List of metropolitan areas in Europe explained

This list ranks metropolitan areas in Europe by their population according to three different sources; it includes metropolitan areas that have a population of over 1 million.

Sources

List includes metropolitan areas according only to the studies of ESPON, Eurostat, and OECD. For this reason some metropolitan areas, like the Italian Genoa Metropolitan Area (with a population of 1,510,781 as of 2010[1]) or the Ukrainian Kryvyi Rih metropolitan area (with a population of 1,170,953 as of 2019[2]), are not included in this list, with data by other statistic survey institutes.

Figures in the first three columns correspond to Functional urban areas (FUA). The concept of a functional urban area defines a metropolitan area as a core urban area defined morphologically on the basis of population density, plus the surrounding labour pool defined on the basis of commuting.Figures in the first two columns use a harmonised definition of a Functional urban area developed jointly in 2011, with delimitation basing on the DEGURBA method.[3] [4]

Further information on how the areas are defined can be found in the source documents. These figures should be seen as an interpretation, not as conclusive fact.

Metropolitan areas

Metropolitan area nameCountryOECD
(2020)[5]
Eurostat[6] ESPON
(2006)[7]
Amsterdam metropolitan area (2022)
Antwerp (2021)
Athens metropolitan area (2011)
Barcelona metropolitan area (2022)
Belgrade
Berlin metropolitan area (2021)
Bilbao metropolitan area (2022)
Bordeaux (2020)
Greater Bristol (2018)
Brussels metropolitan area (2022)
Bucharest metropolitan area (2018)
Budapest metropolitan area (2022)
Cardiff (2018)
Copenhagen metropolitan area (2013)
Dnipro
Donetsk
Dublin Metropolitan Area (2011)
Frankfurt Rhine-Main (2021)
Gdańsk (Tricity) (2021)
Greater Glasgow (2018)
Gothenburg (2018)
The Hague (2021)
Hamburg Metropolitan Region (2021)
Hannover (2021)
Helsinki Metropolitan Area (2022)
Istanbul (2004)
Katowice metropolitan area (2021)
Kazan metropolitan area
Kharkiv
Kraków metropolitan area (2021)
Kyiv metropolitan area
Lille (2020)
Lisbon metropolitan area (2023)
Łódź metropolitan area (2021)
London metropolitan area (2018)
Lyon (2020)
Madrid metropolitan area (2022)
Málaga-Marbella (2022)
Greater Manchester (2018)
Mannheim-Ludwigshafen (2021)
Marseille (2020)
Merseyside (Liverpool/Birkenhead) (2018)
Milan metropolitan area (2022)
Minsk metropolitan area
Moscow metropolitan area
Munich (2021)
Nantes (2020)
Naples metropolitan area (2022)
Nice (2020)
Nizhny Novgorod
Nottingham-Derby (2018)
Northwest Metropolitan Region (Bremen) (2021)
Nuremberg Metropolitan Region (2021)
Odesa
Greater Oslo Region (2013)
Ostrava metropolitan area (2022)
Paris metropolitan area (2020)
Porto Metropolitan Area (2023)
Portsmouth-Southampton (2018)
Poznań metropolitan area (2021)
Prague metropolitan area (2022)
Rhein-Nord (Düsseldorf - Neuss) (2021)
Rhein-Süd (Cologne - Bonn) (2021)
Riga metropolitan area (2022)
Rome metropolitan area (2022)
Rostov-on-Don
Rotterdam (2022)
Ruhr (2021)
Saarbrücken - Forbach/
(2021)
Saint Petersburg metropolitan area
Samara
Saratov
Seville (2021)
Sofia (2022)
South Yorkshire (Sheffield-Doncaster) (2018)
Metropolitan Stockholm (2018)
Stuttgart Metropolitan Region (2021)
Tbilisi
Thessaloniki metropolitan area (2011)
Toulouse (2020)
Turin metropolitan area (2022)
Tyne and Wear (Newcastle-Sunderland) (2018)
Ufa
Valencia (2022)
Vienna
Volgograd
Voronezh
Warsaw metropolitan area (2021)
West Midlands conurbation (Birmingham) (2018)
West Yorkshire Built-up Area (Leeds - Bradford) (2018)
Yerevan
Zagreb metropolitan area (2022)
Zürich metropolitan area (2022)

Polycentric metropolitan areas in the European Union

RankAreaStatePopulation[8]
1Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region12,190,000
2Randstad6,787,000
3Katowice-Ostrava metropolitan area/ 5,294,000
4Flemish Diamond5,103,000
5Vienna-Bratislava metropolitan region/ 4,600,000

See also

Regional and country-specific lists

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Urbanismi, Cluster urbani e aree metropolitane – volume primo, Italia . 23 February 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141006092229/http://www.cityrailways.it/storage/pdf/01_urbanismi%20ITALIA_2011.pdf . 6 October 2014 . dead . it.
  2. Web site: Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2019.
  3. Lewis Dijkstra, Hugo Poelman . 2012-03-01 . Cities in Europe - The new OECD-EC definition . 2 . 2024-06-08 . Until recently, there was no harmonised definition of ‘a city’ for European and other countries member of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). This undermined the comparability, and thus also the credibility, of cross-country analysis of cities. To resolve this problem, the OECD and the European Commission developed a new definition of a city and its commuting zone in 2011. […] Each city is part of its own commuting zone or a polycentric commuting zone covering multiple cities. These commuting zones are significant, especially for larger cities. The cities and commuting zones together (called Larger Urban Zones) account for 60 % of the EU population..
  4. Web site: Territorial typologies manual - cities, commuting zones and functional urban areas . . "Within the Urban Audit, (...) functional urban areas were previously referred to as ‘larger urban zones’.".
  5. Web site: OECD: FUAs and Cities. OECD. 10 October 2024.
  6. Web site: Database. 16 Jun 2024. ec.europa.eu. Eurostat. Population on 1 January by age groups and sex - functional urban areas (urb_lpop1)
  7. Web site: Study on Urban Functions (Project 1.4.3)]. March 2007. European Spatial Planning Observation Network. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924002318/http://www.espon.eu/export/sites/default/Documents/Projects/ESPON2006Projects/StudiesScientificSupportProjects/UrbanFunctions/fr-1.4.3_April2007-final.pdf. 24 September 2015., Final Report, Chapter 3
  8. [European Spatial Planning Observation Network]