EconomyLongform · 8 min read

The Quiet Rise of Small Towns

Remote work and a longing for community are reshaping where Americans choose to live — and where the next decade of growth will happen.

By Dana Reyes

Senior Economy Correspondent · March 14, 2026

Dawn over a returning main street. Illustration: Meridian Graphics
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For decades the story was the same: ambitious people left small towns for big cities, chasing the jobs and the energy that only density seemed to offer. That story, the data now suggests, is quietly changing.

Remote work, rising rents, and a renewed longing for community have nudged a steady stream of people back toward smaller places — towns that, a generation ago, were written off as left behind.

The shift is showing up in school enrolments that have stopped shrinking, in local hiring that is finally outpacing departures, and in the slow, hopeful reopening of long-shuttered main streets.

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