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Thislist of U.S. cities by Black population covers allincorporated cities andcensus-designated places with a population over 100,000 and a proportion of Black residents over 30% in the 50U.S. states, theDistrict of Columbia, and theterritory ofPuerto Rico and the population in each city that isBlack or African American.
The data source for the list is the2020 United States census.[1]
At the time of the 2020 census, there were 47.5 million Americans who were Black (either alone or in combination), making up 14.2% of the U.S. population. State by state, the highest number of Black Americans could be found inTexas (3.96 million),Florida (3.70 million),Georgia (3.54 million),New York (3.53 million), andCalifornia (2.83 million). Meanwhile, the highest proportions of African Americans were in the District of Columbia (44.17%),Mississippi (37.94%),Louisiana (33.13%), Georgia (33.03%), andMaryland (32.01%).
Throughout the country, there are 342 cities with a population over 100,000. 19 of them had Black (alone or in combination) majorities, and in 46 more cities, between 30% and 50% of the population identified as black. Out of the 19 majority-Black cities, four were in Georgia and Louisiana, andAlabama had three each.
In 2020, the largest cities that had a Black majority wereDetroit, Michigan (population 639K);Memphis, Tennessee (population 633K);Baltimore, Maryland (population 586K);New Orleans, Louisiana (population 384K); andCleveland, Ohio (population 373K); and the city with the largest Black population wasNew York.
The list below displays each city (or city-equivalent) in the fifty states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico with a population over 100,000 and a Black proportion over 30% as of the 2020 census. It includes the city's total population, the number of Black people in the city, and the percentage of people in the city who are Black as of the 2020 census. The table is initially sorted by the Black proportion of each city but is sortable by any of its columns, as can be found by clicking the table headers.
Cities where people who are Black alone are not at least 30% of the population, while people who are either Black alone, or, in combination with another race, do form at least 30% of the population, areitalicized.[nb 1]
Note that New York City has the largest population of black residents among American cities. As of the 2020 US census, New York City had 8.8 million residents, of which 22.1% identified as black, equating to a total of 1,943,645 who identified as black or African American. This figure is more than double the next largest city population, which is the black population in the city of Chicago.
| City | State | Black % | Black alone % | Population | Black population | Black alone population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Fulton | 93.26% | 90.53% | 107,436 | 100,190 | 97,259 | |
| Jackson | 80.45% | 78.86% | 153,701 | 123,656 | 121,215 | |
| Detroit | 80.38% | 77.69% | 639,111 | 513,697 | 496,534 | |
| Birmingham | 69.82% | 68.40% | 200,733 | 140,156 | 137,296 | |
| Miami Gardens | 66.97% | 63.50% | 111,640 | 74,761 | 70,886 | |
| Memphis | 63.34% | 61.57% | 633,104 | 401,033 | 389,779 | |
| Montgomery | 61.91% | 60.29% | 200,603 | 124,187 | 120,950 | |
| Baltimore | 60.42% | 57.79% | 585,708 | 353,890 | 338,478 | |
| Augusta | 58.61% | 55.81% | 202,081 | 118,441 | 112,773 | |
| Shreveport | 57.82% | 56.02% | 187,593 | 108,474 | 105,088 | |
| New Orleans | 57.02% | 54.24% | 383,997 | 218,969 | 208,273 | |
| Macon | 56.48% | 54.58% | 157,346 | 88,865 | 85,885 | |
| Baton Rouge | 55.43% | 53.84% | 227,470 | 126,097 | 122,461 | |
| Hampton | 53.65% | 49.52% | 137,148 | 73,579 | 67,915 | |
| Newark | 53.22% | 49.45% | 311,549 | 165,802 | 154,048 | |
| Mobile | 53.04% | 51.35% | 187,041 | 99,198 | 96,039 | |
| Cleveland | 51.59% | 48.37% | 372,624 | 192,239 | 180,224 | |
| Brockton | 51.42% | 34.98% | 105,643 | 54,320 | 36,951 | |
| Savannah | 51.41% | 49.14% | 147,780 | 75,979 | 72,618 | |
| Atlanta | 49.51% | 47.22% | 498,715 | 246,906 | 235,513 | |
| Columbus | 49.40% | 46.47% | 206,922 | 102,212 | 96,163 | |
| Beaumont | 49.15% | 47.32% | 115,282 | 56,666 | 54,549 | |
| Fayetteville | 47.58% | 42.99% | 208,501 | 99,208 | 89,645 | |
| Miramar | 46.43% | 42.39% | 134,721 | 62,553 | 57,109 | |
| Newport News | 46.35% | 42.25% | 186,247 | 86,330 | 78,687 | |
| St. Louis | 45.45% | 43.04% | 301,578 | 137,059 | 129,814 | |
| Greensboro | 44.83% | 41.99% | 299,035 | 134,071 | 125,574 | |
| Rochester | 44.55% | 40.10% | 211,328 | 94,142 | 84,752 | |
| Washington | 44.17% | 41.45% | 689,545 | 304,539 | 285,810 | |
| Dayton | 43.90% | 40.67% | 137,644 | 60,432 | 55,981 | |
| Norfolk | 43.55% | 40.16% | 238,005 | 103,657 | 95,594 | |
| Killeen | 43.47% | 37.27% | 153,095 | 66,556 | 57,055 | |
| Cincinnati | 43.35% | 40.55% | 309,317 | 134,092 | 125,443 | |
| North Charleston | 42.99% | 40.64% | 114,852 | 49,371 | 46,673 | |
| Richmond | 42.91% | 40.45% | 226,610 | 97,240 | 91,653 | |
| Little Rock | 42.35% | 40.64% | 202,591 | 85,790 | 82,340 | |
| Hartford | 42.32% | 38.19% | 121,054 | 51,236 | 46,231 | |
| Inglewood | 42.24% | 38.70% | 107,762 | 45,523 | 41,708 | |
| Philadelphia | 42.01% | 39.31% | 1,603,797 | 673,785 | 630,462 | |
| Milwaukee | 41.50% | 38.59% | 577,222 | 239,542 | 222,746 | |
| Columbia | 40.36% | 38.50% | 136,632 | 55,140 | 52,598 | |
| Buffalo | 40.16% | 36.87% | 278,349 | 111,796 | 102,636 | |
| Bridgeport | 38.59% | 35.07% | 148,654 | 57,372 | 52,138 | |
| Durham | 38.59% | 36.24% | 283,506 | 109,411 | 102,742 | |
| Tallahassee | 37.22% | 35.02% | 196,169 | 73,007 | 68,691 | |
| New Haven | 35.82% | 32.20% | 134,023 | 48,001 | 43,160 | |
| Charlotte | 35.39% | 33.05% | 874,579 | 309,487 | 289,062 | |
| Syracuse | 35.37% | 30.67% | 148,620 | 52,573 | 45,588 | |
| Winston-Salem | 34.98% | 32.52% | 249,545 | 87,286 | 81,148 | |
| Akron | 34.94% | 31.41% | 190,469 | 66,555 | 59,821 | |
| High Point | 34.35% | 32.10% | 114,059 | 39,183 | 36,610 | |
| West Palm Beach | 34.13% | 31.65% | 117,415 | 40,075 | 37,160 | |
| Jacksonville | 33.20% | 30.57% | 949,611 | 315,281 | 290,279 | |
| Toledo | 32.67% | 28.76% | 270,871 | 88,503 | 77,897 | |
| Lafayette | 32.42% | 30.70% | 121,374 | 39,354 | 37,259 | |
| Columbus | 31.77% | 28.65% | 905,748 | 287,735 | 259,483 | |
| Chesapeake | 31.68% | 28.97% | 249,422 | 79,013 | 72,268 | |
| Huntsville | 31.45% | 29.34% | 215,006 | 67,626 | 63,085 | |
| Columbia | 31.25% | 27.65% | 104,681 | 32,718 | 28,941 | |
| Peoria | 31.13% | 27.86% | 113,150 | 35,228 | 31,527 | |
| Chattanooga | 30.89% | 29.09% | 181,099 | 55,950 | 52,690 | |
| Chicago | 30.79% | 29.17% | 2,746,388 | 845,638 | 801,195 | |
| Roanoke | 30.76% | 27.47% | 100,011 | 30,764 | 27,470 | |
| Pompano | 30.71% | 28.55% | 112,046 | 34,410 | 31,994 | |
| Indianapolis | 30.55% | 27.95% | 887,642 | 271,214 | 248,067 |

TheNew Great Migration is the demographic change from 1970 to the present, which is a reversal of the previous 60-year trend ofblackmigration within theUnited States.
Since 1970,deindustrialization of cities in theNortheastern andMidwestern United States, growth of jobs in the "New South" with lowercosts of living, desire to reunite with family, cultural ties, the perception of lessening discrimination and religious connections have all acted to attractAfrican Americans to theSouthern United States in substantial numbers.[4][5] Between 1965 and 1970 around 287,000 African Americans left the Southern United States, while from 1975 to 1980, it is estimated 109,000 African Americans migrated to the Southern United States, showing the reversal of the original Great Migration.[4] Between 1975 and 1980, several Southern states saw net African American migration gains. In 2014, African Americanmillennials moved in the highest numbers toTexas,Georgia,Florida, andNorth Carolina.[6] African American populations have continued to drop throughout much of theNortheast, especially from the state ofNew York[6][7] and fromnorthern New Jersey,[8] as they rise in the South. InMassachusetts, even though the black population saw a net increase between2010 and2020, theGreater Boston area lost approximately 8,800 black residents and Massachusetts lost an average of 11,700 black residents per year from 2015 to 2020, with approximately half moving to Southern states and Georgia and Florida being the most popular destinations.[9]
African Americans are also moving to thesuburbs.[10]
Fort Worth,San Antonio,Columbus,Houston,Jacksonville andCharlotte saw the largest growth in the black population.[11][12]