2025

Cities in United States ranked by Multi-Racial White Population

This list ranks the 55616 cities in U.S. based on their Multi-Racial White population, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau. It also highlights population changes in these cities over the past five years.
Updated Feb 13, 2025

Top 5 cities with the largest Multi-Racial White population in U.S.

  • 1
    New York
    Multi-Racial White population in New York is 655,381
    6.90% of New York population is Multi-Racial White
  • 2
    Los Angeles
    Multi-Racial White population in Los Angeles is 561,953
    12.47% of Los Angeles population is Multi-Racial White
  • 3
    San Antonio
    Multi-Racial White population in San Antonio is 419,687
    21.98% of San Antonio population is Multi-Racial White
  • 4
    Houston
    Multi-Racial White population in Houston is 415,761
    15.07% of Houston population is Multi-Racial White
  • 5
    Phoenix
    Multi-Racial White population in Phoenix is 322,765
    16.30% of Phoenix population is Multi-Racial White

List of 55616 cities in United States by Multi-Racial White Population

Rank by Multi-Racial White Population
City
Multi-Racial White Population
% of Total City Population
% of Total U.S. Multi-Racial White Population
5 Year Rank Trend
1 New York 655,381 6.90% 2.60%
2 Los Angeles 561,953 12.47% 2.23%
3 San Antonio 419,687 21.98% 1.66%
4 Houston 415,761 15.07% 1.65%
5 Phoenix 322,765 16.30% 1.28%
6 Chicago 301,074 9.87% 1.19%
7 El Paso 255,523 26.97% 1.01%
8 213,635 13.94% 0.85%
9 203,147 7.77% 0.81%
10 199,578 12.35% 0.79%
11 184,075 28.74% 0.73%
12 165,161 5.69% 0.66%
13 147,386 13.34% 0.58%
14 141,573 12.55% 0.56%
15 136,447 7.50% 0.54%
16 136,017 34.61% 0.54%
17 131,683 11.51% 0.52%
18 122,951 35.40% 0.49%
19 117,826 16.97% 0.47%
20 113,393 16.83% 0.45%
21 110,434 6.79% 0.44%
22 104,004 12.51% 0.41%
23 102,654 24.30% 0.41%
24 98,206 15.02% 0.39%
25 97,240 12.71% 0.39%
26 93,661 5.46% 0.37%
27 92,031 11.55% 0.37%
28 82,960 7.81% 0.33%
29 82,474 30.34% 0.33%
30 80,506 8.62% 0.32%
31 80,312 16.12% 0.32%
32 76,465 21.23% 0.30%
33 71,771 8.67% 0.28%
34 70,323 12.03% 0.28%
35 69,411 25.21% 0.28%
36 69,400 7.15% 0.28%
37 67,434 6.82% 0.27%
38 67,339 9.32% 0.27%
39 67,073 16.09% 0.27%
40 65,592 10.18% 0.26%
41 65,276 10.62% 0.26%
42 64,860 20.59% 0.26%
43 64,110 13.77% 0.25%
44 63,990 8.35% 0.25%
45 63,565 7.27% 0.25%
46 61,184 13.19% 0.24%
47 59,969 15.81% 0.24%
48 58,243 10.56% 0.23%
49 57,144 14.35% 0.23%
50 56,315 12.34% 0.22%
51 55,271 17.78% 0.22%
52 55,066 11.51% 0.22%
53 55,011 10.46% 0.22%
54 50,891 13.85% 0.20%
55 49,708 25.53% 0.20%
56 49,115 32.23% 0.19%
57 47,402 6.44% 0.19%
58 46,920 14.28% 0.19%
59 46,224 16.99% 0.18%
60 45,946 10.21% 0.18%
61 44,151 22.67% 0.18%
62 44,127 8.19% 0.18%
63 43,693 11.86% 0.17%
64 42,819 8.64% 0.17%
65 42,180 32.73% 0.17%
66 41,156 26.85% 0.16%
67 41,128 18.39% 0.16%
68 40,797 14.82% 0.16%
69 40,674 13.37% 0.16%
70 40,440 7.55% 0.16%
71 40,259 7.26% 0.16%
72 40,192 7.43% 0.16%
73 39,750 10.30% 0.16%
74 38,175 17.65% 0.15%
75 37,981 17.63% 0.15%
76 37,686 7.47% 0.15%
77 36,810 16.71% 0.15%
78 36,524 9.90% 0.14%
79 35,859 17.03% 0.14%
80 35,598 30.75% 0.14%
81 35,506 11.14% 0.14%
82 34,817 9.90% 0.14%
83 34,377 17.89% 0.14%
84 33,941 7.24% 0.13%
85 33,777 10.96% 0.13%
86 33,720 13.88% 0.13%
87 33,342 10.06% 0.13%
88 33,104 6.47% 0.13%
89 33,091 17.02% 0.13%
90 32,895 17.73% 0.13%
91 32,714 9.86% 0.13%
92 32,549 13.90% 0.13%
93 32,490 26.08% 0.13%
94 31,902 10.37% 0.13%
95 31,783 12.79% 0.13%
96 30,904 8.94% 0.12%
97 30,671 10.56% 0.12%
98 30,174 29.74% 0.12%
99 29,557 9.22% 0.12%
100 29,525 15.48% 0.12%

Methodology

This ranking list is based on data from the American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates, conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. The ACS is one of the most reliable sources for understanding population trends across different locations, and it provides estimates for various racial and ethnic groups at city, county, state and all geography levels down to the Census block group.
This list ranks cities in United States by their Multi-Racial White population, using the most recent ACS data available.

How the Census Defines Multi-Racial White Population

The U.S. Census Bureau allows people to self-identify their race, meaning individuals can choose one or more racial categories when responding to the survey. In this ranking, we include everyone who identifies as Multi-Racial White, whether alone or in combination with another race.
Here are a few important things to know about how race is reported:
  • Some people identify as Multi-Racial White alone, while others identify as Multi-Racial White along with another race (such as Multi-Racial White and White).
  • Hispanic / Latino origin is reported separately from race, so someone can be both Hispanic and Multi-Racial White .
  • We’ve used the “Multi-Racial White alone or in combination” category unless noted otherwise, which gives a broader picture of the Multi-Racial White population in each area.

How We Ranked the Data

This ranking is based on the total number of people who identified as Multi-Racial White alone or in combination in cities. To provide additional context, we’ve also included two key percentages:
  1. % of Total City Population – This shows what percentage of the total state population identifies as Multi-Racial White .
  2. % of Total U.S. Multi-Racial White Population – This tells us how much of the entire U.S. Multi-Racial White population lives in that state.
To keep things simple, all population numbers have been rounded to the nearest whole number, and percentages are rounded to one decimal place. Because of rounding, some percentages may not add up to exactly 100%.

Things to Keep in Mind

Like all survey-based data, ACS estimates come with some limitations. Here are a few things to be aware of:
  • In places with very small Multi-Racial White populations, the numbers may not be reported at all due to privacy protections or sampling variability in the survey.
  • Since the ACS is based on a sample, the numbers are estimates, not exact counts. That means they may slightly differ from other sources like the decennial U.S. Census.
  • Cities that don’t have any reported Multi-Racial White population are not included in the ranking but are listed separately below for reference.
This ranking is meant to provide a clear, data-driven look at where Multi-Racial White populations are most concentrated while keeping the numbers easy to understand.

Sources

U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2019-2023 5-Year Estimates.