NYC, Austin, and LA were the top cities tech talent moved to between 2022 and 2023, per a report.San Francisco, Seattle, and Boston lost the greatest share of relocating tech workers.Several places attracting tech workers are “blue island” cities in red states.
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Top tech workers aren’t just moving to Austin and Miami.
New York was the city that gained the biggest share of relocating tech talent between 2022 and 2023, a recent report by SignalFire found.
While the San Francisco Bay Area is still the center of the tech world, a migration of tech employees out of California has continued since the rise of remote work.
The report found that the most common states that tech workers relocated to included New York, Texas, California, and Florida.
The top nine cities tech workers relocated to were:
New York had a net gain in tech talent of about 3.5%, while Austin had a gain of about 1.5% and Los Angeles had a net gain of around 0.5%.
Meanwhile, the nine cities tech workers moved away from were:
San Francisco
Seattle
Boston
Phoenix
Washington, DC
Sacramento, California
Portland, Oregon
Detroit
Provo, Utah
San Francisco saw a 3.5% net loss in tech talent, while Seattle lost just under 2.5% and Boston lost more than 0.5%.
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The report found that 15% of all tech employees who moved between 2022 and 2023 went to New York. New York drew a significant share of the tech workers who relocated from San Francisco, Boston, and Seattle, among other cities.
The trend of people moving out of San Francisco and California in general to cities in Texas and Florida has been partially explained by people wanting to escape high costs of living. But New York managed to draw the biggest share of tech workers who moved between 2022 and 2023 despite its high housing prices and cost of living.
Several of the cities attracting tech workers are “blue island” cities located in red states, such as Austin, Nashville, Tampa, and Miami.
In addition to the cities in the report, there are also smaller cities across the US that have growing tech scenes, including places in Utah, Idaho, and Arkansas.
Correction: May 1, 2024 — An earlier version of this story misstated the time period the SignalFire report measured. It was between 2022 and 2023, not last year.
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