The proposed changes to disclosure avoidance policies of the U.S. Census Bureau, grounded in differential privacy, have faced increasing criticism from demographers and other social scientists. Scholars have found that counts generated via Census-released test data are accurate for aggregate population statistics but introduce considerable error for tabulations of sub-groups. At present, the ramifications of this new approach, and the error it may introduce, remain unclear for rural populations. In this brief, we focus on rural populations and evaluate the ability of the proposed differential privacy data to estimate growth rates from 2000 to 2010 across the rural-urban continuum for the total, non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic or Latino/a, and non-Hispanic American Indian population. We find the method introduces significant error into growth rates at the county level for all groups except the total and non-Hispanic white population. Further, errors increase dramatically as we move from urban to rural. Thus, unless corrected the proposed differential privacy method will introduce significant rural and non-white bias into census tabulations.