If you wanted a snapshot of where American coherence stands in 2024–2025, you could pull a hundred Pew, Gallup, and CDC dashboards and watch the slope keep falling. We’ll do that elsewhere in this series. This page is for the other half of the story.
Because in the same country, on the same calendar, in the same year, there is a population doing the inverse: doubling every twenty years, retaining 85 to 97 percent of its youth, and accumulating capital fast enough that its primary bank crossed $1.5 billion in assets in 2024. The current state of American coherence is not a single number. It is a bifurcation.
The North American Amish are the statistical anomaly that makes the rest of the framework testable. While the broader U.S. population is defined by declining fertility, aging workforces, and accelerating secularization, the Amish demonstrate exponential biological growth, high youth retention, and burgeoning capital — all while insulating themselves from modernity. Here is what their 2024–2025 numbers actually say.
The current state of America is not one trajectory. It is two — and they are diverging at compound rates.
The Aggregate Census
The U.S. Census Bureau does not track religious affiliation, so demographers count church districts and multiply by average district size (130–170 individuals). As of summer 2024, the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies put the total North American Amish population at 400,910 — the first time the figure crossed 400,000. Projections for 2025 land between 404,575 and 410,955.
To appreciate the velocity, consider the historical baseline. In 1900, the Amish population in North America was around 5,000–6,000 people. By 2000 it was approximately 177,910. In the first quarter of the 21st century alone — 25 years — the population expanded by roughly 233,000 people, an increase of about 131%.
| Year | Population | Annual Growth | Districts |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | 125,850 | — | — |
| 2000 | 177,910 | +4.19% | 1,335 |
| 2010 | 244,770 | +3.42% | — |
| 2020 | 344,670 | +3.48% | 2,606 |
| 2022 | 367,295 | +3.27% | — |
| 2023 | 378,190 | +2.97% | — |
| 2024 | 400,910 | +4.37% | 3,038 |
| 2025 (proj.) | 410,955 | +2.50% | 3,114 |
The Compound Annual Growth Rate stays remarkably consistent near 3.5% — a pace that effectively doubles the population every generation.
The Doubling Function
A central concept in Amish demography is doubling time — the years required for the population to grow by 100%. Throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, the Amish doubling time has held at approximately 20 to 22 years. The U.S. general population, by contrast, has a doubling time now expanding into the better part of a century.
2025
~410,000
2044 (Projected)
~747,000
2050 (Projected)
1,000,000+
Apply a conservative 22-year doubling assumption to the 2022 figure and the math is mechanical: ~747,000 by 2044, crossing one million sometime in the early 2050s. Barring a catastrophic collapse in retention or fertility, this is no longer projection — it is arithmetic.
The Biological Engine
The Amish strictly forbid artificial contraception, viewing children as a gift from God — “heritage of the Lord.” The result is a Total Fertility Rate (TFR) between 6.0 and 7.0, compared to a U.S. average that has fallen below the replacement level of 2.1.
Total Fertility Rate Spread
U.S. average: < 2.1
Amish (mainstream): 6.0 – 7.0
Ultra-conservative affiliations: 9.0 – 10.0+
There is a quiet implication buried in those numbers. The more progressive New Order Amish run smaller families, while ultra-conservative groups — Swartzentruber, Andy Weaver — exhibit TFRs north of 9.0. Differential fertility means the Amish population is not simply growing; it is becoming statistically more conservative over time, because the strictest subgroups reproduce fastest.
The result is a population pyramid with an exceptionally broad base. A significant plurality of the Amish population is under 18. That demographic momentum guarantees continued growth for decades even if fertility were to modestly decline.
The Architecture of Retention
High birth rates supply potential growth. Retention — the share of Amish-born children who voluntarily join the church as adults — supplies realized growth. Without high retention, no fertility rate could keep up.
The popular narrative says Amish youth flee restriction for the freedoms of the “English” world. The data says the opposite. The aggregate retention rate is 85% or higher. Nearly nine of every ten children born Amish ultimately choose baptism, the Ordnung, and the community. The advent of the smartphone has not triggered a mass exodus. Rumspringa — the adolescent period of relative freedom — appears to function as inoculation: youth experience the world enough to make an informed, usually affirmative, return.
| Affiliation | Characteristics | Retention |
|---|---|---|
| Andy Weaver (Dan Church) | Ultra-conservative; strict shunning; minimal tech. | ~97% |
| Old Order (mainstream) | Traditional; standard buggy; standard Ordnung. | 85% – 90% |
| New Order Amish | Evangelical focus; higher tech; ambient outreach. | 50% – 65% |
Strictness is a survival trait. The groups demanding the most sacrifice command the highest loyalty.
This is the “strict church” thesis from sociology of religion, validated by hard demographic numbers. It also predicts something uncomfortable for the broader culture: the part of the Amish population that is growing fastest is also the part with the strictest separation, the most rigorous shunning, and the lowest tolerance for compromise.
Geographic Footprint
Two-thirds of all Amish live in three states — Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana — but the population is in motion, with explosive percentage growth in the western frontier and second-tier states.
| State | Settlements | 2025 Population |
|---|---|---|
| Pennsylvania | ~60+ | ~92,660 |
| Ohio | ~65+ | 89,765 |
| Indiana | 28 | 67,310 |
| Wisconsin | 68 | 27,535 |
| New York | 60 | 25,220 |
| Michigan | 52 | 20,690 (2024) |
| Kentucky | 55 | 16,720 |
| Missouri | — | ~15,000 |
| Iowa | 25 | 10,965 |
In Holmes County, Ohio, the Amish constitute over 40% of the population — the “minority” is functionally the dominant culture. New York’s Amish population has more than quadrupled since 2000. Between 2020 and 2024, Nebraska saw a 64.8% increase and Colorado a 56.9% increase. These western settlements are typically small and conservative, pioneers escaping eastern density and land prices.
From Plows to Profits
The pastoral image of an Amishman behind a plow is increasingly statistically inaccurate. In Lancaster and Holmes Counties, the sheer density of population has made universal land ownership mathematically impossible — there isn’t enough acreage. So the Amish pivoted to small business and cottage industries. The pivot has been miraculous.
Amish Small Business
~95%
5-year survival rate
U.S. National Average
~50%
5-year survival rate
The structural advantages compound:
Low Overhead
Operations run from barns and outbuildings. No grid utility costs. Family labor. No expensive insurance or benefits packages.
Amplified Work Ethic
Cultural disdain for idleness translates directly into productivity per labor-hour.
Extreme Networking
In Holmes County, economists document a phenomenon where competitors actively help one another. A booked roofer hands the job to his cousin. A furniture maker borrows lumber from his neighbor. Cooperation reduces bankruptcy risk for the whole network.
Niche Brand Pricing
High-quality, labor-intensive goods (heirloom furniture, quilts, timber framing) where the “Amish” brand commands a premium.
The result is the rise of the “Amish Millionaire” — no longer an oxymoron. In Holmes County and Elkhart-LaGrange, manufacturing operations producing RV parts, cabinetry, or portable storage sheds generate revenues exceeding $10 million annually. Between 2005 and 2019, average household income for 27-year-olds raised in lower-income Holmes County homes rose 24% — upward mobility outpacing nearly every other rural county in the United States.
The Bank of Bird-in-Hand
The most tangible evidence of Amish capital accumulation is a single regulated institution: the Bank of Bird-in-Hand (BBIH), established in 2013 in the heart of Lancaster County as the first U.S. bank chartered specifically to serve the Plain community. Its quarterly disclosures provide a rare, audited window into the liquidity of an otherwise opaque sub-economy.
| Metric | Dec 2022 | Dec 2023 | Sep 2024 | Dec 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Assets | ~$1.10B | $1.363B | $1.578B | $1.592B |
| Total Deposits | ~$893M | $1.089B | $1.307B | $1.328B |
| Net Loans | — | $1.182B | $1.333B | $1.379B |
Asset growth of nearly $500 million in two years (2022–2024). Shareholders’ equity stood at $147 million in late 2024 — and the bank is owned largely by the community it serves. To service customers who travel by horse and buggy, BBIH operates a fleet of mobile branches called GELT Buses (a play on the Yiddish word for money) that drive to rural crossroads to handle deposits and withdrawals.
There is a quiet message in those numbers. The transition from informal mutual-aid lending to formal balance-sheet credit means modern Amish enterprise has outgrown what a traditional church aid fund can finance. Capital depth has reached the level where formal banking is not optional.
The New Inequality
The narrative of the Amish as a flat egalitarian society where everyone shares equal status and wealth is increasingly being challenged by the data. The shift from farming (where land constraints cap accumulation) to business (where scale is theoretically infinite) has introduced significant economic stratification.
A landmark exploratory study by Moledina and McConnell on Holmes County wealth distribution found unambiguously: economic differentiation is growing. Wealth is no longer normally distributed. A class of wealthy business owners and church leaders (often the established landed patriarchs) controls a disproportionate share of community assets — particularly land. Church leadership status correlated positively with higher land values, suggesting an intertwining of spiritual authority and economic standing.
Paradoxically, the same study found a disproportionate number of Amish individuals fall below the national poverty line by reported cash income. Some of that statistical poverty is misleading — large household sizes dilute per-person income, and Amish families produce much of their own food, reducing cash needs. But it also points to a real demographic: the “Lunch Pail” Amish, men with no land and no business who must work hourly wages in factories. They are vulnerable to economic downturns in a way that landed farmers are not — a new working class within the Plain community.
Three Regional Economies
Lancaster County, PA
The Agritourism Engine
2024 tourism — driven by the Amish brand — generated $2.7 billion in direct visitor spending and supported over 26,000 jobs. The county draws over 10 million visitors annually. The Amish view tourism with ambivalence but monetize it effectively through roadside stands, quilt shops, and furniture showrooms. Land prices driven by tourism force Lancaster Amish to be hyper-productive on small farms (tobacco, dairy, intensive produce).
Holmes County, OH
The Manufacturing Powerhouse
Less tourism, more production. Between 450 and 500 wood shops populate the county. Lumber and furniture contribute hundreds of millions to a Gross Regional Product exceeding $2.3 billion. The extreme-networking culture allowed Holmes to recover faster than neighboring regions from both 2008 and COVID-19, pivoting quickly to masks and desks during the lockdowns.
LaGrange / Elkhart, IN
The RV Belt
The settlement is inextricably linked to the Recreational Vehicle industry. A massive percentage of Amish men work in RV factories. Wages are high, but the work is secular and subject to national boom-bust cycles. During the 2008 crash, unemployment skyrocketed; during the COVID RV boom, wages soared. This reliance on “English” corporations distinguishes Indiana Amish from the more independent entrepreneurs of Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Future Outlook
The trends carry forward mechanically. By 2050, the Amish are expected to cross the one-million threshold. They will transform from a fringe group into a substantial minority bloc in states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, with potential to alter the political landscape of rural districts.
The primary constraint on this growth is physical: land. The Amish reliance on horse transportation limits the radius of any settlement. As core settlements like Lancaster and Holmes reach saturation, three pressures will intensify:
Accelerated Westward Migration — More settlements in Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska.
Subdivision of Farms — Continued shrinkage pushing more men into non-farm work.
Increased Friction — Density-driven conflicts with local zoning boards over sanitation, schooling, and road maintenance.
The 2024–2025 statistics confirm what the first six decade analyses set up. The Amish are not a relic. They are a dynamic, growing, and increasingly wealthy sub-society, doubling every generation, surviving in business at rates that shame the corporate sector, and accumulating billions in capital. The success is breeding new challenges. The gap between the Amish Millionaire and the Lunch Pail laborer is widening. The pressure on the land is accelerating. But for now — and that “for now” should be heard against the entire arc of this series — the numbers tell a story of extraordinary vitality.
On the same calendar, in the same country, two trajectories. One is collapsing into incoherence. The other is doubling every twenty years on a coherence reserve that 1940s America itself could not match.
This is the current state. From here the series turns to the four vectors of collapse — Family, Truth, Money, Identity — and then to the Amish proof in full. The decade analysis ends. The mechanism analysis begins.