Using individual records from a large and geographically detailed national research opinion survey, this paper employs a multilevel cross-classified statistical framework to demonstrate the relative importance of simultaneous individual and place-based (neighbourhood and city region) variations, at both the origin and the destination, in the distance moved by residential migrants in England and Wales. The results confirm strong micro-level variations in the distance moved according to key variables such as household income, educational attainment and housing tenure whilst simultaneously revealing the importance of substantial origin and destination place-based macrogeographic variations. Indeed, a typical migrant is found to be pulled over significantly longer distances towards rural/coastal (amenity-rich) destination environments and, at the same time, pushed over significantly longer distances from (increasingly) metropolitan origins. The paper is valuable in revealing the importance of simultaneously modelling origin and destination macrogeographical contexts net of individual and neighbourhood composition and for demonstrating the significance of differential place-based attractiveness as a key source of variation in the distance moved between origins and destinations in England and Wales. Substantively, the findings reveal the continued strength of counterurbanisation as a process that persists in drawing people, over long distances, from metropolitan cores and towards the amenity-rich environments of England and W