As global temperatures rise, many people assume that worsening heat will drive residents to abandon warming regions in large numbers. However, new research published in the journal Sustainability reveals that higher temperatures alone are not prompting mass relocations in the United States, but rather slowing the rate of new arrivals to unusually hot areas. These results suggest that economic opportunities and housing conditions shape human mobility far more than gradual climate changes do.
Research into climate adaptation typically focuses on large government policies or municipal infrastructure projects. Less attention is given to how individual households adapt to gradual environmental shifts, such as rising average temperatures or prolonged droughts. These slow-moving changes increase financial burdens by raising utility bills and insurance premiums.
Over time, such creeping expenses can stress household budgets and affect physical health. Researchers wanted to understand if these persistent temperature anomalies prompt people to pack up and leave their communities. A temperature anomaly is simply the difference between current temperatures and a long-term historical average.
Previous research often looked at rapid disasters like hurricanes or wildfires. Studying slow-onset temperature changes offers a different perspective on how families manage environmental risk. If people move away from slowly warming areas, policymakers need to plan for shifting tax bases and changing infrastructure needs.
Yanmei Li, an associate professor of urban and regional planning at Florida Atlantic University, led the investigation. Li and her co-author, Diana Mitsova, a professor in the same department, suspected that household moves might be constrained by local economic realities. They aimed to see if a specific temperature threshold exists that triggers widespread relocation.
To investigate these patterns, the researchers examined county-to-county migration records from the Internal Revenue Service for the year 2021. This tax data tracks where people move by comparing their filing addresses from one year to the next. The team focused on the contiguous United States, looking at out-migration, in-migration, and net migration rates for each county.
They compared this migration data against temperature records from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Specifically, they looked at average temperature anomalies from 2017 to 2021 compared to a baseline period of 1901 to 2000. They also factored in local socioeconomic details, such as housing costs, poverty rates, and education levels, using census data.
The researchers utilized spatial regression models, which are statistical tools that account for geographical patterns and neighborhood effects. These models helped them separate the influence of temperature from other factors like a booming local job market or high housing vacancy rates. They also used a technique called spline analysis to look for potential tipping points where a certain amount of warming might suddenly change migration habits.
The results challenged common assumptions about climate-driven relocation. In the statistical models, the estimated impacts of temperature anomalies on all three migration outcomes were not statistically significant. This means that once housing and economic factors are considered, temperature changes alone do not clearly predict population shifts.
Instead of pushing people away, moderate temperature anomalies were associated with slightly lower rates of out-migration. This pattern hints at a situation where vulnerable households become trapped. Worsening environmental conditions can drain personal finances, making it too expensive for people to afford the costs of moving.
The relationship between temperature and mobility did change slightly in areas with high poverty. In poorer counties, rising temperatures were linked to higher out-migration rates. This suggests that households with fewer resources might eventually be displaced when environmental stress compounds existing economic hardships.
When looking at extreme temperature anomalies, the researchers found a different trend. Rather than causing current residents to flee, extreme heat primarily reduced the number of new people moving in. Counties experiencing the most severe temperature increases received fewer in-migrants, which slowed their overall population growth.
Despite these warming trends, traditional migration magnets in the Sun Belt continue to grow rapidly. Growing metropolitan areas in states like Texas, Florida, and Arizona remain popular destinations. People continue to flock to these regions for jobs, affordable housing, and lifestyle amenities, even though these same areas show some of the highest temperature anomalies in the country.
Li noted that the dynamics of human relocation are heavily tied to local appeal. “As extreme temperature anomalies increase, we don’t see more people leaving,” Li said.
She added that this shift alters how we should view climate-related population changes. “It’s less about people being pushed out and more about places becoming less attractive,” Li explained. “At the same time, consistently warm climates still draw people, highlighting a contrast between steady warmth and extreme heat.”
The analysis also searched for a specific temperature tipping point that might trigger a sudden exodus. The models indicated a possible shift in migration behavior when warming exceeds about 2.6 degrees Fahrenheit above historical averages. Even beyond this point, the changes in migration remained relatively small and were not statistically significant.
Mitsova pointed out that while current responses are mild, the future might look different. “The absence of strong effects today does not mean climate will remain a minor factor,” Mitsova said. “Our findings suggest that stronger migration responses could emerge in the future, particularly as rising temperatures interact with extreme events, long-term exposure, or constraints such as housing availability and insurance markets.”
The study does carry a few limitations. Because the researchers only looked at migration data from a single year, they cannot track how long-term exposure to heat influences relocation over a decade or more. Using county-level information might also mask hyper-local differences, as a single county can contain both wealthy, resilient neighborhoods and highly vulnerable communities.
People base their decisions to move on a tangle of overlapping reasons. A new job, a desire for a larger home, or proximity to family often outweigh concerns about local climate anomalies. These powerful social and economic drivers can easily obscure the subtle influence of gradual environmental change in broad statistical models.
Future research should investigate how cumulative exposure to slow-onset climate changes affects families over longer periods. Scientists could also incorporate data on specific hazards, such as the rising cost of flood insurance or the frequency of nearby wildfires. Conducting surveys directly with individual households would also help clarify exactly how environmental worries factor into their decisions to stay or leave.
Addressing these questions will help municipal planners prepare for the future. By understanding the real barriers to relocation, governments can focus on local resilience strategies. Upgrading infrastructure and assisting low-income households with energy costs might prove more effective than bracing for an unlikely wave of mass climate migration.
The study, “Temperature Anomaly and Residential Mobility: Spatial Patterns, Tipping Points, and Implications for Sustainable Adaptation,” was authored by Yanmei Li and Diana Mitsova.
