List of urban areas in Sweden by population

This is a list of urban areas in Sweden by population.

The population is measured by Statistics Sweden. The statistics bureau uses the term tätort (locality or urban area), which is defined as a continuous built-up area with a maximum distance of 200 m between residences. The localities are geographical and statistical units, totally independent of the administrative and political subdivision in counties and municipalities.

The urban areas in Sweden with more than 20,000 inhabitants as of 2010, according to Statistics Sweden who releases these statistics only every five years,[1] are:

  1. Stockholm, 1,372,565
  2. Gothenburg, 560,839
  3. Malmö, 280,415
  4. Uppsala, 140,454
  5. Västerås, 110,877
  6. Örebro, 107,038
  7. Linköping, 104,232
  8. Helsingborg, 97,122
  9. Jönköping, 89,396
  10. Norrköping, 87,247
  11. Lund, 82,800
  12. Umeå, 79,594
  13. Gävle, 71,033
  14. Borås, 66,273
  15. Eskilstuna, 64,679
  16. Södertälje, 64,619
  17. Karlstad, 61,685
  18. Täby, 61,272
  19. Växjö, 60,887
  20. Halmstad, 58,577
  21. Sundsvall, 50,712
  22. Luleå, 46,607
  23. Trollhättan, 46,457
  24. Östersund, 44,327
  25. Borlänge, 41,734
  26. Tumba, 37,852
  27. Upplands Väsby, 37,594
  28. Falun, 37,291
  29. Kalmar, 36,392
  30. Kristianstad, 35,711
  31. Karlskrona, 35,212
  32. Skövde, 34,466
  33. Skellefteå, 32,775
  34. Lidingö, 31,561
  35. Uddevalla, 31,212
  36. Landskrona, 30,499
  37. Nyköping, 29,891
  38. Motala, 29,823
  39. Vallentuna, 29,519
  40. Örnsköldsvik, 28,991
  41. Trelleborg, 28,290
  42. Åkersberga, 28,033
  43. Varberg, 27,602
  44. Karlskoga, 27,084
  45. Lidköping, 25,644
  46. Alingsås, 24,482
  47. Märsta, 24,068
  48. Boo, 24,052
  49. Ängelholm, 23,240
  50. Sandviken, 22,965
  51. Piteå, 22,913
  52. Kungälv, 22,768
  53. Visby, 22,593
  54. Katrineholm, 21,993
  55. Vänersborg, 21,699
  56. Västervik, 21,140
  57. Enköping, 21,121
  58. Falkenberg, 20,035

See also

References

  1. Statistics Sweden (2010). "Localities 2010" (PDF).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.