Metropolitan statistical area
A Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) is a geographic entity delineated by the United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB) consisting of one or more counties (or equivalent areas) that contain a core urban area with a population of at least 50,000 inhabitants, along with adjacent communities exhibiting a high degree of economic and social integration with the core, primarily assessed through commuting patterns where at least 25% of the employed residents in an outlying county work in the core or vice versa.[1][2] These areas form part of the broader Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) framework, which also includes smaller micropolitan statistical areas for urban clusters of 10,000 to 49,999 residents, and are designed exclusively for statistical purposes to facilitate the collection, analysis, and dissemination of data by federal agencies.[3][4] MSAs are composed of a central core—typically defined by an urbanized area or urban cluster—plus outlying counties that meet contiguity and integration criteria, ensuring the region reflects functional economic units rather than political boundaries.[2] The delineation process relies on data from the decennial census, such as the 2020 Census for the most recent updates, combined with commuting information from the American Community Survey to measure integration; central counties must have at least 50% of their population in urban areas of 10,000 or more, or at least 5,000 residents in a principal urban area.[1][3] In larger MSAs with a core population exceeding 2.5 million, subdivisions known as metropolitan divisions may be identified to provide more granular statistical reporting.[2] As of the 2023 OMB revisions based on 2020 Census data, there are 393 MSAs across the United States and Puerto Rico, encompassing approximately 86.2% of the nation's population and serving as a foundational tool for economic analysis, labor market studies, health statistics, and resource allocation by agencies like the Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[1][5] These delineations are reviewed and updated periodically, with the current standards finalized in 2020 and no changes to the core population threshold from prior iterations, though ongoing research explores potential adjustments for future accuracy.[2]Definitions and Concepts
Core Definition
A metropolitan statistical area (MSA) is a geographical region defined by the United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for statistical purposes, consisting of a core urban area with a population of at least 50,000 plus adjacent communities that exhibit a high degree of social and economic integration with the core, as measured primarily by commuting ties.[2] MSAs serve as non-legal entities, established solely to facilitate the collection, tabulation, and publication of federal statistical data by agencies including the U.S. Census Bureau, without implying any form of governance, funding allocation, or official boundaries.[3] Their delineations enable consistent analysis of urban and regional trends in areas such as population, employment, and housing.[1] The fundamental components of an MSA include one or more central counties (or, in New England, cities and towns that form a New England City and Town Area) encompassing the core urban area, plus outlying counties (or equivalent areas in New England) connected through substantial daily commuting patterns to that core. In the 2023 OMB update, 393 MSAs are recognized nationwide, encompassing 387 in the United States and 6 in Puerto Rico.[3][1] Due to processes like suburbanization, some MSAs display a polycentric structure with multiple significant urban centers rather than a single dominant core; representative examples include the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, featuring integrated development across Dallas and Fort Worth, and the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area, with its twin-city configuration.[6] MSAs represent a core component of the broader core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) framework used by the OMB.[3]Related Statistical Areas
Core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) serve as the overarching category in the U.S. federal statistical system, encompassing metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) with at least one urbanized area of 50,000 or more inhabitants and micropolitan statistical areas with smaller urban clusters. Note that in New England, these areas are delineated using New England City and Town Areas (NECTAs) based on cities and towns rather than counties.[1] These delineations, established by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), aim to capture regions centered on urban cores with surrounding areas exhibiting significant economic and social integration, primarily through commuting ties.[2] Micropolitan statistical areas represent smaller regional economies within the CBSA framework, defined by a core urban cluster with a population between 10,000 and 49,999 residents, along with adjacent counties (or, in New England, cities and towns forming a NECTA) that demonstrate economic integration via commuting patterns.[1] Unlike MSAs, these areas highlight nonmetropolitan locales with moderate urban influence, such as Ellensburg, Washington (population around 45,000 in the broader area), which serves as a hub for agriculture and education in central Washington state, or Port Angeles, Washington, a coastal economy focused on forestry, tourism, and trade with Canada.[1] This classification aids in analyzing rural-urban transitions and resource distribution in less densely populated regions.[2] Combined statistical areas (CSAs) extend the CBSA structure by aggregating two or more adjacent CBSAs—whether MSAs, micropolitan areas, or a mix—that exhibit substantial employment interchange, defined as at least 15 percent using a specific measure.[2] The employment interchange measure calculates the sum of two percentages: the share of employed residents in one CBSA who commute to jobs in the adjacent CBSA, plus the share of employed residents in the adjacent CBSA who commute to the first CBSA, based on journey-to-work data from sources like the American Community Survey.[2] For instance, if 10 percent of workers from CBSA A commute to CBSA B and 8 percent from B to A, the measure totals 18 percent, qualifying for combination; these CSAs are voluntary and provide a broader view of interconnected labor markets, such as the Portland-Vancouver-Salem CSA spanning Oregon and Washington.[1] According to the OMB's 2023 bulletin (No. 23-01), there are 935 CBSAs nationwide, comprising 393 MSAs and 542 micropolitan statistical areas, while CSAs number 184 as voluntary aggregations of these components.[1] In 2021, the OMB considered a proposal from its Standards Review Committee to raise the MSA population threshold from 50,000 to 100,000 to better reflect urban growth patterns, but after receiving over 700 public comments opposing the change—citing potential loss of federal funding and data comparability for smaller cities—the agency rejected it and retained the 50,000 threshold in the finalized 2020 standards.[2][7]Historical Development
Early Origins
The concept of metropolitan areas in the United States originated with the U.S. Census Bureau's introduction of "metropolitan districts" in the 1910 census, aimed at capturing the growing interdependence between large cities and their surrounding suburbs. These districts were defined for central cities with populations of 200,000 or more inhabitants, incorporating adjacent urban sections within approximately 10 miles of the city boundaries, based on population density thresholds of around 150–200 inhabitants per square mile to distinguish urban from rural areas. This early framework recognized emerging patterns of suburban commuting, primarily via rail and streetcar, but was limited to 25 such districts nationwide, reflecting the era's focus on major industrial hubs like New York.[8] During the 1930s and 1940s, the Census Bureau refined these definitions to address rapid urbanization and the limitations of municipal boundaries in representing economic realities. The population threshold for central cities was lowered to 50,000 by the 1930 census, with districts now requiring a total population of at least 100,000 and including contiguous areas with densities exceeding 150 persons per square mile; by 1940, the minimum metropolitan population requirement was removed, resulting in 140 identified districts that emphasized compact, high-density urban-industrial centers. These changes were influenced by increasing suburban growth and the need for more accurate data on urban economies that extended beyond city limits, as traditional city-based statistics failed to account for peripheral development.[9][10] In 1949, the Bureau of the Budget (predecessor to the Office of Management and Budget) adopted the first standardized metropolitan areas (SMAs) for use in the 1950 census, shifting to county-based delineations (except in New England) with a central city of at least 50,000 residents and a total area population of 100,000 or more. Criteria incorporated population density, non-agricultural employment ratios (e.g., at least 75% in adjacent counties), and commuting patterns (e.g., 15% or more of workers commuting to or from the central county), providing a functional measure of urban integration. This standardization was driven by post-World War II suburbanization, which decoupled physical settlement from economic ties, and the demand for consistent data to support federal economic planning and resource allocation beyond isolated municipalities. Early SMAs included major examples like New York (over 6 million residents) and Chicago (over 6 million), which encompassed dense urban cores and integrated suburban communities.[11][10] These foundational SMAs later evolved into metropolitan statistical areas in 1983.[11]Modern Evolution
In 1983, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) redefined metropolitan areas, changing the terminology from Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs), established in 1959, to Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), with a greater emphasis on commuting patterns to determine the inclusion of adjacent counties rather than solely relying on county-based urban cores.[3][12] This shift aimed to better capture functional economic integration by analyzing journey-to-work data alongside population and employment densities.[12] The evolution continued with the introduction of the Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSA) framework in December 2000, when OMB announced new standards for delineating metropolitan and micropolitan areas, incorporating urban clusters—defined as areas with populations between 2,500 and 49,999—to extend the concept beyond densely populated urbanized areas of 50,000 or more.[6] These standards were formalized through OMB's issuance of specific area definitions in the Federal Register on June 6, 2003, based on 2000 Census data, marking a comprehensive update that replaced prior MSA and Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) designations with a unified CBSA system.[13] Subsequent major revisions included the 2010 standards adopted by OMB on June 28, 2010, which refined delineation criteria following the 2000 Census framework but were applied to update areas after the 2010 Census, introducing adjustments for employment data and commuting thresholds to reflect evolving economic ties.[14] The most recent update came via OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 on July 21, 2023, which established revised delineations for 393 Metropolitan Statistical Areas and 542 Micropolitan Statistical Areas using 2020 Census population data and American Community Survey commuting information from 2016–2020.[1][15] These 2023 revisions addressed population shifts revealed by the 2020 Census, resulting in the addition or removal of counties in various MSAs to account for growth and integration changes; for instance, the Bend-Redmond, OR MSA expanded by incorporating Crook and Jefferson counties, while the Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN MSA added Cheatham and Dickson counties, reflecting regional urbanization patterns.[1] OMB conducts ongoing reviews of these standards approximately every decade, synchronized with decennial Census releases, incorporating public comment periods—such as the 60-day review in early 2021 for the 2020-based updates—to ensure delineations remain relevant to socioeconomic patterns.[16][3]Delineation Criteria
Population and Urban Thresholds
The delineation of Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) begins with the identification of a core urban area, defined by the U.S. Census Bureau as an urban area with a population of at least 50,000 inhabitants.[3] This threshold ensures that MSAs capture regions centered around significant population concentrations, distinguishing them from smaller micropolitan statistical areas, which require an urban area of 10,000 to 49,999 residents.[2] Urban areas are delineated by the Census Bureau using density-based criteria from decennial census data. An urban area must contain at least 2,000 housing units or 5,000 persons overall and is delineated based on density criteria, including a densely settled core of contiguous census blocks generally meeting a minimum of 425 housing units or 1,000 persons per square mile, adjusted for extensions and mergers.[17] Central counties form the nucleus of an MSA and must contain or border the qualifying core urban area. To qualify, a central county must have at least 50 percent of its total population residing within urban areas of 10,000 or more inhabitants, or it must contain at least 5,000 persons in a single urban area of 10,000 or more.[2] These criteria, applied using 2020 Decennial Census data for population and urban delineations, ensure that central counties represent the demographic and economic hub of the MSA.[1] Outlying counties may be added to an MSA if they demonstrate sufficient integration with the central core, primarily through commuting patterns where at least 25 percent of the employed residents in the outlying county work in the central counties, or conversely, at least 25 percent of the employment in the outlying county is held by residents of the central counties.[2] Commuting flows are measured using five-year estimates from the American Community Survey (ACS), specifically the 2016–2020 period for the 2023 MSA delineations.[1] Outlying counties must also be contiguous to the central core and cannot be assigned to multiple MSAs; assignment is based on the strongest commuting linkage.[2] Exceptions and adjustments accommodate complex geographic configurations. For multi-county urban areas, the Census Bureau groups counties into a single core cluster by allocating the largest share of the urban area's population to the dominant county, preventing fragmented delineations.[2] In cases where a county qualifies as both central and outlying—such as when part of its territory falls within the urban area and part outside—it is designated as central to maintain the integrity of the core.[2] Split counties, often due to water bodies or other boundaries, are evaluated holistically but must meet contiguity rules for inclusion.[2] These provisions, rooted in the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) 2020 Standards, allow for flexible yet consistent application across diverse regional landscapes.[2]Integration Measures
Integration measures for metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) evaluate the degree of economic and social connectivity between a central core and surrounding outlying counties, serving as the primary criterion for including those counties in an MSA after initial qualification based on population thresholds.[2] The core metric is commuting flows, which capture daily workforce movement as an indicator of labor market integration. Specifically, an outlying county is considered integrated if at least 25% of its employed residents commute to the central counties of the MSA for work, or if at least 25% of the jobs in the outlying county are filled by residents of the central counties.[2] These percentages are calculated using journey-to-work data from the American Community Survey (ACS), typically the most recent five-year estimates available at the time of delineation.[2] For combined statistical areas (CSAs), which aggregate adjacent core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) exhibiting broader regional ties, integration is assessed through an employment interchange measure. This metric quantifies shared employment between two adjacent CBSAs by calculating the sum of workers commuting from one CBSA to the other and vice versa, then dividing by the total employment in the sending CBSA (with the process repeated reciprocally and averaged).[2] Adjacent CBSAs qualify for combination into a CSA if this interchange measure reaches or exceeds 15%, reflecting substantial cross-boundary economic interdependence.[2] The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) oversees the delineation process, utilizing county equivalence files provided by the U.S. Census Bureau to map counties to CBSAs based on the standards.[18] For boundary disputes or proposed adjustments, OMB incorporates public input through comment periods during standards reviews and, in some cases, regional public hearings to resolve ambiguities in integration evidence.[2] In 2023, OMB updated CBSA delineations by incorporating commuting data from the 2020 Census and updated ACS estimates, leading to the identification of 393 metropolitan statistical areas along with numerous county reassignments to reflect evolving integration patterns.[1]Implementation in the United States
Current List and Demographics
As of the 2023 delineations issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), there are 387 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the United States, encompassing approximately 87% of the total U.S. population. These areas are based on the 2020 Decennial Census as the baseline, with annual population estimates updated through vintage 2024 by the U.S. Census Bureau to reflect current demographic shifts. The delineations exclude Puerto Rico's six MSAs, focusing solely on the 50 states and the District of Columbia.[19] The largest MSAs by 2024 population estimates highlight the concentration of population in major urban centers. The New York–Newark–Jersey City, NY–NJ–PA MSA leads with 19,940,274 residents, followed by the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA at 12,927,614, the Chicago–Naperville–Elgin, IL–IN–WI MSA at 9,408,576, the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX MSA at 8,344,032, and the Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land, TX MSA at 7,796,182. From 2020 to 2024, these top MSAs exhibited varied growth rates; for instance, the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington MSA increased by about 8.8%, driven by migration and economic expansion, while the New York MSA declined by roughly 0.3%. Regionally, MSAs are distributed unevenly, with the South and West divisions hosting the majority. California contains 38 MSAs, the highest number, while Texas has 37, reflecting their large land areas and urban development patterns. Other states like Illinois (16) and Pennsylvania (15) also have significant shares, whereas smaller or more rural states such as Vermont and Wyoming have none. Between 2020 and 2024, the aggregate population in U.S. MSAs grew by approximately 3.0%, reaching 293.9 million residents and outpacing nonmetropolitan growth rates of around 1.2%. This trend underscores ongoing urban-rural shifts, with 88% of MSAs recording net population gains in the most recent year, fueled by domestic migration to Sun Belt regions and recovery from pandemic-related outflows.[19]Federal Usage and Impacts
Metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) serve as the foundational geographic framework for numerous U.S. federal data collection efforts, enabling consistent tabulation and publication of statistics across agencies. The U.S. Census Bureau relies on MSAs to report on key socioeconomic indicators, including employment, housing, and income, using data from sources like the American Community Survey and decennial census to delineate areas with at least one urban core of 50,000 or more residents plus integrated surrounding counties based on commuting patterns.[3] Similarly, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) uses MSAs to produce local employment and unemployment estimates through programs like the Current Employment Statistics survey, covering over 380 MSAs and providing monthly data on nonfarm payrolls that inform national economic trends.[20] In federal policy applications, MSAs guide the allocation of funds for disaster preparedness and response. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) incorporates MSA delineations to determine eligibility for grants such as the Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI), which targets the 100 most populous MSAs for homeland security funding, and the Nonprofit Security Grant Program (NSGP), where eligibility is tied directly to MSA locations to address urban vulnerabilities.[21] For community development, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) designates entitlement communities for Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) based on MSA boundaries, awarding formula-based funds to principal cities with populations over 50,000 and urban counties to support housing rehabilitation, economic development, and infrastructure in low- and moderate-income areas.[22] MSAs underpin critical economic indicators that shape policy and analysis. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) calculates gross domestic product (GDP) by MSA, revealing regional economic performance; for instance, in 2023, real GDP growth varied widely across MSAs, with increases in most areas driven by sectors like finance and professional services.[23] The Census Bureau publishes poverty rates by MSA, highlighting disparities; in 2022, rates ranged from 7.2% to 19.1% across states and metros, informing targeted interventions for urban poverty. Revisions to MSA definitions, such as those issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in 2023, have tangible impacts on resource distribution. These updates added 30 counties to MSAs while removing 22, potentially shifting UASI funding eligibility and requiring FEMA to reassess risk-based allocations for programs like the Port Security Grant Program, though no changes occurred for tribal grants.[21] For BLS, the revisions delayed some seasonally adjusted employment series and altered sample compositions, affecting the comparability of local unemployment data used in federal economic reporting.[24] Criticisms of MSA delineations center on their reliance on county boundaries, which often encompass rural or exurban lands that do not reflect actual urban sprawl or commuting realities. This county-centric approach can overestimate metropolitan extents by including sparsely populated areas, complicating analyses of urban form and density; studies highlight heterogeneity in MSA structures, where even similar-sized areas vary in compactness due to rigid county lines that ignore finer-scale urban expansion.[25][26]Metropolitan Areas in Puerto Rico
Delineations and Counts
In Puerto Rico, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) delineates six Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) as part of the 2023 revisions, all defined using the island's 78 municipios as the geographic building blocks equivalent to counties in the mainland United States.[1] These MSAs are integrated into the national total of U.S. CBSAs but are delineated separately to account for Puerto Rico's territorial status and unique administrative structure, ensuring they align with federal statistical standards while reflecting local economic integration patterns.[2] The MSAs follow the standard U.S. criteria for core-based statistical areas, adapted to use municipios and American Community Survey (ACS) five-year commuting data to measure employment interchange, with thresholds of at least 25% of the employed population commuting to or from the central core.[2] Due to the island's compact geography, contiguity among municipios is assessed within Puerto Rico's boundaries, without cross-territory extensions.[1] The following table lists the six MSAs, including their OMB codes, titles, principal cities, and key central and outlying municipios (full components available in the official bulletin). All are components of broader Combined Statistical Areas (CSAs): the San Juan-Bayamón CSA (code 490), Mayagüez-Aguadilla CSA (code 364), or Ponce-Coamo CSA (code 434).[1]| OMB Code | MSA Title | Principal City | Central Municipios | Key Outlying Municipios |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10380 | Aguadilla, PR MSA | Aguadilla | Aguadilla, Isabela | Añasco, Moca, Rincón, San Sebastián |
| 11640 | Arecibo, PR MSA | Arecibo | Arecibo | Camuy, Hatillo, Quebradillas |
| 25020 | Guayama, PR MSA | Guayama | Guayama | Arroyo, Patillas |
| 32420 | Mayagüez, PR MSA | Mayagüez | Mayagüez | Cabo Rojo, Hormigueros, Lajas, Sabana Grande, San Germán |
| 38660 | Ponce, PR MSA | Ponce | Ponce | Guayanilla, Juana Díaz, Peñuelas, Villalba, Yauco |
| 41980 | San Juan-Bayamón-Caguas, PR MSA | San Juan, Bayamón, Caguas | San Juan, Bayamón, Caguas | Aguas Buenas, Aibonito, Barceloneta, Barranquitas, Canóvanas, Carolina, Cataño, Cayey, Ceiba, Ciales, Cidra, Comerío, Corozal, Dorado, Fajardo, Florida, Guaynabo, Gurabo, Humacao, Juncos, Las Piedras, Loíza, Luquillo, Manatí, Maunabo, Morovis, Naguabo, Naranjito, Orocovis, Río Grande, San Lorenzo, Toa Alta, Toa Baja, Trujillo Alto, Vega Alta, Vega Baja, Yabucoa |