What HNW migration intent looks like in data
Migration intent is not a single signal — it is a cluster: school-search behavior in target metros, executive-mobility indicators, second-home content engagement, professional-network movement, financial-restructuring signals (estate planning, brokerage transfers), and consumption-pattern shifts. Individually, none of these is conclusive. In ensemble, they produce a probability score with a 60–90 day pre-MLS lead time on the majority of cohorts.
Corridor-specific dynamics
Each migration corridor has its own profile. CA→TX is dominated by mid-career executive families and entrepreneurs; the decision window is 60–90 days and is sensitive to school-calendar timing. NY→FL is dominated by older HNW households with second-home patterns; the decision window is longer (90–180 days) and is more weather/tax driven. Models are corridor-segmented.
Brokerage operating models
Luxury brokerages typically deploy migration intelligence in two ways: buy-side prospecting (identifying inbound HNW prospects and matching to listings) and listing-side anticipatory engagement (identifying outbound HNW households in the brokerage's home market before listing decisions are made).
Signal half-life — production model
Predictive cohort vs. cold list
Citations
- · Internal Revenue Service — SOI migration tables, longitudinal household movement data.
- · U.S. Census Bureau — American Community Survey, 1-year HNW household estimates.