← Back to context

Comment by verall

21 hours ago

This is not true, I don't know if you live here or why you repeat it.

Population has receded slightly in the last couple years in Austin proper, is still greater than 2020, and the metro area has not shrunk year over year at all, although growth has slowed.

> This is not true, I don't know if you live here or why you repeat it.

Population by year:

2019: 978,763

2020 high estimate for Jan 1 (996,369) - https://austin.culturemap.com/news/city-life/01-15-20-austin...

2020: 961,855 (Census, low mark)

2023: 979,882

2024 (estimated high mark): 986,928

So yes, the population cratered from a high in early 2020. This brought down prices with a 2 year lag, as owners started to get rid of empty units. The prices will come right back up now, that the population is recovering.

  • You're comparing different estimate sources and still ignoring that someone moving to round rock or ceder park is still a part of the housing pressure for the city of Austin.

    A low-single-digit push to local burbs happened all over the country. "Austin" in the same way people discuss "Houston" or "Chicago" i.e. the local metro area has grown every year.

    • There are different sources (and I pointed that out), but they all show that the population has been at most flat.

      The suburbs migration IS the point. The suburbs are a superior model when it's made possible by de-urbanization of workplaces, and it shows. The price in the suburbs of Austin has been growing.