Where Are People Moving in Towns, GA?
IRS county-to-county migration, 2023 tax year (released about two years after the tax year it covers).
People moving in
81
People moving out
128
Net migration
+227
Towns, GA is a net gainer of residents. In the latest IRS data (2023 tax year), 81 people moved in and 128 moved out, for a net gain of +227. Sustained inflows like this are one of the strongest long-run signals of housing demand.
Migration is most useful read alongside the rest of the market. People move for jobs, affordability, climate, and lifestyle, and where they come from and go to says a lot about what a county is competing on. Below are the specific counties driving Towns, GA’s flows in each direction.
Top counties people moved to Towns, GA from
Top counties people left Towns, GA for
“Returns” counts tax returns (a household proxy) that moved along each flow; “People” counts the individuals on those returns, when reported. IRS aggregate and foreign pseudo-rows are excluded. Informational only, not financial advice.
Frequently asked questions
Are people moving to Towns, GA or leaving?
Towns, GA had a net gain of +227 residents in the latest IRS data (2023 tax year), with 81 people moving in and 128 moving out. Net migration is inflow minus outflow.
Where are people moving to Towns, GA from?
The largest sources of new Towns, GA residents are Union, GA, Clay, NC. The full top-ten list of origin counties is in the table above.
Where do people leaving Towns, GA go?
People leaving Towns, GA most often move to Union, GA, Clay, NC. The full top-ten list of destination counties is in the table above.
What does Towns, GA migration mean for housing?
Migration is a leading demand signal. Sustained net inflows tend to support rents and home prices when supply cannot keep up, while net outflows can soften them. Read this alongside Towns, GA's price forecast, building permits, and affordability on the full county dashboard before drawing a conclusion.
How current is this Towns, GA migration data?
It comes from IRS Statistics of Income county-to-county migration data, which is released about two years after the tax year it covers; the figures above reflect the 2023 tax year. That lag is normal for this dataset, which counts actual tax returns rather than survey estimates.