Alaska’s population rose slightly between 2024 and 2025 and is now at its highest level since 2017, the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development announced Wednesday.
as of July 1, 2025, the department said in its annual state population estimate. That’s up 1,649 people from the department’s July 2024 population estimate of 737,088. The rise comes despite a revision that erased thousands of international immigrants that the U.
S. Census mistakenly believed had moved to Alaska. Last year, relying on Census figures showing that thousands of people had migrated to Alaska from other countries, the department in July 2024 estimated Alaska’s populationSince then, and after prodding from Alaska state demographer David Howell, the Census Bureau retroactively lowered the number of international migrants that came to Alaska, and this year’s population estimate is significantly lower than last year’s but higher than the state’s revised 2024 figure. “We think is more accurate given that people crossing the southern border aren’t very often making their way to Alaska,” Howell said. With the extra residents removed and a new baseline in place, the state’s population grew on a year-over-year basis because the number of births in the state exceeded the number of Alaskans who died. That natural increase — births minus deaths — of 3,389 people was greater than the number of people who moved out of the state. Between 2024 and 2025, 1,740 more people moved out of Alaska than moved here. It was the 13th consecutive year of negative net migration in Alaska, extending the longest streak of negative net migration since 1945.. Compared with the other 49 states and the District of Columbia, Alaska’s population growth ranked 40th.the highest growth rates among states . Vermont , Hawaii and West Virginia had the lowest and were among five states that posted population declines. The U.S. Census Bureau has slightly different figures than the state — it estimated a 0.1% population gain between 2024 and 2025 — but the Alaska Department of Labor conducts surveys of military bases and group homes that the Census Bureau does not, Howell said. For that reason, he believes the state’s estimate is more accurate than the Census Bureau’s. Overall, Howell said, Alaska seemed to simply extend existing population trends between 2024 and 2025. “We’re continuing to see losses in the working-age population. … We’re really starting to see declines in the school-age population. It was growing slightly at the beginning of this decade, but at this point, there’s about 1,000 more 17-year-olds than there are 4-year olds. And so we’re just going through aging,” he said. Alaska’s median age is 37.1, one and a half years older than it was at the start of the decade. Haines, the state’s oldest community, has a median age above 50.Howell and the Department of Labor and Workforce Development are predicting that the state’s population will start dropping steadilyThe number of births in the latest population estimate is the lowest since the trans-Alaska oil pipeline was built. The number of deaths dropped slightly last year, but Howell said there may be a morbid reason for that: The COVID-19 pandemic peaked in Alaska in 2021-2022 and may have killed elderly Alaskans who would have died later. This year’s state population estimate retroactively updated the population change between 2021-2022, turning it from a small gain into a decline. On a borough and city level, existing trends continued in the latest forecast. The Matanuska-Susitna Borough continues to be the fastest-growing large area of the state, the population of Anchorage is relatively flat, the Interior’s population is growing slightly and Southeast Alaska’s population is falling.See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to
Alaska Population Increase James Brooks Alaska Beacon Alaska Department Of Labor And Workforce Developme U.S. Census U.S. Census Alaska
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