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Carmel, Indianapolis and Fort Wayne notch biggest 2016 population gains, census estimates show

For Immediate Release May 25, 2017
Downtown Carmel, Indiana, street
Carmel, Indiana, experienced the largest increase in population across the Hoosier state from 2015 to 2016.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Seven Indiana cities posted annual population increases of more than 1,000 residents in 2016, according to estimates released by the U.S. Census Bureau and analyzed by the Indiana Business Research Center at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business.

Carmel led with an addition of 2,977 people last year, followed by gains in Indiana’s two largest cities. Indianapolis added an estimated 2,869 people, and Fort Wayne grew by 1,682 residents from 2015 to 2016.

More suburban Indianapolis communities claimed the next five spots: Noblesville, with an increase of 1,562 residents in 2016; Westfield, 1,285 residents; Fishers, 1,147 residents; Greenwood, 1,073 residents; and Plainfield, 834 residents.

Lafayette, which grew by 700 residents, and Bloomington, which had 672 additional people, rounded out the top 10.

Among Indiana cities or towns with at least 5,000 residents, Whitestown in Boone County was the state’s fastest-growing community in 2016 with a growth rate of 9.2 percent. This marks the sixth consecutive year that Whitestown has ranked as the state’s fastest-growing locale. Over that span, Whitestown’s population has more than doubled from 3,147 in 2010 to 6,590 in 2016.

For the second year in a row, McCordsville in Hancock County was Indiana’s second-fastest-growing place, with a growth rate of 7.2 percent in 2016, followed by Bargersville in Johnson County (4.2 percent growth), and Hamilton County’s Westfield (3.6 percent) and Carmel (3.4 percent).

In all, 13 of the 15 fastest-growing cities or towns in the state in 2016 were in suburban counties in the Indy metropolitan area. The only places outside Central Indiana to make the top 15 were the Lake County communities of Winfield (2.9 percent) and St. John (1.9 percent).

Indiana’s largest cities

With a population of 855,164 residents, Indianapolis was the nation’s 15th-largest city in 2016, ranking just behind Columbus, Ohio, (860,090) and ahead of Fort Worth, Texas (854,113).

Indianapolis skyline with IUPUI in foreground
Indianapolis, home to the IUPUI campus, remains the state’s largest city, although its level of population growth has slowed in recent years.

Indianapolis had seen something of a population growth surge earlier in this decade, adding an average of 6,775 residents per year from 2010 to 2014, but growth in the Circle City has slowed of late, with an average annual gain of roughly 3,200 residents over the past two years. Indianapolis grew by an average of about 3,800 residents each year from 2000 to 2010.

Fort Wayne has seen remarkably steady population growth over the past six years. Indiana’s second-largest city added 1,682 residents in 2016 to bring its total population to an estimated 264,488. Fort Wayne’s growth in 2016 was just a shade lower than its average annual growth of 1,739 per year from 2010 to 2015.

Evansville (population 119,477) and South Bend (101,735) are the only other Indiana cities with a population above 100,000 residents. These two communities have experienced opposing growth trends so far this decade.

Evansville added an average of 139 residents per year from 2010 to 2013 but has seen an average annual decline of 354 residents over the past three years. 2016 marked Evansville’s largest drop over this stretch, with a loss of 561 residents.

South Bend, by contrast, had essentially flat population change from 2010 to 2013 but has added an average of 236 residents per year over the past three years.

Before posting a nearly 3,000-person gain in population last year, Carmel, the state’s fifth-largest city, added on average 1,660 residents per year from 2010 to 2015. The rest of Indiana’s 10 largest cities are Fishers (90,127), Bloomington (84,465), Hammond (77,134), Gary (76,424) and Lafayette (71,782).

Thirteen of the state’s 20 largest cities posted population gains in 2016. Of this group, the four fastest-growing communities were in the Indianapolis metro area, led by Carmel (3.4 percent growth in 2016), Noblesville (2.7 percent), Greenwood (1.9 percent) and Fishers (1.3 percent). Other fast-growing larger cities include Lafayette (1.0 percent), Mishawaka (1.0 percent), Bloomington (0.8 percent) and Jeffersonville (0.8 percent).

At the other end of the spectrum, Evansville, Gary and Hammond had the state’s largest declines in 2016.

For Gary, the decline in population of 692 residents in 2016 was the continuation of a sharp, years-long population slide. According to the Census Bureau, Gary’s population has fallen by more than 25 percent in the past 16 years, from 102,746 at the time of the 2000 census to an estimated 76,424 in 2016. Gary was Indiana’s fifth-largest city in 2000 but ranked as the state’s ninth-largest community in 2016. Hammond’s population dropped by 512.

Around the state

Aerial view of Evansville, Indiana
Evansville, in southwest Indiana along the Ohio River, had one of the state’s largest population declines.John Blair/Creative Commons

In 2016, 480 of Indiana’s 1,010 townships either held steady or added population. Of this group, 11 townships – all in Indy-area suburban counties – had a growth rate above 2 percent. Another 74 townships grew at a pace between 1 percent and 2 percent in 2016. More than half of the state’s townships registered a loss last year, with 54 of them declining at a rate of 1 percent or more.

“Looking at differences between urban and rural communities, the data show that most Hoosiers live in cities or towns,” said Matt Kinghorn, demographer at the Indiana Business Research Center.

Two-thirds of Indiana’s 6.63 million residents in 2016 lived in incorporated places. Indiana’s cities and towns as a group accounted for 82 percent of the state’s total population growth in 2016.  

For more information about these estimates, visit the Population topic page at STATS Indiana.

The Indiana Business Research Center is the official state representative to the U.S. Census Bureau on matters relating to the census and population estimates and serves as a state partner in the national network of State Data Centers. It receives support from the Indiana Department of Workforce Development for this work, including the websites Hoosiers by the Numbers and the award-winning STATS Indiana.

Note: The Census Bureau adjusts its population estimates for sub-county areas each year to account for city and town boundary changes (e.g., annexations). Therefore, boundary changes do not contribute to any population changes reported in this release.

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