The completion of a comprehensive historical database of state-by-state Church statistics for the United States is another significant milestone for The Cumorah Foundation. The database includes annual membership totals, congregations (including ward and branch breakdowns when available), stakes, districts, and missions for all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Historical membership data are available from 1987–2025, with statistics for congregations, stakes, districts, and missions likewise spanning nearly four decades.
Data were compiled from the retired Deseret News Church Almanac series and the Church’s official Newsroom site where annual state-by-state statistics have been published. To our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive publicly available compilation of historical Church statistics for the United States ever assembled. The database also includes historical statistics for stakes, districts, and missions that are difficult to locate in a single source and, in many cases, are no longer readily available elsewhere.
State-by-state statistics were published by the Church every other year from 1987 through 1999 and annually thereafter through 2025, with the exception of 2020 when no state-by-state statistics were released due to the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Empty cells in the database indicate data that were not published or are otherwise unavailable for specific years and statistical categories. Most missing data consist of ward and branch breakdowns for selected years when the Church reported only total congregations. To provide a more complete historical record, ward and branch totals for 2012–2017 were reconstructed by tracking unit creations, consolidations, and closures within individual stakes and districts during the period when the Church did not publish ward-branch breakdowns.
This resource provides valuable data for researchers, historians, journalists, members, and others interested in analyzing long-term trends in Church growth, geographic expansion, congregational development, temple expansion, and organizational change within the United States. Users can identify historical milestones, compare growth patterns among states, examine changes in Church administration over time, and better understand how the Church has developed across different regions of the country.
The database is available for viewing in Google Sheets and may also be downloaded here.
157 comments:
I've read a comment elsewhere that a District in Chile may soon become a Stake. But unknown which one or when. But it shows that the work progresses in that far off land.
A new stake will be formed from a division of the Salem Utah West Stake this Sunday. It currently has 14 wards.
During a recent ministering visit to countries in the Africa South Area, Elder Gong visited Gabarone Botswana. I know it may be some time still, but to some Gabarone is a possible future location announcement. Having an apostle visit is one step closer to that reality.
https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2026/06/05/elder-gerrit-gong-south-africa-ministry-rain-blessings-angola-mozambique-madagascar/
I'm surprised the Kisangani DRC Stake hasn't been added to the Meetinghouse site since it was organized a month ago on May 9th. It's still listed as a Mission District.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2221454
I’m well aware the district page advertised the conference as organizing the first stake, but as I look at the district’s facebook page there’s been no follow up. And the English-speaking visiting authority didn’t mention the new stake in the talk in the livestream that was posted online on that page.
Now, are there other explanations? Yes. But this may have been a misunderstanding.
(Growth in DRC is still impressive, with about 14 new stakes and 8 new districts over the last 12 months.)
It almost certainly wasn't Stuff in remote areas of Africa can just take a long time to get updated on the Church website.
This year may be the most discontinued stakes in the last while, even while stake creations continue to be at high levels. 13 discontinuations so far, and judging on upcoming combined stake conferences in the SL Valley, it looks like that at least 1 stake in West Valley City and 2 stakes in Sandy will still be discontinued this year.
Also, I'm just noticing that after the latest sidebar update, the Price Utah YSA stake is missing from discontinued stakes and the Raleigh East Stake from created stakes.
This resource is incredible, thank you for sharing Matt.
I recall a while ago someone mentioned that they were interested to see which year the church "peaked" in terms of units, and any change since then. I did a brief analysis for each state below.
There are 21 states where 2025 had the highest number of units (ie the "peak"):
Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia, Wyoming, North Dakota, Kentucky, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.
Of these 21, 17 saw growth from the prior year, while 4 reached this peak prior to 2025, with zero net growth since then (this isn't counting changes from branches to wards, just raw total units):
North Dakota (2024), Kentucky (2021), Rhode Island (2016), Wisconsin (2009).
That leaves us with 29 states and D.C that have seen a decline from the peak. From most recent to least, here's the State, year of peak, and decline since the peak:
Utah (2023, -52 units)
Iowa (2021, -2 units)
Georgia (2021, -4 units)
Virginia (2021, -4 units)
New Jersey (2021, -5 units)
Connecticut (2021, -6 units)
Nevada (2021, -23 units)
Arizona (2021, -48 units)
Mississippi (2017, -2 units)
Massachusetts (2016, -1 unit)
New Mexico (2016, -11 units)
Oregon (2016, -32 units)
Alaska (2015, -6 units)
Pennsylvania (2015, -9 units)
Washington (2015, -84 units)
Kansas (2014, -3 units)
Alabama (2012, -3 units)
Delaware (2010, -3 units)
Minnesota (2009, -3 units)
Nebraska (2007, -4 units)
Maine (2007, -6 units)
Michigan (2007, -6 units)
Illinois (2005, -10 units)
California (2004, -301 units)
New Hampshire (2000, -3 units)
New York (1999, -17 units)
Vermont (1997, -3 units)
D.C (1995, -3 units)
Louisiana (1995, -14 units)
South Dakota (1987, -5 units)
I think this has been long overdue for the Salt Lake metro area. We've seen a multitude of stake creations further south in Utah county for years. I think a big driver of the net migration is younger members and families from Utah buying new homes rather than moving into gentrified neighborhoods
I haven't seen the Kisangani stake officially show up on church maps yet, I'm guessing it takes a while for official data to come from that area of the Congo?
Quick breakdown: 21 states had their highest number of units as of 2025. 20 states and D.C saw a decline of 1-10 units from their peak, ranging from 1987-2021. 9 states saw a decline of 11-301 units from their peak, ranging from 1995-2023.
May be Villarica which is just south of Temuco. A couple of years ago they realigned mission boundaries and combined two districts together in order to prepare the place to become a stake someday.
Though Saratoga Springs and Eagle Mountain, Utah are often lumped together and for very good reasons, it seems inevitable to me that an Eagle Mountain Temple will be announced at some point, especially considering there is a very good chance and expectation that Eagle Mountain will surpass Provo as Utah County 's largest city in the coming decades.
Yes. I’m not an expert at how big it will get, but there’s a lot of space out there.
The chapel way out in cedar fort is full, with three wards commuting from Eagle Mountain
Last week in the update of the San Lorenzo Honduras District into the new "Gulf of Fonseca Honduras Stake". The Monjaras Honduras District (1253778), organized June 6th, 2010, was merged into the new stake, on the left (west) side of the bay.
Districts Closed
6 Jun 06, 2026 Monjaras Honduras District
Buena Vista Branch (356085)
Guapinol Branch (261203)
Marcovia Branch (352179)
Monjaras Branch (329711)
All were merged into the new Gulf of Fonseca Honduras Stake (615668) last sunday.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/615668
The Gulf of Fonseca Honduras Stake is one of several created over the past few names named not after a city but after a more broad geographical area. At one point all stakes were named after the city where they were located, plus either the state, province or outisde the US and Canada country. It makes sense with some stakes to not name them after a specific city though, and in other cases to name them after a city other than the one the stake center is located in.
Over the weekend the Wilemette Valley Oregon and Yorba Linda California Temples were dedicated by President Uchtdorf and President Christofferson. The Missoula Montana and Springfield Missouri Temples had groundbreakings. Also the Huntsville Alabama Temple had a groundbreaking date announced for early August. Elder John D. Amos will preside at the groundbreaking. Elder Amos is a native of Louisiana and has lived most of his adult life in Florida. He and his wife were married in the Atlanta Georgia Temple.
Salem Utah Summer Spring Stake (2332434)
Organized on 7 June 2026
- Salem 10th Ward
- Salem 11th Ward
- Salem 12th Ward
- Salem 13th Ward
- Salem 14th Ward
- Salem Park Ward
Mission: Utah Saratoga Springs Mission
Temple: Payson Utah Temple
Washington Utah Long Valley Stake (2334356)
Organized on 7 June 2026
- Long Valley 1st Ward
- Long Valley 2nd Ward
- Red Waters Ward
- Riverbend Ward
- Scenic Sunrise Ward
Mission: Utah St George Mission
Temple: Red Cliffs Utah Temple
@John Pack Lambert
Pretty good weekend for temple progress!
We're very excited & grateful here for the Missoula Temple groundbreaking. We watched the site dedicatory prayer & shovel ceremony together as a family.
Scheduled Groundbreakings and Dedications are done for now. This resumes in August. With 3 scheduled dedications and at least 3 scheduled groundbreakings, August appears to be another active month for temple milestones.
Also, the sole temple rededication this year takes place on August 23 (sandwiched between the 2 dedications on August 16 and the one other on August 30.
Today the Interior and Exterior photos for the public open house for the Belo Horizonte Brazil Temple dedication posted on the Church News site. If anyone interested.
https://www.thechurchnews.com/temples/2026/06/10/public-invited-to-tour-belo-horizonte-brazil-temple-open-house/
Quick update for this week:
A new district has just been organized in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It’s the Maluku Democratic Republic of the Congo District, now appearing in Meetinghouse under ID 2325233 and reporting to the DRC Kinshasa South Mission.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2325233
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/missions/2245698
Also, the Kisangani DRC District, pending upgrade to a Stake since early May, just organized 2 new branches this week. So maybe they were waiting for the internal realignment to take place before posting to the Meetinghouse the change.
230 Jun 10, 2026 Motumbe Branch
231 Jun 10, 2026 Kapalata Branch
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2221454
The Gboko Nigeria Stake, which was organized early last year, has grown from 5 wards and 3 branches to 11 wards and 4 branches in just over a year. Seems like a likely candidate to divide at its next stake conference in September. Truly rapid growth!
Based on a conference in June and another one in July, it also looks likely that the Mwanza Tanzania District will become a stake this summer. Though that is just speculation.
And this is Copilot AI's thoughts on it.
"This is the kind of acceleration we only see in:
Aba (early 2000s)
Kinshasa (2015–2020)
Freetown (2012–2016)
Gboko is now in that same category.
4. The geography supports a clean division
From the unit list, you can already see two natural clusters:
Mkar / North Cluster
Mkar 1st Ward
Mkar 2nd Ward
Jingir Ward
Kontien Ward
Buter Ward
Tyowanye Branch
Uga Branch
Gboko Urban / South Cluster
Agirigi Ward
Ahungwa Ward
Akaajime Ward
Atekombo Ward
Uwua Ward
Mbagba Ward
Abagu Branch
Ihugh Branch
This is exactly the kind of distribution that produces:
Gboko Nigeria Stake
Mkar Nigeria Stake
Or similar naming."
Another possibility, the Kenema Sierra Leone Stake (1979051), with just organized it's 10th Ward this week, the Tongo Branch (2147874), is now the Tongo Ward (2147874). Bringing stake totals 10 Wards, 4 Branches, 14 units total. And 2 Stake conferences the last 6 months. On July 12, and Dec 6th.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/1979051
In a post from the Sierra Leone Bo mission president awhile ago, he stated that the Kenema Stake would divide this year and that the Moriba Town District would also become a stake this year. Also that a 5th stake would likely be formed in Bo next year.
This probably means over 1% of individuals in Gboko are church members. That, while not unheard of, is pretty high for Africa. If this keeps up, Gboko could be a real center of strength.
It's happy to see this sort of rapid growth renew in Nigeria-- since the pandemic, I hadn't seen examples like this, but membership in Jos and Gboko stakes/metros have both been growing since those stakes were organized.
Sierra Leone Bo Temple is a very strong candidate for becoming the next temple announced in a country before the country's first temple is announced.
There could totally be 3 stakes there by year-end 2028-- two in the current boundaries of the Kisangani Stake/District (see comments above) and then one in the boundaries of the Lubunga District (currently 6 wards).
I wonder if part of the strategy is leadership growth to make this a center of strength.
Hope this is a Church growth development: the Church has released a new guide to help ward and stake leaders prepare their congregations for the September 6 Church meeting schedule adjustments. My thanks once again to you all.
A new stake was organized in Lagos Nigeria on May 31st.
The new Lagos Nigeria Gberigbe Stake (2331608)
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2331608
32 Jun 11, 2026 Lagos Nigeria Gberigbe Stake
Sorry but I have to laugh at CoPilot's assumptions that the Long Beach East and San Jose South stakes in California may split. Zero chance that either one is going to happen.
Chris, would love to connect by email. my email is my first initial, my last name, the number 88, and gmail is my service provider.
I personally find AI is too quick to please and too slow to be skeptical. Definitely don't think it can (or should) replace our own careful analysis, as it will make mistakes.
Another laughable statement is the one saying that "Dartmouth could merge with the Halifax corridor". I just double-checked on Rick's temple site, and what I remembered from when I was in the neighboring Saint John, New Brunswick stake (in the 90's) is still correct: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia is right next to Halifax and has the only stake in that province.
The whole concept of posting AI speculation is laughable.
I would not rely on AI for Church growth predictions. I use AI regularly for many tasks, but forecasting Church growth is one area where it tends to perform poorly. AI often struggles to appropriately weigh the many variables that influence growth and may rely on outdated or incomplete information. I once experimented with using AI for temple predictions, and it suggested several locations where temples had already been announced while also proposing some locations that appeared highly unlikely. Current AI models simply are not trained on the specialized data and historical context needed to make reliable forecasts for Latter-day Saint growth.
Chris is a valued poster. I agree with the posts critiquing AI but hope he won't hesitate to keep posting otherwise.
I agree - if AI is trained on Church growth at all, most of the underlying data likely comes from this blog and from Cumorah. But it would likely still need to operate with a lot of assumptions. Something else I have found is that AI is typically very poor at geography, which is probably the most important factor in Church growth. Not too long ago I tried to convince ChatGPT that Texas borders Kansas; it took about two prompts to get the wrong answer I wanted.
Thanks, Michael — appreciate the clarification. I’ll keep contributing.
I'll just post any "predicitions" as mine. And not give credit to AI or Copilot anymore.
Michael, please let me know if you are interested in a collaboration project.
Yes-- if you tried to email me, it didn't come through.
Wouldn't it be historic if the Cairo Egypt District, becomes a Stake at the next conference on November 7th? I know it's wishful thinking for a District that covers 3 (or four, depending on who you ask) countries.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/475149
This district covers a large chunk of the Middle East/North Africa Area. Because of it covering several unrecognized countries, unless you have insider knowledge or attended there, it's unclear how many branches it actually know how many branches there are. This is unique as it's a district not covered by a mission and is directly administered by the area. It's unclear how many of these there are, but definitely much fewer than mission-operated districts.
The Manama Bahrain Stake, for example, is mostly in Saudi Arabia, but none of the Saudi Arabia congregations show on the map.
I assume you mean "before the country's first temple is [dedicated]". It is very possible. I'm also wondering if the church is going to wait on announcing it until after the dedication to see how well Freetown is attended. Much of the members travel under the power of their own two feet which I would say is more of a reason for a temple in Bo as there's 4+ stakes just within Bo.
Sierra Leone got its first stake on 2 Dec 2012, which was also the Church's 3,000th. Now there's 10+ stakes in the country and ~3,722 stakes worldwide - which shows how fast the church is growing in the nation compared to the rest of the world.
The only issue is I'm not sure how much of temple construction has been delegated to the area. If funding is/becomes part of it, it could cause a slowdown in African announcements.
Michael, I sent you an email Saturday night. Please, check your spam/junk folder.
David, don't forget to add this latest new stake in Nigeria posted late last week on the meetinghouse site, to your public map.
Chris D.
A new stake was organized in Lagos Nigeria on May 31st.
The new Lagos Nigeria Gberigbe Stake (2331608)
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2331608
32 Jun 11, 2026 Lagos Nigeria Gberigbe Stake
June 11, 2026 at 11:57 PM"
https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1G7hdBBWl07qNmfixCPEyCf7dAOKzzjw&ll=3.8040255578654794%2C56.52415087505652&z=2
FYI, Open House and exterior and interior photos of the new Cleveland Ohio Temple dedication posted earlier today. Preparing for the double dedications following the July rest month, on August 16th. Along with the Belo Horizonte Brazil Temple the same day (details posted last monday).
https://www.thechurchnews.com/temples/2026/06/15/open-house-begins-cleveland-ohio-temple-not-far-from-historic-kirtland-temple/
AI is a useful tool, but is only good as it's input. It's great at math, good at grammar, can be good with finding facts and things to do, but not so great on geography, unique individual needs, and cannot make accurate assumptions when there's not enough info to do so.
The San Diego Temple, one of the prettiest in the church in my opinion, also has opened for public tours. It will be dedicated the week after (August 23).
"The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced the open house and dedication dates for the Modesto California Temple, the start of renovations for the Apia Samoa Temple and the location of the Hamburg Germany Temple."
https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/news-for-temples-in-california--samoa-and-germany
The Hamburg Location is located at the stake center which is at a good location for transit riders. It doesn't appear that there's much additional space. Property like this won't be easy to come by if relocating the stake center is desired. The floor area was not announced. Maybe a temple/chapel/stake center similar to New York and Hong Kong?
The Pago Pago American Samoa Temple is complete with President and Matron called. Maybe a December/January dedication to provide interim replacement for Apia Samoa?
I am a bit surprised the church went with such a central location for Hamburg (if I currently envision where this is). Among Germany's largest cities, Hamburg is probably the most notorious for being short on space for new buildings. I was firmly expecting the church to place it on the outskirts, possibly nearer to Pinneberg or Stade.
Finding space near a transit line along the outskirts would be difficult as well. Keep in mind, only about half of Hamburg's households own a car. It's a central location for members driving in from the suburbs. Basement could be the lower parking/baptistry. first floor classrooms/stake offices, another floor could purpose other church offices, 2nd floor chapel/cultural hall, 3rd floor remainder of the temple. Limited parking under building can allow for more greenspace around the building, and members could be encouraged to use park and ride services by the local transit agencies. Since the typical standard cannot be used here, I would like similar architectural effort be placed like the church did with San Diego. This would make the temple stand out among others in the area, yet fit in enough to match the neighborhood/local ordinances.
So, as of today, 19 temples have been or are scheduled to be dedicated this year. Looks like 7+ more will be dedicated by mid-June of next year.
Sunday, June 14th 2026 Stake Updates.
Bowling Green Kentucky Stake (2298333)
Organized on 14 June 2026
- Bowling Green 1st Ward
- Bowling Green 2nd Ward
- Bowling Green 3rd Branch
- Bowling Green YSA Branch
- Greenville Ward
- Morgantown Ward
- Russellville Branch
- Scottsville Branch
Mission: Tennessee Nashville Mission
Temple: Nashville Tennessee Temple
Hopkinsville Kentucky Stake reorganized as the Clarksville Tennessee Stake on 14 June 2026
Nice to see some growth in Kentucky, my mission state.
I am wondering if either Indiana or Kentucky will get a second temple soon.
The advantages of placing a temple in the center of a city, especially in Europe, are high. So the location of the Hamburg Temple makes sense from the little I know of Hamburg.
If thry do a building that is temple plus other stuff this would be like Hong Kong (at least when first built) and Manhattan. It would also be somewhat similar to Brussels Belgium.
I am hoping the Pagp Pago Anerican Samoa Temple can be dedicated before the Apia Samoa Temple closes.
I am also hoping that President Uchtdorf lives until the Hamburg Temple is dedicated.
Two more thoughts. I saw a post about a baptismal service in the Nigeria Calabar mission involving more than 250 people. The Calabar Nigeria Temple cannot come too fast.
The website to volunteer to help with the Salt Lake Temple celebration of apply for paid positions has gone up. The goal is to make it a joyful experience. There will be lots of musical and theatrical performances. All skills are needed. Also there will be some remote positions. They need both public facing and behind the scenes volunteers.
They are anticipating 5 million guests. This will be huge and need huge amounts of support in a full range of positions.
Sorry for the typos in my post above. I meant Pago Pago American Samoa.
On another note evidently the space that was the cafeteria in the San Diego Temple was turned into a marriage waiting room.
I am aslo surprised with the Hamburg temple locaction. I was convinced it would be build on the Langenhorn chaple property since this chaple has not been used since the ward was discontinued. Now I fear, that they will just move the Hamburg ward to th Langenhorn chapel and the Hamburg stake will be left without a real stake center.
The Wartenau location for the Hamburg Temple is such an exciting announcement since the Wartenau chapel has a lot of meaning for Northern German church members. It's nice to see that location can continue to be special. I wonder if the Harburg chapel will be repurposed as the Hamburg stake center or maybe they'll re-instate the Altona meetinghouse again.
I don't have either on top of my list, but Northern Indiana is on my "Somewhat Likely 40" (Ranked 21-60), and Western Kentucky is on my 2nd group of 60 (Ranked 61-120). However, this new stake would add more wards/branches to my hypothetical Hopkinsville Kentucky Temple District which could possibly move it to "Somewhat Likely 40" when I update the map for my next 6-month prediction season (Late August/Early September).
With 4 wards and 4 branches in the new stake, I wonder if one of the branches are going to be a ward soon.
I've heard rumor of the church moving the sacrament table to front and center of the chapel for new construction/renovations. I have not seen this from any official source, nor is it shown on the standard plans on the church's aec webpage (link below).
https://aec.churchofjesuschrist.org/
Do you have a link to that post about 250 getting baptized?
Egor Demin, the 8th overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft, was recently baptized. He had an excellent rookie season after a year at BYU and is quite popular back home in Russia. He could legitimately become one of the better players in the league over the next few years. It will be interesting to see if his stardom influences attitudes toward the Church in Russia, a la Kresimir Cosic in Croatia/Yugoslavia.
Last Sunday, the Burr Oak Ward was created in the Independence Missouri Stake, affecting the boundaries of 5 Wards in the Independence Stake (Blue Springs 2nd, Blue Mills, Independence 3rd, Independence 4th, & Raytown) and 3 Wards in the Kansas City Stake (Blue Springs 1st, Grain Valley, & Fleming Park).
The Independence Missouri Stake now has 11 Wards:
Blue Mills
Blue Springs 2nd
Burr Oak
Hill Park
Independence 1st
Independence 3rd
Independence 4th
Owens
Raytown
Independence YSA
Santa Fe (Spanish)
The Kansas City Missouri Stake now has 10 Wards and 2 Branches:
Blue Springs 1st
Fleming Park
Grain Valley
Harrisonville
Kansas City 1st
Kansas City 3rd
Lee's Summit 1st
Lee's Summit 3rd
Longview Lake
Raymore
Riverview Branch (transferred from the Independence Stake on May 17)
Kansas City YSA Branch (created on March 24)
Looks like at least two districts organized this past weekened.
Tsévié Togo District
Orellana Ecuador District
2026 Temple count
8 temples have been dedicated
11 have dedications scheduled for later this year
5 without scheduled dedications (yet) have a temple president and matron that's been called - unclear how many, if any, will be dedicated later this year.
I would say it's very likely we'll have 20+ dedications this year.
7 Groundbreakings so far this year.
3 additional groundbreakings scheduled for August 1-15. It's unclear how many more groundbreakings they'll be.
While anything is possible, it appears temple announcement count (announced temples without a groundbreaking) may drop below 100 later this year. This will mean there would have to be 6+ more groundbreakings beyond what's still to be announced later this year.
2 temples have been announced this year. I would imagine it is very likely we'll have more announcement(s) later this year, with my guess being about 1-5 additional announcements for the remainder of the year. I think the rate of announcements will slowly increase as backlog gets reduced.
219 dedicated temples (7 of them are undergoing extensive renovations and one renovation scheduled)
57 are between groundbreaking and dedication (11 of these have dedications scheduled)
105 announced but have not had a groundbreaking scheduled (3 with scheduled groundbreakings)
Both stakes will be in Stake Conferences at november 8Th. So...
Tsévié is in the maritime region of Togo. It is directly north of Lome which is on the coast at the border with Ghana. A quick glance at Togo and Benin might make one think one temple for both would make sense. However a closer look indicates that the location of Lome and Cotonou means that them getting temples announced about the same time (or even the same day) would not be surprising.
It is about 24 miles from Tsévié to Lome. Google maps says driving the main roadway it take 54 minutes. I would hope there is a bus you can get on that goes from one place to the other, but getting to the bus deport might take different times. In 2010 Tsévié had a population of 55,000. It may have grown since. It is the seat of Zio Prefecture which in 2022 had a population of 500,000. Martime Region where Lome and Tsévié are has 3.5 million of Togo's 9 million people. There are 5 regions in Togo. The next most populous region is Plateau Region, just to the north. It has 1.6 million people. The next places to reach would seem to be Notse and then Atakpamé, which is the capital of Plateau Region and has 84,000 people. Both these cities are conveniently on the main roadway that starts in Lome and runs through the center of the country. Hopefully with it getting its own mission this year we will see even more outreach across the rest of Togo.
Is Port Harcourt with 8 stakes the city with metro city with the most stakes without a temple at least announced. A temple announced there would probably take in at least 9 stakes and 3 districts.
Traditionally, the Seminar for New Mission Leadership has been held during the last weekend in June, prior to mission leaders beginning their service on or around July 1. It appears that the Seminar began early this year, likely to ensure that the incoming leaders would not only be in place but ready to go right from July 1. Elder Ronald A. Rasband, who chairs the Missionary Executive Council, opened the Seminar with this counsel, debunking 5 false narratives about current missionary work. The Church News has also created this repository page for summaries of counsel that will be provided by select Church leaders, including each of the current 15 apostles (and some of their wives). The Church News coverage also noted that Elder Jonathsan S. Schmitt is now the Executive Director of the Church's Missionary Department. My thanks once again to you all.
Sorry for my typo. I meant "Elder Jonathan S. Schmitt" above.
Especially significant to this blog is this comment by Elder Rasband: "Year-to-date global convert baptisms in 2026 are far exceeding where we were at this same point last year. "
It's also pertinent to note that Elder Mark A., Bragg is now the Executive Director of the Family History Department, per this report, suggesting that many of the changes that were to take effect on August 1 have already been made/are already in progress.
This emphasis on Sacrament Meeting may help with retention: https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2026/06/18/be-filled-partake-sacrament-invites-elder-jonathan-schmitt/
Ndola Zambia District has been discontinued
The emphasis on “far” is what is important to me there. It should not be surprising that with a larger base of members and an increasing global population, every single year there should be more convert baptisms, just by retaining the same growth rate. Basically every year the church doesn’t break a record in baptisms from the year before means that the church’s growth rate has slowed.
It depends what you call a city. If your talking about those within the municipality and does not have a temple:
Some Utah communities have 8+ stakes with a city's namesake and has no temple. Examples: Eagle Mountain (11 stakes), Herriman (11 stakes), Kaysville (8 stakes), Pleasant Grove (13 stakes), Riverton (9 stakes), Sandy (18 stakes), Springville (8 stakes)
Henderson NV has 7 stakes within the city and two other stakes reaching into the city limits.
In all these cases, they're not far from a temple
If your talking about the metro, I believe it easily meets the criteria you mention. The metro encompasses the Rivers State in southern Nigeria which has 8 stakes, 2 districts.
Port Harcourt has been on my "Top 20" list for some time due to the number of stakes and the cost/availability of members to get to Aba (many use their own two feet to get around). Factors that may be hindering Port Harcourt from getting a temple is that its in reasonable proximity to nearest temple (41 miles from city center to Aba Temple). Sub-Saharan Africa lacks leadership and an additional temple would pulling some of that leadership. With it taking quite some time for temples to get them built, and so many not completed (only one of 7 announced temples are in operation, and 4 of 7 haven't seen groundbreaking), the church maybe waiting for the backlog to decrease before announcing any more.
Nigeria (80 stakes, 13 districts, 356,669 sq mi) is comparable in land area and church size as Texas (83 stakes, 1 district, 268,596 sq mi). Nigeria has 1 operating, 2 under construction and 4 announced temples (7 total). Texas has 5 operating, 3 under construction and 2 announced temples (10 total).
While Nigeria covers a larger land area, 94% of the stakes (all but 5) are located in the southern 1/3 of the country. 88% of the stakes in Texas (all but 10 stakes) are located in the eastern half of the state.
Year-end 2025 stats published by the church was used.
This was replaced with the newly created Copperbelt Zambia Stake. It's still unclear what branches has become wards.
I agree. It's very hard to put down a finger on what is meant by this exactly but my expectation would be at least 10% year-over-year growth in convert baptisms. Anything below that is really just "noise" in an environment that is more stagnant.
FYI, id any interested. The Gingoog Philippines District (611263), has finally been updated to the earlier stake organization from the about 2 weeks ago by Matt. The new Gingoog Philippines Stake (611263) is on the Meetinghouse site confirmed.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/611263
Thanks for posting the link to Elder Rasband's comments. Something I find interesting is that his responses to the allegedly false narratives are not the correct data needed to prove them false.
He states that the rising generation does not have less faith and interest in Jesus Christ than previous generations because there are more missionaries serving than in many years prior. The absolute number of missionaries can still be rising while the percentage growth in missionaries is smaller than the total growth of church membership, indicating an actual decline in interest in this regard, assuming those willing to serve missions is the best indicator of a generation's interest and/or faith in Jesus Christ.
In the second point he makes a similar argument against the church declining because of record convert baptisms. I think he is making the same mistake here again, arguing an absolute number growth when in fact needing to present a stable or growing percentage of growth instead(I think, I am quite new to the field of data science so forgive me and please point this out if I'm wrong). However, a continuing to grow total membership that does take into account deaths and membership withdrawals/removals, could be taken as a sign this is correct, though it would need to be coupled with evidence of solid membership retention to be concrete, which instead is presented as a separate argument.
Speaking of, the third argument addresses retention, which he does not present any indication of data proving otherwise, but simply states a reassurance of the opposite, that in fact these converts are sticking around and fulfilling other milestones in their gospel progression. Reassuring, yes, but not definitive proof in a series of arguments implying data that says otherwise.
Fourth and finally, the last argument states more missionaries come home early than ever before. Funny enough, here is where the argument switches to arguing an absolute number, and Elder Rasband initially switches to arguing a percent, but in doing so, both find error in their argument. An increase in the absolute number of missionaries returning early would be expected in a growing missionary force, even if the percent of growth of both stayed equal or the percentage growth in early returns lagged behind total missionary growth. On the flip side, Elder Rasband says that an overwhelming majority of missionaries are finishing their missions, which again, just because the percent is, for example, 90%, doesn't mean more missionaries aren't coming home early. He does later state that the percent of missionaries completing their missions has grown, which is a slightly buried lead but does present his best argument yet against one of these statements. It is still possible for the number of early returns to be growing in this case, but again, the growth rate would clearly be very limited in scale and thus an encouraging metric over all.
So, I don't believe he is trying to hide anything or be intentionally misleading, but I just mourn that someone of his experience in both leadership and business, and with the access to the non-publicly available data that he most certainly has, it is unfortunate that his comments did not use this data in a clear and correct manner to definitively rebut these statements.
The Church continues to report on the Seminar for New Mission Leadership. The Newsroom and the Church News covered counsel from Church President Dallin H. Oaks and his wife, krsstin, which I think are appropraitely related to Church growth in general and the growth of the missionary program in particular. My thanks once again to you all.
*Kristin*. Sorry for the typos.
Thank you Chris
@Caleb
Thanks for the info on Egor Demin! As a former attendee of BYU (and an NBA fan), I've been following his career for the last few years, but I didn't know he'd joined the church.
@John Pack Lambert & David McFadden:
I'm hoping for 2nd temples in Indiana and Kentucky, too.
Predictions in the comments here over the last few years have been for Fort Wayne & Paducah.
I'm hoping someday for Lexington & Evansville, too (since I served in those cities).
Local growth in my ward:
A young man was baptized yesterday (the son of a friend of mine who recently passed away).
Before she passed away, his mother requested that he get baptized in the river next to their house (so he did).
Good news from Malta. The Mosta Branch (295159) in the Palermo Italy Stake , recently became a Ward, the new Valletta Ward (295159).
113 Jun 21, 2026 Valletta Ward Mosta, Malta
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/wards/295159
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/607312
I only gathered the data going back to 1980, but the number of missionaries serving per unit of the church in 2025 was the fourth highest since 1980.
2014 - 2.87
2013 - 2.84
2015 - 2.47
2026 - 2.45
Missionaries as a percentage of total membership constituted 0.44% of church membership in 2025, which is slightly lower than the average of 0.48% going back to 1980. It's the highest since 2016, but still lower than the 1980s and 1990s.
Data here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1yPCUlzFMHZpTJW3lkRK3gSLCOIuZZ1HZG0D2olilZ1w/edit?usp=sharing
FYI: This is just my own observation, but the Mwanza Tanzania District (2236230) looks like a strong candidate to become the country’s second stake. The district currently has 11 branches, and it has two district conferences scheduled very close together — June 27–28 and July 25–26.
That kind of back‑to‑back scheduling often precedes leadership interviews and administrative adjustments. If stake creation is in the planning pipeline, the July 25–26 weekend seems like a plausible window.
We've been informed that next week there is a major realignment going on across several YSA stakes in northern Utah County. I'm expecting lots of boundary changes, potentially new wards and probably a new stake.
It looks like that the meetinghouse locator has some issues. New branches wards apearing and then disapearing again the next day. Branches upgraded to wards and shown as branches again the next day. Like the above mentioned Valletta ward. When I click on the stake it shows me the Mosta branch. When I click on it I have about a 50% chance that it shows Valletta ward.
In addition to Elder Rasband indicating that convert baptisms are up year to date, President Oaks indicated that we are about to hit a new record of missionaries serving. There are several 18-year-old women who have gotten their mission calls in my stake. It also seems the number of young men serving is up, but I could be missing something. We also seem to have more young service missionaries serving.
I could see 18-year-old women serving missions leading to an increase of 18-year-old men serving as well.
On a not very related point the Tabernacle Choir Concert from the Rose Bowl is being broadcast to Aretha Franklin Ampitheatre in Detroit, which is in my branch boundaries. It is about 2 miles or so from the Cobo Center where President Nelson gave an address to the NAACP national convention in July 2019.
I did not realize local watch parties were going to be held in performance venues instead of stake centers or chapels. I do not know if this is unique to Detroit or is common. I also am not sure if that is the only watch party we are doing in my stake. None of the chapels in Detroit are large enough to host a large event, since the church sold the Palmer Park Branch's old building and it now meets in a small space that the church has a lease on. I understand the logistics of this, but Gladys Knight and her Saints United Voices choir did perform at that chapel once.
Of the talks at the New Mission Leaders training conference I think Elder Renlaund's, in which he was supported by Elder Peter M. Johnson, Elder Gimenez and others, has a great chance to change things in a postiive way.
Elder Renland emphasized not starting by downing on people for not providing referrals. He emphasized there are lots of way that members can support missionary work. I just am not that good at setting up referrals, but I do a little better at befriending people when they come to church. I have to say in my experience having members willing to reach out while genuine love and caring to people who come in new is going to do more than having them refer their aqaintances. If they refer good friends and relatives it is another story, but a lot of times that is not who is referred.
Elder Renlund also said "Elder Renlund also encouraged mission leaders to help their missionaries understand the importance of never speaking negatively about local Church members. He shared how, in 1983, he was called as a bishop for a newly formed ward in Baltimore, Maryland, with only 10 men willing to accept home teaching assignments. Overwhelmed by the ward’s “horrible” statistics and his ongoing medical training, Elder Renlund described himself as a negative, pessimistic Church leader." He then goes on to tell of how some missionaries who were positive changed his outlook.
Looks like a new stake was created yesterday in Malaga, Spain from a division of the Granada Spain stake. Several wards must have been created or upgraded, as the Granada stake had 8 wards as of last week.
Point of correction.. The Tabernacle Choir concert is at the Hollywood Bowl, not the Rose Bowl.
Today's temple announcements are both the new Tulsa Oklahoma and Victoria BC temples have a groundbreaking ceremony and external rendering, posted on the Newsroom site a moment ago.
https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/milestones-for-the-tulsa-oklahoma-and-victoria-british-columbia-temples
This wouldn't surprise me. 4 units were either created or upgraded to a ward in this area since mid-February - something not seen much, especially in Europe.
FYI, only one Stake change reported above by Caleb. Thanks, Caleb.
Málaga Spain Stake (2332086)
Organized 21 June 2026
- Fuengirola Ward
- Málaga 2nd Ward
- Málaga 3rd Ward
- Marbella Branch
- Torre del Mar Branch
Mission: Spain Madrid South Mission
Temple: Madrid Spain Temple
Sorry about not correctly stating Hollywood Bowl.
The Aretha Franklin Ampitheater is the only view party in Metro Detroit. It looks like most are in chapels of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints but some are in concerts venues, high schools (some specifically a high school performing arts venue) and in Huntsville, Alabama and Henderson Nevada and maybe a few more places in a minor league sports stadium.
Five temples currently scheduled for groundbreakings in August. This brings the number of announced temples without a scheduled groundbreaking down to 100. Unless there's a increase in announcements and/or decrease in groundbreakings, we will see fewer than 100 announced temples awaiting groundbreaking by the end of the year and 85-90 by the end of next year as groundbreakings are far exceeding announcements.
Groundbreakings by year (Y2K-present)
2026* 12
2025 20
2024 14
2023 8
2022 16
2021 12
2020 21
2019 11
2018 1
2017 3
2016 4
2015 5
2014 1
2013** 3
2012 3
2011 7
2010 6
2009 3
2008 2
2007 3
2006 3
2005 3
2004 1
2003 3
2002 2
2001 4
2000 5
* 2026 includes YTD dedication plus 5 that are scheduled to be dedicated in August
** 2013 count includes Paris France Temple which had no traditional groundbreaking.
If the church has a 2% annual sustained growth and there's 400 temples, then only 8 announcements/year is needed to match growth. There's currently not 400 temples and the church has average just under 2% growth in recent years so 8 announcements/year to match growth maybe optimistic.
We had stake conference a couple of months ago. The visiting authority only mentioned one statistic briefly when he mentioned to the Stake President that we need to have a goal for 100% retention. From what I can see we are struggling in this area and have for a while as quick baptism tactics are very prevalent in our mission at the moment. I have family in leadership roles in multiple stakes and districts throughout the mission and they are all reporting the same frustrations, that people are being baptized unprepared. Sometimes not knowing the basic doctrines of the gospel and not living the commandments (especially Word of Wisdom). With our mission being realigned in the next couple of weeks we are hoping that at least some of the stakes/districts in the area won't have that issue anymore.
What location, mission?
The old Raleigh North Carolina Stake (503991), has recently this week been renamed "Raleigh North Carolina West Stake (503991)", after last month's split to create the new Mount Airy North Carolina Stake, on May 17th.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/503991
I would say there are several places that adding a temple would be justified with no growth. Basically I think the statistical analysis ignores the fact that the goal is making temples more integral to worship.
The other issue is that we are not going to build another temple on the scale of Mexico City or Los Angeles. So new temples probably average a bit less than the scale of existing temples.
On the other hand, on the issue of why a Port Harcourt Temple has not yet been announced I have these thoughts. One is it seems it is 15 hours of walking, and about an hour and a half driving. While this is clearly enough to justify a temple on distance alone, it is less pressing than most of the rest of Nigeria.
I think the other issue is that based on the number of stake currently there and growth rates, a Port Harcourt Temple they will want at least 30,000 square feet maybe bigger. This may be a case where finding a good location before announcing is a wise move
I do keep hoping each weekend we will see more temples announced.
This renaming is probably related to the creation of the Raleigh North Carolina East Stake - May 31st, 2026, not Mt. Airy? Mt. Airy is quite far from Raleigh.
^^Yes, as David asked, what mission?
I can tell you that the members in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Mission see similarly. The ward I had been in for the last couple years was really, really good at fellowshipping, but the retention rate was only 30% over the last 4 years because the missionaries were pressured to baptize people too quickly, and in turn pressured people to be baptized before they were ready.
I was once in a lesson with the missionaries in which they invited a recovering heroine addict to stop going to his doctor-perscribed appointments at the methadone clinic, so he could be baptized. Whether someone recieving perscribed methadone is something that had to stop before baptism or something to patiently assist the person through, or to consider prescribed and therefore kosher was not on these missionaries mind (who were leaders in the mission). Dunking was. All obstaces (percieved or real) were to be overcome "now" no matter the detriment. (This was not an exceptional experience, but one that exemplifies frequent similar occurences).
Many missionaries and members have worked so hard and the 30% who stay are a great addition to the church, but if the missionaries had been encouraged to value PMG chapter 13, we could be at more than 30%, both because the unready wouldn't have been baptized into inactivity, and because the unprepared would have been made prepared, then baptized, and could have stayed.
Hank, thank you for correcting my mistake. Yes, it was related to the Raleigh East organization. I got the timing off. Since the Mount Airy Stake was split from Winston-Salem a few weeks prior also. I appreciate you reminding me the correct order of events.
Found this on the Brazil Porto Alegre North Mission page.
The Osório Brazil District (616982) has been renamed the "Capão da Canoa Brazil District (616982)".
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/missions/2013029
This is the Toronto Canada mission. Soon to be East and West missions
A lot of comments about Elder Renlund/Rasband's recent trainings, more missionaries serving, 2nd most temples dedicated in a year, and more convert baptisms than last year.
At some point, can we stop using raw arithmetic? The church will nearly always look like it's growing substantially, and should continuously break records even if growth is stagnant, if metrics keep being used this way.
Like Droxen hinted at above, the vast majority of the "growth" statistics we keep using are (1) not meaningful/falsifiable, (2) temporary, and/or (3) manipulable.
For example, the claim that more missionaries are serving than ever, after the age change for women serving, should not be surprising at all. Nor would it be surprising if the age hadn't changed, if the base of missionaries to draw from is larger. Seeing more convert baptisms than the year before should also not be surprising, unless it surpasses expected growth in baptisms. It should not be surprising at all that more members than ever are enrolled in Seminary or Institute when there are entire countries that have opened up Institute programs, or where some are being auto-enrolled. This is not necessarily saying that faith is really decreasing, but the growth stats often used, even by church leaders, is truly meaningless.
I do investor-based stock market research. To simplify my point, one could say that stock prices should encompass our expectations of future performance. If Apple announces a profit next year, we should not be surprised, and simply earning a profit should not on its own lead to an increase in stock price. Instead, it's the level of growth in profits that will drive an increase or decrease in stock prices: the abnormal, unexpected increase.
What is most frustrating about this is that internally, I'm sure the metrics used to track church growth are quite good. I'm sure the church has a whole team dedicated to growth analytics, including estimates of actual attendance-based membership, stagnant records, unit sizes, etc. The leadership has better metrics in hand and refuses to divulge the metrics that are actually informative, choosing to inform the public with meaningless metrics instead.
Elder Renlund prepared an entire talk dedicated to debunking claims about church growth and then gave a list of statistics that would make the finance master's students I teach blush with embarrassment. An executive on a conference call would receive a lot of pushback from analysts if they were to use statistics like this, particularly in a "debunking" effort. And that's assuming the statistics are correct (I tend to believe they are, although Elder Holland's "double-digit stakes every week" comment always lurks in the back of my mind).
Isaiah 55:8-9 would seem to apply here. If the apostles speak for the Lord (as I believe they do), then it seems disingenuous to me to use worldly metrics to determine growth and success in the Lord's work. The Lord has also said "whether by my own voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same." So at what point can we please stop using worldly metrics & definitions and disingenuously applying them to a worldly analysis of the success of.the Lord's work?
To the James who teaches finance students:
I hear you, but there's a counter-story. The Church had 25 years of not hitting a nominal record in convert baptisms, despite aggressive missionary efforts to do so (Pres. Hinckley calling for the doubling of baptisms in the late 90s, the introduction of Preach My Gospel, the lowering of the mission age). It went from 1990 to 2025 without hitting the same raw number of baptisms.
At the same time, many, many other churches have witnessed a decline in raw membership from 1990 to 2025. (Mad respect to churches that buck the trend.) Whatever the details of current activity rates, it would be incredibly hard to argue that our church in the US, internationally, or even in any individually country has fewer people in pews now than in 1990.
So yes, for the little stone to fill the earth we would need sustained acceleration of what we've seen in the post-COVID era so far. (And, frankly, we may see that! For example, the 50 new wards and branches in DRC alone this half of the year indicates continued acceleration there.)
But I don't think we should fault our leaders for being thrilled with what is happening after decades of struggling to have any statistics indicating accelerating growth.
Finally, some of the focuses-- BYU Pathway, church attendance for investigators, Preach my Gospel, etc. -- are structural improvements that boost retention, so comparisons to the 80s and 90s aren't accurate and the records we are seeing in convert baptisms are much more indicative of church health than similar stats would have been 20-30 years ago.
Again, I hear you, but the context I shared matters.
The Salt Lake Temple doors are back in place. In the article in the Deseret News about this by Tad Walch he mentions that the plan is to be 100% complete with all construction by fall. Furniture will then be placed, and then the filming for the virtual tour will be done.
The website to apply as a volunteer or performer is up.
The Tabernacle Choir's performance at the Hollywood Bowl will be their last performance on a tour outside Utah until probably 2028. 2027 is going to be largely absorbed in connection with the Salt Lake Temple celebration. I believe I have read the Tabernacle Choir will perform at the Salt Lake Temple rededication.
Good news from the Lae Papua New Guinea Stake. On the meetinghouse website.
The stake organized 5 new branches, and moved the Kavieng Branch (2184494) back to the Mission. The five new branches are 80 Mile Branch (2334100), Gusap Branch (2334089), Nadzap Branch (2334062), Ramu Branch (2334070), Wawin Branch (2334097). Bringing the stake to a new total of 12 Wards and Branches. Impressive. Again, maybe in the sweet zone for a possible split in future. (This last statement my own opinion. Not church policy or planning.)
James Stokes: The apostles themselves use worldly metrics, worldly definitions and worldly analysis. To claim otherwise is a rather absurd argument.
It would make sense that 2026 would have the highest count of missionaries, seeing that we are 18 years out from 2008, when there were 123,502 children of record (the second highest year ever reported), and an increase of 32% from 2007. 2008-2018 all saw children of record above 100k, so there should be a crest in missionaries for the next decade based off of children of record alone.
The problem is, with that huge 32% increase in C.O.R from 2007-2008, we would in theory see a similar huge increase in missionaries serving from 2025-2026 if a similar percentage of youth chose to serve missions. A 32% increase from 2025 would be around 103,600 missionaries serving in 2026. So any number of missionaries less than that would mean that a smaller percentage of potential missionaries are choosing to serve.
Cousin James, this blog uses worldly analysis all the time. Number of new stakes, % increase of members in each state/country, even by Matt.
I guess the annual membership report from the church is also worldly and must not be published because it doesn’t accurately project the growth of the church right cousin?
Shhhh, don't offend James Stokes with logic and reason.
I'd love to see a chart demonstrating this data, that is comparing the children of record to the numbers of missionaries serving eighteen-twenty years later.
I created a column for "% of Children of Record as Missionaries" here, dividing current missionaries by the children of record from 18 years ago (column S): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1yPCUlzFMHZpTJW3lkRK3gSLCOIuZZ1HZG0D2olilZ1w/edit?usp=drivesdk
It is only goes back to 2015 since there was a gap where the church wasn't reporting children of record, and of course is going to be off since sisters served at 19+ during that period, but can be a crude metric to determine the missionary yield for a birth year.
I don't think anyone here knows the answer, and I'm not looking for the answer. It's a wait and see as we're years away and anything could happen. How many temples are going to be announced once the backlog is minimized? I believe we've now increased production to about 15-20 temples per year. Still far from the 35 per year announced by Nelson, but significantly higher than church growth as a whole. To maintain according to the rate of recent historical growth, it would optimistically only require 6-8 announcements per year which is significantly less than current production. I'm wondering once backlog is gone if temple construction will continue at a rate significantly faster than church growth or much faster such as the current pace of construction.
The percent increase in converts, units, and temples is much higher than in years past. Especially for convert baptisms, the 2025 numbers were substantial and can’t be attributed to just having a larger denominator of church membership. The fact that the increase in convert baptisms is continuing into 2026 and was not an idiosyncratic event in 2025 is telling.
The Church has a strategy department with ex-Bain/McKinsey consultants who are geniuses at looking at the numbers. But to the average member reading the Church News, they’re content with what Elder Rasband shared.
The good majority of missionaries are COR so the number of young full-time missionaries should correlate with COR. Not everyone that wants to go can serve right at 18. Some are still in High School or have other obligations that would delay their start of service. Therefore, a 32% spike in COR that followed by a decrease in COR the next year may not see the same play out in specifically 32% increase in missionaries.
The announcement that 18-year-olds can now serve compounded with continued emphasis that all worthy young adults to serve a mission will likely be the biggest cause this year for a spike in missionary service. Also, some COR members are blessed and added within weeks of being born, and others may take longer. Children, youth, and some YSA convert baptisms can also translate to additional missionaries once they turn of age/worthiness. Within a couple of years after announcing age changes in last decade there was a 44% increase in young, full time missionaries. This is a one year age drop for sisters instead of a 2 year drop announced last decade. Also this only effects sister missionaries serving. But compounded with a spike in COR 18 years ago, it may contribute to a significant increase in missionaries potentially to or beyond numbers stated earlier.
From the recent Copperbelt Zambia Stake, in April 2026, 4 of the Branches have now advanced to Wards.
Luanshya, Masala, Ndola and Twapia
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/470457
120 Jun 24, 2026 Twapia Ward Twapia, Zambia
https://news-pacific.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/dedication-of-church-missionary-training-centre
https://news-pacific.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/dedication-of-church-missionary-training-centre
A temporary training centre for volunteer missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was dedicated on May 30, 2026, in East Boroko. Elder Peter F. Meurs, President of the Pacific Area of the Church offered the dedicatory prayer invoking a blessing that all who enter here would feel the sacred sense of purpose and consecration, declaring the Papua New Guinea Temporary Missionary Training Centre as “a holy place of preparation.”
Missionaries are Church members between the ages of 18-25 who voluntarily set aside schooling, employment, sports and personal interests to help others for 18 or 24 months. Missionaries are assigned to one of over 500 missions around the world by an Apostle of the Church. Before beginning service, missionaries attend a training centre.
A missionary training centre assists missionaries to learn, love and live their purpose of inviting and helping others come unto Christ. Elder Meurs offered gratitude “for the sacred privilege of proclaiming His restored gospel throughout the earth.”
The Papua New Guinea TMTC is one of three smaller-sized facilities globally. Eleven larger Missionary Training Centres around the world provide language learning as well as preparation to share the gospel of Jesus Christ. Because of its unique size, the PNG TMTC can cater to the specific needs of local young missionaries.
Traditional MTCs are generally close to an operating temple, although it sometimes closes for renovations (i.e. Provo Rock Canyon Temple). Port Moresby has a temple nearing completion (no called leaders or announced dates for open house/dedication).
Do we know the locations of the other two TMTCs?
Chris, can I get the new mission unit numbers once they come out? The meetinghouse locator does not allow searching for missions or areas. Could I also get the unit numbers for Areas?
Also for the James that teaches Finance:
I agree with you 100%.
A few years ago this kind of thing would have bothered me a lot more. At this point, I’ve mostly made peace with not expecting much in terms of meaningful metrics from the Church, it just seems unlikely, and pretty normal for institutions like this. Governments, corporations, universities, NGOs, pretty much every institution highlights the numbers that support its narrative and spends less time talking about the ones that don't.
Let's put in to perspective the audience; the audience is a group of incoming mission presidents who have already decided to leave their jobs, families, and normal lives for three years. The message isn't really "here is an interesting analysis of church growth." The message is "Don't worry, the work is moving forward, and what you're about to do matters."
Would I prefer more meaningful data? Absolutely. Do I think they probably have much better metrics internally? Definitely. But I've stopped taking these kinds of presentations as demographic analyses. They're narrative-building exercises, and once I started viewing them that way, I found them a lot less frustrating.
I agree that there are a lot of compounding variables. It will be interesting to see how the numbers play out over the next decade. Any increase in missionaries serving is definitely a good thing.
I’m holding off until the official updates finish propagating. Once everything is fully reflected on the public pages, I’ll post whatever is confirmed.
Ok. Thank you Chris. I noticed existing missions are still showing the boundaries before split.
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