As of May 2024, Denver's population was slightly increasing, with a 0.44% increase from the 2020 count. However, Denver's population of 716,577 in 2023 was still below the 716,606 estimated by the U.S. Census Bureau for July 2020. The Denver-Aurora-Centennial metro area also grew 1.2% between July 2020 and July 2023, which is higher than the 1% national increase, but lower than other major metros in the U.S.. Some factors that may be contributing to Denver's population decline include: Housing inaccessibility Dwindling affordability Slower migration More deaths Drop in fertility rates Fewer young people moving to Colorado Denver is technically on the losing side of the ledger. Its population of 716,577 last summer didn't surpass the 716,606 the U.S. Census Bureau estimated for July 1, 2020. But Denver's population rose 0.44% in the 2023 count and if there is any Colorado city that could rebound strongly in the next count, it is Denver.May 17, 2024
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As of May 2024, Denver's population was slightly increasing, with a 0.44% increase from the 2020 count. However, Denver's population of 716,577 in 2023 was still below the 716,606 estimated by the U.S. Census Bureau for July 2020. The Denver-Aurora-Centennial metro area also grew 1.2% between July 2020 and July 2023, which is higher than the 1% national increase, but lower than other major metros in the U.S..
Some factors that may be contributing to Denver's population decline include:
Housing inaccessibility
Dwindling affordability
Slower migration
More deaths
Drop in fertility rates
Fewer young people moving to Colorado
Denver is technically on the losing side of the ledger. Its population of 716,577 last summer didn't surpass the 716,606 the U.S. Census Bureau estimated for July 1, 2020. But Denver's population rose 0.44% in the 2023 count and if there is any Colorado city that could rebound strongly in the next count, it is Denver.May 17, 2024
MORE BUSES OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS WILL BE HERE SOON! DONT WORRY!