NYC Study Finds 2025 Population Decline And Net Outflow Across All Income Levels
A Citizens Budget Commission study found New York City's population declined in 2025 with a net outflow across all income levels.
The report says the city lost about 114,000 more residents to other US cities than it gained in 2025. The study finds out-migration exceeded in-migration across every income stratum, and the bottom 40 percent of earners showed larger losses than the highest-income groups. Researchers linked part of the decline to roughly a 70 percent drop in both domestic and international in-migration compared with earlier years.
Mayor Brandon Mamdani has emphasized policy achievements this year, touting universal child care funding and a plan to open five city-owned grocery stores. City officials allocated $70 million in capital funds for the five stores and expect to spend about $30 million on a 9,000-square-foot East Harlem location. Stores would be city-owned but run by private operators with price guarantees only for a core set of staples, officials said. Public reaction on social media ranged from budget-skeptic critiques about the $30 million price tag and limited staple guarantees to warnings that government underpricing could hurt private grocers.
Early mainstream coverage emphasized Mamdani's policy rollout and "100-day" wins without foregrounding the population loss. Later reporting, driven by the Citizens Budget Commission study and carried in the same outlet, framed the 2025 decline as a citywide problem and highlighted net out-migration across all incomes. The newer coverage contrasted Gov. Kathy Hochul's warnings about wealthy taxpayers leaving with Mamdani's dismissal of those fears as "imagined," signaling growing scrutiny of migration trends.
📌 Key Facts
- A Citizens Budget Commission study found New York City's overall population declined in 2025 and the city had a net domestic outflow of about 114,000 residents to other U.S. cities last year.
- The study reports net out-migration across all income levels; between 2023 and 2024 the city lost proportionally more low- and middle-income residents than high-income residents, with the bottom 40% of earners particularly affected.
- Researchers link the recent population decline in part to roughly a 70% drop in both domestic and international in‑migration to the city.
- The coverage contrasts Gov. Kathy Hochul’s warnings about wealthy taxpayers leaving for states like Florida and Texas with Mayor Mamdani calling 'rich‑flight' fears 'imagined,' and Fox draws a parallel to San Francisco, whose metro population has not recovered to 2020 levels despite an AI boom.
- At an April 12, 2026, 100‑day event delivered alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders, Mayor Mamdani explicitly embraced the label 'democratic socialism' and Sanders publicly praised his program as an example of it.
- Mamdani said he secured $1.2 billion for universal child care through a partnership with Gov. Hochul and claimed the program was effectively launched by his eighth day in office.
- The administration reported issuing more than 195,000 housing‑code violations in its first 100 days and securing over $34 million in settlements, judgments and repairs for tenants; officials also said murders are at record lows, more than 1,000 guns have been removed from the streets, a new Office of Community Safety was created, crews have filled more than 102,000 potholes, and the city aims to repave over 1,000 lane‑miles this fiscal year.
- Mamdani proposed five publicly owned affordable grocery stores (one per borough) and on April 14, 2026 outlined a plan allocating $70 million in capital funds (about $30 million for a 9,000‑sq‑ft East Harlem site); the first store is expected in late 2027 and the Harlem store by 2029, with city ownership, private operators under contract, direct subsidies to lower prices on core staples, and the initiative framed as a 'grand experiment' modeled on LaGuardia‑era public markets intended to coexist with existing bodegas and supermarkets.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (15)
"The City Journal piece criticizes Mayor Mamdani’s democratic‑socialist push to unionize workers and tenants, arguing that expanding union power will worsen costs and supply problems and that competition and supply‑side reforms are a superior path to improving outcomes."
"A skeptical City Journal appraisal argues that Mamdani’s 100‑day celebration overstates accomplishments: signature promises like city‑owned groceries have been scaled back or delayed, revealing fiscal and operational weaknesses beneath political rhetoric."
"A critical City Journal commentary arguing that Mayor Mamdani’s $70 million plan for city‑owned subsidized grocery stores prioritizes identity‑based politics and symbolism over sound, meritocratic, and economically sensible policy, risking market distortion and poor fiscal outcomes."
"A critical City Journal piece framing Mayor Mamdani’s $70 million, city‑owned grocery initiative in East Harlem as an ideologically motivated, impractical boondoggle that will likely require ongoing subsidies, crowd out local merchants, and fail to remedy food‑access problems effectively."
"The City Journal piece critiques Mayor Mamdani’s plan for a city‑owned, subsidized East Harlem grocery — arguing it’s fiscally imprudent, will undercut private grocers, and is unlikely to achieve both lower prices and union wages without further subsidies."
"A City Journal critique arguing Mayor Mamdani’s $70 million city‑owned grocery plan is politically symbolic, fiscally risky, and unlikely to deliver durable relief — crowding out small retailers while straining an already precarious municipal budget."
"A WSJ editorial criticizes Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposed pied‑à‑terre tax—framed as a move to placate progressive Mayor Zohran Mamdani—arguing it punishes a small group of wealthy nonresidents, risks driving them away, and is more political theater than sound fiscal policy."
"The WSJ opinion piece criticizes Mayor Mamdani’s $70 million plan for city‑owned subsidized grocery stores as ideological "grocery socialism" that risks fiscal waste and harm to private grocers while offering little practical relief for food‑access problems."
"A sharply critical opinion piece argues that Mayor Zohran Mamdani failed a basic leadership test during his first 100 days by privileging ideological optics over clear support for the NYPD and steady crisis management after an alleged terror plot."
"A skeptical City Journal critique of Mayor Mamdani’s $70 million city‑owned grocery plan argues the scheme is politically driven, fiscally risky, likely to have limited effect on prices, and a poor recession‑era policy compared with targeted aid or market‑based alternatives."
📰 Source Timeline (4)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Citizens Budget Commission study released Monday reports New York City's overall population declined in 2025.
- The city lost 114,000 more residents to other U.S. cities than it gained last year.
- Study finds that across all income levels, more people moved out of New York City than moved in during the last year.
- Between 2023 and 2024, New York City lost more low- and middle-income residents than high-income residents, with more people in the bottom 40% of incomes moving out.
- Study links recent population decline partly to a roughly 70% drop in both domestic and international in-migration to the city.
- Article notes Gov. Kathy Hochul previously lamented wealthy taxpayers leaving New York for states like Florida and Texas and contrasts that with Mayor Mamdani calling rich-flight fears 'imagined.'
- Fox piece draws a parallel to San Francisco, citing San Francisco Chronicle reporting that the metro area's population still has not recovered to 2020 levels despite an AI boom.
- Mamdani held a press event April 14, 2026 at La Marqueta in East Harlem to formally outline how the government‑run grocery initiative will work.
- The city has allocated $70 million in capital funds for five city‑owned grocery stores, with about $30 million budgeted for the 9,000‑square‑foot East Harlem store built on a vacant city lot.
- The first city‑owned grocery store is expected to open in late 2027, with the Harlem store opening by 2029.
- Stores will be city‑owned but run by a private operator under contracts that require lower prices on core staples such as bread and eggs, with the city directly subsidizing these items.
- Mamdani framed the initiative as a “grand experiment” modeled on Fiorello LaGuardia‑era public markets and said the stores are intended to coexist with, not replace, existing bodegas and supermarkets.
- Mamdani delivered a 100‑day speech on April 12, 2026, alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders, explicitly embracing the label of democratic socialism.
- He touted securing $1.2 billion for universal child care through a partnership with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, saying the program was effectively launched by his eighth day in office.
- The mayor proposed opening five publicly owned, affordable grocery stores—one in each borough—by the end of his first term, with the first expected to open next year.
- Mamdani’s administration reported issuing more than 195,000 housing-code violations against landlords in 100 days and securing more than $34 million in settlements, judgments and repairs for tenants.
- City officials said murders are at record lows, that more than 1,000 guns have been removed from the streets, a new Office of Community Safety has been created, and crews have filled more than 102,000 potholes, aiming to repave over 1,000 lane‑miles this fiscal year.
- Sanders publicly praised Mamdani’s program as an example of democratic socialism in practice and said it was the first time he’d been introduced by someone proudly using that label.