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New U.S. Census Bureau data shows San Francisco’s population grew by about 1,200 in the last tracking period and still remains one of the most populated metropolitan areas in the country.
By comparison, the total U.S. population rose 1% during that time. Zoom in: The San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont metropolitan area has seen modest gains between April 2020 to July of last year ...
By the numbers: The San Francisco metro area's 65+ population was the only age group to increase from 2020 to 2023, growing 8.7%, according to Census data. Meanwhile, the area's 14-and-under ...
That's more than 6% of the city's population. Those dramatic numbers put San Francisco on the map in a different way. So many people are leaving San Francisco metro area or are thinking about it.
San Francisco had the largest population loss among the Bay Area's cities, losing more than 5,300 residents for a decline of 0.6%, while Oakland lost 2,250 residents, a drop of 0.5%. A new housing ...
The data represents a significant shift in population trends for San Francisco, which hadn’t seen notable net gains in LinkedIn’s data since 2017. The San Francisco metropolitan area had some ...
While it is undeniable that more people have left California than were born or moved into it, one surprising slice of a Census Bureau report shows troubled San Francisco's population is on the way up.
Population losses have started to slow in most major metro areas, with gains last year in Boston, Minneapolis and San Francisco. The nation is continuing its decades-long move to the South and ...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Some of the most high-profile urban areas in the U.S. gained population on Tuesday. But it's not because of a sudden flood of moving trucks into Atlanta, New Orleans and San ...