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Housing construction in a neighborhood in Elk Grove on July 8, 2022. Photo by Rahul Lal, CalMatters

published on May 8, 2025 - 10:57 AM
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On May 1, the California Department of Finance released a report highlighting the state’s 108,000-person increase during the 2024 calendar year.

In addition to the 108,000-person increase, California also saw an increase in K–8 enrollment of 13,890 students, a nearly 25,300-person increase in the 65-and-older population and the natural increase (births minus deaths) contributed 114,805 people, up almost 10,000 from 2023.

The Central Valley followed these trends—Fresno County’s increase of 0.9% put it at the third-highest rate in California, while Tulare County’s 0.7% increase put it in sixth.

Lassen County, located in northeast California along the Nevada border, had the highest increase rate, at 2.9%.

At 2.7%, Madera County had the highest housing growth among all counties. Kings County was the eighth-highest county with a 1.2% increase. The state average housing growth for all counties was 0.8%.

With a city population of 557,032, Fresno was the fifth most populous city in California, behind Los Angeles (3,835,263), San Diego (1,408,937), San Jose (979,415) and San Francisco (842,027). Bakersfield was ninth with a population of 419,238.

Hanford and Tulare were among the fastest-growing cities with populations over 30,000, with increases of 2.3% and 2.0%, respectively.

Fresno County’s Huron and Firebaugh both made the top 10 for multi-family housing unit growth. Huron was fifth with a 13.73% growth, while Firebaugh was 10th at 9.81%.


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