Growth in the Triangle cools slightly but still among nation’s fastest

Population growth is slowing in most counties nationwide amid a massive drop in immigration, new U.S. Census data shows.

  • But that isn’t stopping the Triangle from still being among the fastest-growing areas in the country.

Why it matters: The new data offers the best look yet at how tighter immigration enforcement is affecting America’s demographic makeup, Axios’ Alex Fitzpatrick writes.

By the numbers: The Raleigh metro area was the 10th fastest-growing metro in the country between July 2024 and July 2025, growing 2.4% to nearly 1.6 million people.

Driving the news: International migration fell in nine out of 10 U.S. counties between 2024 and 2025 compared to the prior period, the Census Bureau says.

  • Other counties stayed flat.

Between the lines: That drop is hitting some areas harder than others.

  • Census Bureau demographer George M. Hayward, in a statement: “The nation’s largest counties … are often international migration hubs, gaining large numbers of international migrants and losing people that move to other parts of the country via domestic migration.”
  • Case in point: California’s Los Angeles County lost nearly 54,000 people from 2024 to 2025, down about -0.6%. (It remains the biggest U.S. county, with about 9.7 million people.)

Yes, but: The Census data predates a surge in immigration enforcement activity, including immigration enforcement operations in the Triangle last fall…

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