
Illinois Residents Who Leave Usually Move To 1 Of These 3 States
Even though the state of California now leads the entire country in outbound migration (people deciding to leave a state and then doing it), Illinois, which has been number-one or very near it for the last decade, is still seeing thousands leave the state.
For several years now, Illinois has been at or near the top on a list of states that are steadily and heavily losing their populations. The biggest reason cited for leaving Illinois for most of the people who've departed can be boiled down to a single word: Taxes.
Illinois' tax environment hasn't changed for the better (some would say it's gotten worse, if anything), but the amount of Illinois residents who are leaving the state has slowed down somewhat. We know that Illinoisans are still leaving, but did you know that the majority who wave goodbye to the Land of Lincoln are primarily ending up in 3 states? Only one of those states isn't a neighbor of Illinois.
Most People Think That Those Who Leave Illinois Are Doing It Because Of Our Weather, So They're Obviously Moving To The Warmest, Sunniest Places They Can Find, Right?
I'm sorry to have to tell you that it's not just warmth and sunshine that departing Illinoisans are looking for. It certainly doesn't hurt, since the number-one destination for Illinois' movers with 35,000 former Illinoisans moving there in the last 12 months is...
In Florida's case, the great weather (except for your occasional killer hurricane) is a bonus, but many Illinoisans who've moved there say no state income tax, along with better job opportunities are what drew them to Florida.
The next two Illinois population-stealing states are our direct neighbors, and I know for a fact that they can't claim better weather than we have here in Illinois:
Indiana absorbed 31,000 Illinois residents who were looking to make a fresh start.
Wisconsin took 27,300 Illinois residents off our hands...and probably closed the deal by addicting them to cheese curds and cheddar hats. Ruthless.
About 25 thousand former Illinoisans headed for California, and another 25,000 went to Texas. Missouri took 20,000 and Iowa grabbed up 16,500. Kentucky wound up with around 6,000.
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