List of Midwestern cities by size
Cities in the Midwest with at least 100,000 inhabitants as of July 2017 by the United States Census Bureau:[1]
- Chicago, Illinois; 2,722,586
- Indianapolis, Indiana; 853,431
- Columbus, Ohio; 852,144
- Detroit, Michigan; 679,865
- Milwaukee, Wisconsin; 599,086
- Kansas City, Missouri; 476,974
- Omaha, Nebraska; 463,081
- Minneapolis, Minnesota; 411,452
- Wichita, Kansas; 389,938
- Cleveland, Ohio; 388,812
- St. Louis, Missouri; 314,867
- St. Paul, Minnesota; 300,820
- Cincinnati, Ohio; 298,957
- Toledo, Ohio; 279,455
- Lincoln, Nebraska; 277,315
- Fort Wayne, Indiana; 262,450
- Madison, Wisconsin; 248,856
- Des Moines, Iowa; 214,778
- Aurora, Illinois; 200,946
- Grand Rapids, Michigan; 195,355
- Akron, Ohio; 198,252
- Overland Park, Kansas; 186,147
- Sioux Falls, South Dakota; 170,401
- Springfield, Missouri; 165,785
- Kansas City, Kansas; 151,042
- Rockford, Illinois; 148,640
- Joliet, Illinois; 148,172
- Naperville, Illinois; 146,431
- Dayton, Ohio; 140,939
- Warren, Michigan; 135,147
- Olathe, Kansas; 134,368
- Sterling Heights, Michigan; 131,996
- Cedar Rapids, Iowa; 130,330
- Topeka, Kansas; 127,139
- Evansville, Indiana; 119,806
- Ann Arbor, Michigan; 119,303
- Columbia, Missouri; 118,620
- Fargo, North Dakota; 118,099
- Independence, Missouri; 117,369
- Springfield, Illinois; 116,313
- Peoria, Illinois; 115,424
- Lansing, Michigan; 115,222
- Rochester, Minnesota; 112,683
- Elgin, Illinois; 112,628
- Green Bay, Wisconsin; 104,796
- Davenport, Iowa; 102,268
- South Bend, Indiana; 101,928
References
- United States Census Bureau - U.S. Census website Retrieved April 19, 2019
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