Federal Data HubIRS Migration Flows · JSON

Southeastern Connecticut Planning, CT

County-to-county migration · IRS SOI · filing years 2022-2023

Net migration: +290 tax returns · +566 people · +$1,912,000 AGI

Inflow
7,387 returns · 11,729 people · $497,713,000 AGI
Outflow
7,097 returns · 11,163 people · $495,801,000 AGI

Top origins (where new residents came from)

CountyReturnsAGI
Capitol Planning Region, CT907$60,977,000
Northeastern Connecticut Planning, CT497$24,038,000
Lower Connecticut River Valley Pl, CT497$35,252,000
Washington County, RI367$24,874,000
South Central Connecticut Plannin, CT302$23,052,000
Providence County, RI165$10,207,000
Kent County, RI106$6,049,000
Middlesex County, MA91$8,483,000
Worcester County, MA77$5,235,000
Kings County, NY75$5,294,000

Top destinations (where leavers went)

CountyReturnsAGI
Capitol Planning Region, CT866$53,129,000
Northeastern Connecticut Planning, CT454$22,374,000
Lower Connecticut River Valley Pl, CT415$31,229,000
Washington County, RI264$18,962,000
South Central Connecticut Plannin, CT185$10,735,000
Providence County, RI136$8,739,000
Middlesex County, MA127$8,991,000
Suffolk County, MA100$6,657,000
Kitsap County, WA96$6,604,000
New York County, NY92$8,624,000

IRS migration data tracks where tax filers lived in consecutive years. A "return" is roughly a household; "AGI" is the adjusted gross income that moved with them. Net migration = inflow − outflow. Small county-pair flows are suppressed by the IRS for privacy and shown blank.

Source: IRS SOI Migration Data. License: CC0 1.0.