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8 of the nation’s fastest-growing cities are in Texas, census data shows

Texas was home to eight of the nation’s fastest-growth municipalities in 2025 as people continue moving to smaller cities in the state’s large metropolitan areas, new U.S. Census Bureau data shows.

Texas was home to eight of the nation’s fastest-growth municipalities in 2025 as people continue moving to smaller cities in the state’s large metropolitan areas, new U.S. Census Bureau data shows.

 



What you need to know



Celina, located about an hour north of Dallas, grew faster than any other U.S. city in 2025, according to the census data released May 14. The city grew by 24.6% between July 2024 and July 2025, and 64,427 people called Celina home as of July 1.

 

“Rapid growth is nothing new for Celina, which was also the nation’s fastest-growing city in 2023,” according to a May 14 news release from the Census Bureau.

 

Fulshear, a 64,630-person city west of Houston, saw the second-fastest growth in the nation last year, at 21%.

 

Other Texas cities among the fastest-growing in the nation were:

Princeton, a North Texas city that grew by 18.1% in 2025 to reach a population of 43,524
Melissa, a North Texas city with a 14.5% growth rate and 29,969 residents
Anna, a North Texas city that grew by 10.2% and had 35,245 residents
Forney, a North Texas city with an 8.5% growth rate and 41,658 residents
Hutto, a Central Texas city that grew by 7.9% to reach a population of 46,048
Greenville, a Northeast Texas city with a 7.5% growth rate and a population of 37,069

The suburban boom comes amid a slowdown in overall population growth, according to previous Community Impact reporting. While Texas gained more new residents last year than any other U.S. state, growth slowed significantly amid a nationwide reduction in immigration from other countries.



Helen You, interim director of the Texas Demographic Center, said rapid population growth can be challenging for smaller cities.



“They’re dealing with the strain on the infrastructure, how to create more schools, more classrooms, how to deal with water resources, how to deal with traffic and build more roads,” she told Community Impact during the TDC’s annual conference May 21 in Austin. “On the other hand, there will be communities in the next few years that will see a slowdown of growth, or even a decline.”



What’s happening



The trend of people moving to smaller cities in major metros “is not unique to Texas,” You said, noting that a higher cost of living and limited housing stock in Texas’ largest cities are “pushing people further and further out to other areas.”



“We recognize that lots of people actually don’t live where they work—they’re actually living further and further away from where they work, and this is part of it, too,” You said. “Even though they’re still in the [largest cities], working, commuting and doing shopping, they live further out because of housing availability and affordability.”



While Celina and other North Texas cities grew rapidly in 2025, Dallas lost about 1,800 residents, federal population records show.



Meanwhile, Austin surpassed 1 million residents for the first time in its history last year, gaining more than 4,000 residents since 2024, Community Impact reported.



Texas is home to five of the nation’s 15 most populous cities, according to the U.S. Census Bureau:

Houston is the fourth-largest city in the U.S., with nearly 2.4 million residents as of July 2025
San Antonio is the seventh-largest city, with about 1.5 million residents
Dallas is the ninth-largest city, with roughly 1.3 million residents
Fort Worth is the 10th-largest city, with just over 1 million residents
Austin is the 12th-largest city, with about 1 million residents

 

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NBTx News is the friendly, go-to guide for life in New Braunfels, Texas. It wades into the currents of local news and events, uncovering hidden gems and sharing neighborly shoutouts from the banks of the Guadalupe and Comal. This publication is all about celebrating the heart and soul of this unique Hill Country community.

© 2026 NBTx News.