In 2022, the CDC reported that home-births had increased to the highest level in 30 years. Our research analyzes the relationship between time, location, and home-births. We obtained home-birth counts by counties in the United States using data from CDC Wonder. We depicted the percentage of births that were intended home-births using ArcGIS, and evaluated the increase in home-births from 2018-2023. We ran an exploratory spatial regression analysis of county-level home births in R with the primary explanatory variables of year (continuous) and state (as a factor). Across all the years, the percentage of home-births was highest in Lancaster, PA, with 15.95% of births occurring at home. For 2018-2023 nationwide, the percentages of home-births were 0.77%, 0.77%, 0.48%, 0.59%, 1.25%, and 1.31%, for each year respectively. In our regression model, year was a significant predictor of percentage of births at home (p-value = 0.0002) and two states, Utah (p= 0.0016) and Nevada (p=0.0004) were also significant. Salt Lake County, Utah had a significant increase in home-births (p <0.001). In 2021, the percentage nearly doubled compared to 2020, with the highest rate in 2023. More research is required to determine the cause of increases in home-births within the United States, though we hypothesize that the COVID-19 pandemic played a role in these years.