Cookies

We use cookies to understand how the website is being used and to ensure you get the best possible experience.
By continuing to use this site, you consent to this policy. About cookies

Change of U.S. White Population, 2010-19

MONDAY, SEP 20, 2021

The U.S. white population climbed over the last decade by more than 530,000 – significant, but not enough to continue shrinking relative to other racial groups, according to a Social Explorer analysis of newly released 2015-19 American Community Survey data. White, non-Hispanics made up slightly less than 60.7 percent of the population, down from 63.8 percent recorded in the 2010 Census and 79.6 percent in the 1980 Census.

A half-dozen counties added more than 1 million white residents over the decade, led by Maricopa County, Ariz. (150,000); Wake County, N.C. (103,000); and Travis County, Texas (99,500). Meanwhile, the largest losses of white residents occurred in Los Angeles County, Calif. (-131,000); Cook County, Ill. (-96,500); and Broward County, Fla. (-91,300). View the changes in the white population over the decade in your county with Social Explorer’s award-winning, easy-to-use mapping tools.

    

U.S. White Population, 2010 – 2019. Click here to explore further.


Author: Frank Bass

Data insights are waiting to be uncovered
Get Started

Already using Social Explorer? Log in.