over half a million requests in the sample were from those who moved to another county; the rest stayed in the same county, zip code, city or rural area. Similarly, just 42,000 change requests reflected moves to another state.

Four of the top five cities for move-outs were Houston, Austin, Orlando and Dallas. For all those cities, the top five moved-to destinatio­ns were less than 30 miles away. New York (Manhattan) was the No. 1 city for move-outs during 2020, and three of the top five destinatio­ns for its movers were less than 15 miles away.

Housing affordabil­ity was key

It may not be obvious when first looking at the Postal Service data, but a little digging reveals that many movers were likely motivated by a cheaper cost of living in 2020, too.

The pandemic brought employment changes for much of the workforce as stores and public venues closed down and many companies shifted to remote operations. As more employees worked remotely, many had newfound flexibilit­y in their living arrangemen­ts. For those who lost their jobs during the pandemic, housing affordabil­ity was an even more crucial factor in the decision to move.

Nathaniel Hunt lived in New York for 11 years and was dancing in the Metropolit­an Opera’s ballet corps before the pandemic shut down most live performanc­es in the city.

“It was a big life change,” he said. “My art form, my vehicle wasn’t adaptable in the same spaces as say, opera singer friends of mine.”

Without live performanc­es, which were his primary source of income, Hunt said he was reliant on unemployme­nt benefits to pay his rent. When the extra $600 per week that was part of the original CARES Act relief ran out, he could no longer afford to stay in Manhattan, so in August he moved back to Maryland to stay with his parents.

Nearly a third of respondent­s to the Bankrate/ YouGov poll said moving closer to friends or family was a motivating factor, while more than a quarter said finding affordable living was a key reason behind their decision to move.

For all of the top five move-out cities, the top moved-to destinatio­ns were places with lower costs of living.

In October, Hunt wound up moving again, to Los Angeles. He now lives with friends in a more affordable place with more open space than he had in New York.

The change opened him to the idea of a more mobile lifestyle, even once coronaviru­s is brought under control.

“Why can’t I have both?” he said. “I do plan on coming back to New York. I also feel that this new community and network that I’ve spawned in LA won’t leave me.”

Hunt’s position underscore­s what many experts have predicted: Even after the pandemic, people will likely continue to want more flexible living arrangemen­ts.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? More than one-third of those who left Manhattan during the pandemic moved to Brooklyn.
DREAMSTIME More than one-third of those who left Manhattan during the pandemic moved to Brooklyn.

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