Why Americans are flocking to this Florida retirement hot spot

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A community on Florida’s Gulf Coast has seen a large influx of new residents from the Midwest who are driving the area’s rapid growth.

The population of Sarasota County, Florida, has grown 12.4% over the five years leading up to April 2025, according to Florida’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research (BEBR).

Midwesterners have flocked to the community for a permanent move as they approach or begin retirement, following the path taken by many of the region’s snowbirds who relocate to the warmer climate during cold Midwest winters.

“The surge of Midwesterners into Sarasota reflects a confluence of factors that have been building for decades, including the natural I-75 corridor, the Gulf’s calmer and more accessible beaches and a cultural tempo that feels closer to the Midwest than Miami’s intensity does,” Realtor.com senior economist Hannah Jones told FOX Business.

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While the uptick in Midwesterners to the region began before the COVID-19 pandemic, the economic disruption caused by the pandemic helped accelerate the trend as remote work made it easier for those still in the workforce to relocate.

“What accelerated that long-standing pattern was the pandemic, which untethered buyers from their offices and gave them both the means and the motivation to make a move they might have otherwise saved for retirement,” Jones said.

Data from the Census Bureau showed that about 1,585 people from Michigan relocated to Sarasota County from 2018 to 2022, while other Midwestern states weren’t far behind. Illinois contributed 1,399 transplants, and Ohio added another 1,282.

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Florida’s BEBR data showed a net influx of 72,493 residents to Sarasota from 2020 to 2025. IRS data showing county-to-county flows from 2022-23 showed about 5,300 Midwesterners relocated to the area and accounted for about 17.5% of incoming residents, making the region the second-largest source of new residents behind the Northeast.

The influx of new residents initially overwhelmed Sarasota’s housing market, and Jones noted that the “resulting demand wave hit Sarasota hard: Inventory cratered, prices spiked and the market briefly rewarded anyone willing to waive contingencies and close quickly.”

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Over time, the market adjusted and home prices in the areas have stabilized such that Sarasota remains in demand despite having a higher median listing price of $487,000 in May 2026, compared with nearby cities like Tampa ($400,000) and Cape Coral ($399,000).

“The supply response came partly through new construction, but the condo market in particular outran the post-pandemic appetite, leaving that segment softer even as single-family inventory has since tightened back up,” Jones said.

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“What Sarasota is navigating now is less a retreat than a recalibration. The underlying draw to Sarasota County hasn’t changed, but the market has shifted from one that penalized hesitation to one that rewards it.”

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