Hi! Where is the best place to live as a new dentist?
Most students are not going to like reading that lolWhere the people are and the dentists aren’t. So if it’s a major city in any state, it’s not the answer.
A place with a growing economy and positive net migration that aligns with your personal preferences.Hi! Where is the best place to live as a new dentist?
But not AnchorageAlaska
Hi! Where is the best place to live as a new dentist?
It's no surprise that the Sun Belt states are growing the fastest. Regarding TX in particular, it's the Texas Triangle I think that will see the most growth. ID/MT I think would be GREAT opportunities to live in (I said live, because you still have to live after you're done "practicing" for the day), or terrible places for others. It all depends on what a person desires in their environment.The fastest growing states now are Texas, Arizona and Florida. Idaho and Montana are growing fast, but all have fewer dental schools for the size of it’s populations.
The Midwest and the Northeast are losing population and are historically where most d schools are.
If you are looking more specific locations. You can look up fastest growing cities/communities in the US by zip code.
78215 - San Antonio, Texas is the number 1 zip code for growth in the country.
Also, Zillow, Redfin, etc have reports on more in depth growth for new homes and communities. The data is there, you just have to look it up.
Yes, I’m in Ohio. Population loss doesn’t specifically matter to a seasoned dentist like me. But it would matter to me if I was looking for a location to open another office. I would target the areas of the state where the population is growing.Correct me if I'm wrong, but you practice in the Midwest? Regarding this population loss, I'm sure overall the numbers agree with you, but for the individual dentist (like you), does it really matter? Particularly for someone who's already established a patient base?
Do church people not have as much money for services?Yes, I’m in Ohio. Population loss doesn’t specifically matter to a seasoned dentist like me. But it would matter to me if I was looking for a location to open another office. I would target the areas of the state where the population is growing.
My state loses about 20k people a year. We actually lost a congressional seat at the US House as a result of that. Where Texas and Florida gained congressional seats. The best blue print to open a new office is expand on that information; blue collar v white collar or low socioeconomic communities, median age, number of schools, street traffic, crime data, city plans and investments, etc. Each piece of data points tells you more about a community.
There are other clues; if you see a lot of churches in a community, specially in an urban area, avoid it. If you see a lot of boost mobile or dollar stores, be wary. A lot of political signs? that’s a red flag. You can learn a lot from a community based on the businesses and services that are there too.
I don’t get that no churches thingLOL. So avoid areas with a lot of churches and political signs. That eliminates a significant amount of the USA. I sort of get what cold front is saying. Growing and affluent areas may not have as much of that.