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.
12 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.
Post a Comment