Texas has 3 in top 10 biggest U.S. cities
  real estate in texas

Texas has 3 in top 10 biggest U.S. cities

 

Everything is bigger in Texas, including the cities. At least that is according to the most recent U.S. Census Bureau population estimates. Three Texas cities made the bureau’s list of the country’s top 10 most populated metros.

Houston ranked fourth with a population of more than 2 million, San Antonio came in seventh with almost 1.3 million, and Dallas placed ninth with more than 1.2 million.

“The post-2000 period has clearly turned into a time of rapid growth for Texas cities, particularly its large and suburban cities,” says Steve Murdock, state demographer and research fellow with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University.

Not only does Texas have some of the largest cities, but it has some of the fastest-growing. From 2000 to 2005, Texas was the only state to have more than one city among the fastest-growing in America, and it had four. San Antonio, up more than 105,000 since 2000, ranked fourth; Fort Worth, up 82,700, ranked fifth; Houston, up nearly 60,000, ranked seventh; and El Paso, up nearly 35,000, ranked tenth.

 

 

Only Los Angeles (up 150,300 to 3.8 million), Phoenix (up nearly 140,000 to 1.5 million) and New York (up more than 134,500 to 8.1 million) added more new residents than San Antonio and Fort Worth.

For 2000–2005 population growth by percentage, Texas again had four cities in the top 10. Fort Worth ranked first with a 15.3% increase. San Antonio ranked fourth at 9.1%, El Paso ranked seventh at 6.2% and Austin was tenth at 4.6%.

In fact, of the more than 1,200 Texas cities and towns covered in the Census Bureau’s 2005 report, 70% showed growth in the previous five years, with some smaller towns boasting especially impressive numbers. Hutto had a 492% growth between 2000 and 2005, while Dallas-area Fate and Little Elm grew by 406% and 365%, respectively.

At the other end of the spectrum, the Wichita Falls population dropped by nearly 4,400. Beaumont was next with a decrease of almost 1,900, followed by Pecos with 1,250

 

 

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David S. Jones is communications director and senior editor with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University. He can be reached at 979/845-2039