Residential Mobility

The Residential Mobility indicator is the percentage of the population living in the same house as the previous year. Higher proportions are better because of the positive effect on neighborhood health.

A low percentage of residents remaining in the same home from year to year is a proxy for multiple, disruptive moves. Disruptive or multiple moves can affect health due to the stress related to moving. Stress can be from reactive moves and/or weakened social supports. These factors affect individual mental and physical health. Frequent household moves are linked to childhood abuse, neglect, household dysfunction, and increased likelihood of smoking and childhood suicide. Children in families that move often may have to repeat grades, and are be more likely to be suspended from school or have emotional and behavioral problems. Childhood residential instability increases lifetime risk of depression. Frequent housing turnover may also reflect negative housing conditions, or contribute to them. Although high residential instability is usually a sign of distress, some neighborhoods have high residential mobility because of less concerning reasons. For example, many college students move between school years in the University of Minnesota neighborhood. Residential Mobility is in the Social Cohesion domain.

Neighborhoodsort ascending Indicator Value Rank
Windom Park 81.7% 37
Windom 83.9% 25
Willard - Hay 76.1% 52
Whittier 64.8% 76
West Calhoun 70.4% 66
Wenonah 86.6% 16
Webber - Camden 77.6% 50
Waite Park 89.7% 8
Victory 87.4% 15
Ventura Village 69.3% 69
University of Minnesota 41.7% 86
Tangletown 82.1% 35
Sumner - Glenwood (Heritage Park) 84.7% 22
Steven's Square - Loring Heights 61.8% 78
Standish 85.0% 21
St. Anthony West 78.6% 47
St. Anthony East 72.2% 61
Shingle Creek 83.0% 31
Sheridan 79.2% 42
Seward 75.6% 55
Regina 89.8% 7
Prospect Park - East River Road 41.7% 86
Powderhorn Park 79.1% 43
Phillips West 71.5% 64
Page 91.1% 3
Northrop 88.2% 11
Northeast Park 68.0% 73
North Loop 63.1% 77
Nicollet Island - East Bank 79.0% 45
Near - North 74.6% 58
Morris Park 86.0% 18
Minnehaha 83.4% 28
Midtown Phillips 72.1% 62
Mid - City Industrial 59.1% 81
McKinley 69.2% 70
Marshall Terrace 83.2% 29
Marcy Holmes 43.5% 85
Lynnhurst 88.2% 11
Lyndale 78.7% 46
Lowry Hill East 65.5% 75
Lowry Hill 78.3% 48
Loring Park 68.8% 72
Longfellow 84.4% 24
Logan Park 86.3% 17
Linden Hills 82.4% 34
Lind - Bohanon 83.9% 25
King Field 81.4% 38
Kenwood 83.8% 27
Kenny 90.2% 6
Keewaydin 94.3% 1
Jordan 71.8% 63
Humboldt Industrial Area 83.0% 31
Howe 85.6% 20
Holland 76.1% 52
Hiawatha 82.6% 33
Hawthorne 75.6% 55
Harrison 79.1% 43
Hale 87.9% 13
Fulton 91.1% 3
Folwell 70.2% 67
Field 90.5% 5
Ericsson 91.3% 2
Elliot Park 60.9% 79
East Phillips 74.9% 57
East Isles 69.7% 68
East Harriet 79.4% 41
East Calhoun (ECCO) 68.9% 71
Downtown West 57.9% 83
Downtown East 59.5% 80
Diamond Lake 89.2% 9
Corcoran 77.7% 49
Cooper 81.9% 36
Como 59.1% 81
Columbia Park 83.2% 29
Cleveland 73.7% 60
Central 80.4% 39
Cedar Riverside 48.9% 84
Cedar - Isles - Dean 73.8% 59
Camden Industrial 77.0% 51
Calhoun Area Residents Action Group (CARAG) 70.8% 65
Bryn - Mawr 85.8% 19
Bryant 80.1% 40
Bottineau 76.1% 52
Beltrami 68.0% 73
Bancroft 88.8% 10
Audubon Park 84.7% 22
Armatage 87.7% 14

Key Citations:
1. Berkman LF, Syme SL. Social networks, host resistance, and mortality: a nine-year follow-up study of Alameda County residents. American Journal of Epidemiology. 1979;109(2):186-204.

2. Bures RM. 2003. Childhood residential stability and health at midlife. American Journal of Public Health 93:1144-8.

3. Cooper, Merrill. 2001. Housing Affordability: A Children's Issue. Ottawa: Canadian Policy Research Networks Discussion Paper.

4. Dong M. 2005. Childhood residential mobility and multiple health risks during adolescence and adulthood. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 159:11-4-1110.

5. Gilman SE, Kawachi I, Fizmaurice GM Buka L. 2003. Socio-economic status, family disruption and residential stability in childhood: relation to onset, recurrence and remission of major depression. Psychol Medicine 33:1341-55.