Census bureau
populations are predominantly lower and not accounted for by date
difference, mostly due to discrepancies over immigrants, which the
California government claims causes financial burden.
These estimates are for the actual
incorporated areas of the listed cities, as opposed to
, and will therefore
differ from other available population listings. Also, the
California State Department of Finance uses different methods for
estimating population than the
| Rank |
City |
Population (CDF 1-09) |
Population (USC 7-07) |
County |
Image |
Description |
| 1 |
Los
Angeles |
4,065,585 |
3,834,340 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Los Angeles is one of the world's
centers of culture, media, academics,
business, and international
trade. It is home to renowned institutions covering a broad
range of professional and cultural fields, and it is one of the
most substantial economic engines of the United States. Los Angeles
also leads the world in producing popular entertainment — such as
motion picture, television, video games
and recorded music — which forms the
base of its international fame and global status. |
| 2 |
San
Diego |
1,353,998 |
1,266,731 |
San Diego |
 |
Located on the border between Mexico and the
United
States , San Diego hosts miles of beaches and a number of
U.S. Military facilities. San Diego's economy is
largely composed of agriculture, biotechnology/biosciences,
computer sciences, electronics manufacturing, defense-related
manufacturing, financial and business services, ship-repair and
construction, software development, telecommunications, and
tourism. |
| 3 |
San
Jose |
1,007,223 |
939,899 |
Santa Clara |
 |
San
Jose is the tenth largest city in the United States, the largest
city in Northern California and the largest in the San Francisco
Bay Area . It was founded on November 29, 1777 as the
first town in the Spanish colony of
Nueva
California , which later
became Alta
California .
The city
served as a farming community to support Spanish military
installations at San
Francisco and Monterey . When California gained statehood in 1850,
San Jose served as its first capital. After more than 150 years as
an agricultural center, San Jose experienced increased demand for
housing from soldiers and other veterans returning from World War II, as well as aggressive expansion
during the 1950s and 1960s by annexing more land area. By the
1990s, San Jose's location within the booming local technology
industry earned the city the nickname Capital of Silicon
Valley. |
| 4 |
San Francisco |
845,559 |
764,976 |
San Francisco |
 |
San
Francisco is a popular international tourist destination renowned
for its steep rolling hills, eclectic mix of Victorian and modern architecture, and famous
landmarks, including the Golden Gate Bridge , Alcatraz
Island , the cable cars , Coit
Tower , and Chinatown . The city is also known for its diverse,
cosmopolitan population, including large and long-established
Asian American and LGBT communities. It is the second most densely populated city
in the United States, behind only New York
City and from the time of the Gold Rush until the 1920s
it was the largest city in California in terms of
population. It was also one of the first cities in
California to be incorporated. |
| 5 |
Fresno |
495,913 |
470,508 |
Fresno |
 |
Fresno is at the heart of the San Joaquin
Valley , a leading agricultural area of the United
States. Fresno is the closest major city to Yosemite
National Park . |
| 6 |
Long Beach |
492,682 |
466,520 |
Los Angeles |
 |
The
Port of Long
Beach is one of the world's largest shipping
ports. The city also has a large oil industry; oil is found
both underground and offshore. Manufacturers include aircraft,
automobile parts, electronic and audiovisual equipment, and home
furnishings. It is also home to the headquarters for corporations
such as Epson America, Molina Healthcare, and Scan Health Care.
Long Beach has grown with the development of high-technology and
aerospace industries in the area. |
| 7 |
Sacramento |
491,097 |
460,242 |
Sacramento |
 |
One
of the first cities to be incorporated in California in 1850,
Sacramento is the capital of the
U.S. state of California and the county seat of
Sacramento
County . The city is located along the Sacramento
River and just south of the American River's confluence in
California's expansive Central Valley . Sacramento is the core cultural and economic
center of its four-county metropolitan area (El
Dorado , Placer , Sacramento , and Yolo
counties) with a combined population of 3,103,956.
The
Sacramento Metropolitan
Area is the largest in the Central Valley, and is the
fourth-largest in California, behind the Greater Los Angeles Area, the
San Francisco
Bay Area , and the San Diego area. Greater Sacramento has been cited as
one of the five "most livable" regions in America,and the city was
cited by Time magazine as America's most integrated. From the Gold
Rush until the end of the 19th century, Sacramento was the second
largest city in the state, behind only San Francisco, and it was an
important agricultural, commercial and transportation center. It is
today the center of an important technology industry. |
| 8 |
Oakland |
425,068 |
401,489 |
Alameda |
 |
Oakland is a major West Coast port, and is home
to several major corporations including Kaiser Permanente and Clorox, as well as corporate headquarters for
nationwide businesses like Dreyer's and
Cost Plus World Markets.
Attractions include Jack London
Square , the Oakland Museum of California , the Chabot Space and Science
Center , Lake
Merritt , the East Bay Regional Park
District ridge line parks and preserves, and Chinatown . |
| 9 |
Santa Ana |
355,662 |
339,555 |
Orange |
 |
County Seat of Orange County. Home to the famous Bowers museum,
Discovery Science Center, and John Wayne Airport. |
| 10 |
Anaheim |
348,467 |
333,249 |
Orange |
 |
Located in Orange County, California, Anaheim is the second
most populous city in the county (after Santa Ana) and second
largest in terms of land area; it is known for its theme parks,
sports teams, and convention center. |
| 11 |
Bakersfield |
333,719 |
315,837 |
Kern |
 |
Bakersfield sits at the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley,
an especially petroleum-rich area of
California. |
| 12 |
Riverside |
300,430 |
294,437 |
Riverside |
 |
Riverside is the most populous city of Southern California's
Inland Empire region. Riverside is the
birthplace of California's citrus industry and home to the University
of California, Riverside (UCR). Its downtown is home to the Mission Inn , one of the two historic landmark hotels in
California. The Mission Inn Festival of Lights is said to be
the 3rd largest Christmas lights display in the nation . |
| 13 |
Stockton |
290,409 |
287,245 |
San Joaquin |
|
Stockton is at the heart of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River
Delta , and is sometimes considered the divider between
the Sacramento Valley and the
San Joaquin
Valley . For much of the later 19th century,
starting with the Gold Rush, Stockton was one of the largest cities
in the state, for a while the third largest city. With a sea port
on the San Joaquin River, it was an important agricultural and
shipping center, roles which it continues to fulfill. |
| 14 |
Chula Vista |
233,108 |
217,478 |
San Diego |
 |
|
| 15 |
Fremont |
215,636 |
201,334 |
Alameda |
 |
Fremont was created as a single city in 1956, from the
unification of several unincorporated communities that had
historically been small but grew rapidly in the years after
World War II. |
| 16 |
Irvine |
212,793 |
201,160 |
Orange |
 |
Irvine is a planned city in Orange
County, California , mainly developed by the Irvine Company since the 1960s.
Irvine is
home to the University of California,
Irvine (UCI) and to a number of corporations, particularly
in the technology sector. It is regarded for its good schools, jobs
and housing by CNNMoney.com, for low crime by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation , and the Census Bureau ranks Irvine highly in
median income. |
| 17 |
Modesto |
210,088 |
203,955 |
Stanislaus |
 |
Modesto is in the center of the San Joaquin
Valley east of San Francisco and south of the capital Sacramento . The city is surrounded by fertile farmland. Its population is growing fast due to
affordable housing in the area and is quickly becoming a bedroom
community for commuters to Sacramento, Fresno, and the San Francisco
Bay Area . |
| 18 |
Glendale |
207,303 |
196,979 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Glendale is the focal point of the Verdugo
Mountains subregion, and is well-known for hosting a large
Armenian-American
community. |
| 19 |
San Bernardino |
204,483 |
199,285 |
San Bernardino |
 |
San
Bernardino is the second largest city in the Inland
Empire area of California, and the county seat of San
Bernardino County , the largest county in geographic area in the 48
contiguous states. |
| 20 |
Huntington Beach |
202,480 |
192,885 |
Orange |
 |
|
| 21 |
Oxnard |
197,067 |
184,725 |
Ventura |
|
One of only a handful of cities in the state that is the
largest in its county, but not the county
seat. |
| 22 |
Fontana |
189,021 |
183,502 |
San Bernardino |
|
|
| 23 |
Moreno Valley |
186,301 |
188,936 |
Riverside |
|
|
| 24 |
Oceanside |
179,681 |
168,602 |
San Diego |
 |
|
| 25 |
Rancho Cucamonga |
177,736 |
170,266 |
San Bernardino |
 |
One of the newer cities in the state, Rancho Cucamonga was
until the late 1970s a small, unincorporated rural area that
incorporated as a city only in 1977. |
| 26 |
Santa Clarita |
177,150 |
169,951 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Home
to Six Flags
Magic Mountain . Incorporated in 1987 as the union of several
previously existing communities, including Canyon
Country , Newhall,
Saugus, and Valencia. |
| 27 |
Garden Grove |
174,715 |
165,610 |
Orange |
|
|
| 28 |
Ontario |
173,188 |
170,936 |
San Bernardino |
 |
Ontario is the third principal city of the
Inland Empire area of California and home to the area's international airport and the region's largest shopping mall, Ontario Mills . |
| 29 |
Pomona |
163,408 |
152,631 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Home of the Los Angeles
County Fair, the largest fair in the United States. |
| 30 |
Santa Rosa |
161,496 |
154,241 |
Sonoma |
 |
The center of one of the northernmost Mexican land grants,
created as a town in the early 1850s, and officially incorporated
as a city in 1868, Santa Rosa is the largest city in California's
Wine Country and the
Redwood Empire. The county seat of
Sonoma
County since 1854, it also grew as a center of
agriculture, shipping, and industry. It is today still an
important local center of business, technology industry, and other
light industry, as well as tourism. It has the dubious fame of
suffering the most destruction during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake,
which destroyed the entire downtown. Notable residents have
included famed horticulturalist Luther
Burbank, and Peanuts cartoonist Charles M. Schulz. Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, and the
surrounding Wine Country have served as the setting for many
well-known films, including Alfred
Hitchcock's personal favorite, Shadow of a Doubt. |
| 31 |
Salinas |
152,597 |
143,517 |
Monterey |
 |
Salinas is known for being an agricultural center as well as
being the hometown of famed writer and Nobel
prize laureate John
Steinbeck. |
| 32 |
Palmdale |
151,346 |
140,882 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Largest city of the California deserts, commonly referred to as
the Aerospace Capital of America. The city is the birthplace of the
Space Shuttle, X-15, B-2 Spirit, F-117 Nighthawk, F-35 Lightning II, SR-71 Blackbird, Lockheed L-1011 Tristar, and many other
aircraft that have been used in the United States Air Force, NASA and air
forces and airlines around the world. It is the sixth
largest city in Los Angeles County and one of the fastest growing
cities in the United States. |
| 33 |
Hayward |
150,878 |
140,943 |
Alameda |
 |
|
| 34 |
Pasadena |
150,185 |
143,400 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Premier City of the San Gabriel Valley subregion; home of the
Rose
Bowl and Rose Parade,
NASA 's Jet Propulsion Laboratory , and the California
Institute of Technology . |
| 35 |
Torrance |
149,111 |
141,420 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Torrance, 21 square miles, is situated 11
miles south of Los Angeles International
Airport (LAX), 8 miles north of the Port of Los
Angeles , 30 miles west of Disneyland and bounded by the Pacific Ocean on the west with 1.5 miles of beach.
Incorporated in 1921, its the eighth largest city in Los Angeles County and the 35th largest
city in California. Torrance averages 12.55 inches of rainfall per
year. |
| 36 |
Corona |
148,597 |
150,308 |
Riverside |
|
|
| 37 |
Lancaster |
145,074 |
143,616 |
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 38 |
Escondido |
144,831 |
136,246 |
San Diego |
 |
|
| 39 |
Orange |
141,634 |
134,299 |
Orange |
 |
|
| 40 |
Elk Grove |
141,430 |
131,212 |
Sacramento |
 |
Elk Grove was a sleepy suburb of Sacramento until the housing
boom of the 1990's and 2000's. Between the decades, the population
has nearly tripled from around 50,000 to almost 150,000
inhabitants. The population has grown so much that Elk Grove has
surpassed all of the other suburbs in size and inhabitants. About
15 miles from Downtown Sacramento, Elk Grove has emerged as a
popular place for young families to live and commute to the job
centers of the area. |
| 41 |
Sunnyvale |
138,826 |
131,140 |
Santa Clara |
 |
|
| 42 |
Fullerton |
137,624 |
132,066 |
Orange |
 |
|
| 43 |
Thousand Oaks |
128,564 |
123,349 |
Ventura |
|
|
| 44 |
El Monte |
126,308 |
122,272 |
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 45 |
Simi Valley |
125,814 |
120,464 |
Ventura |
 |
Home
of the Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library . |
| 46 |
Concord |
124,599 |
120,844 |
Contra Costa |
.JPG/200px-Don_Francisco_Galindo_House_(Concord,_CA).JPG) |
|
| 47 |
Visalia |
123,670 |
118,603 |
Tulare |
 |
Visalia is the oldest city between Stockton and Los Angeles. it
is also one of the fastest growing cities in California at an
alarming rate. Visalia has a small town feel, with big city
amenities. |
| 48 |
Vallejo |
121,055 |
115,552 |
Solano |
 |
Vallejo was from the 1850s until closure in the 1990s, home of
the Mare Island U.S. Naval Shipyard, one of the most important
naval shipyards in the country. It was also very briefly the
capital of California in the early 1850s. It is the largest city in
Solano County. |
| 49 |
Inglewood |
118,868 |
113,376 |
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 50 |
Santa Clara |
117,242 |
109,576 |
Santa Clara |
 |
|
| 51 |
Costa Mesa |
116,479 |
108,978 |
Orange |
 |
|
| 52 |
Downey |
113,469 |
108,109 |
Los Angeles |
 |
|
| 53 |
West Covina |
112,648 |
106,388 |
Los Angeles |
 |
|
| 54 |
Roseville |
112,343 |
108,579 |
Placer |
 |
|
| 55 |
Norwalk |
109,567 |
103,720 |
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 56 |
Victorville |
109,441 |
107,221 |
San Bernardino |
|
|
| 57 |
San
Buenaventura  |
108,787 |
103,219 |
Ventura |
 |
|
| 58 |
Burbank |
108,082 |
107,921 |
Los Angeles |
 |
Media Capital of the World |
| 59 |
Berkeley |
107,178 |
101,377 |
Alameda |
 |
|
| 60 |
Daly City |
107,099 |
100,882 |
San Mateo |
 |
|
| 61 |
Fairfield |
106,440 |
103,992 |
Solano |
 |
Fairfield is the county seat of Solano
County, but not the largest city in the county, which is Vallejo . |
| 62 |
Carlsbad |
104,652 |
|
San Diego |
|
|
| 63 |
Richmond |
104,513 |
101,454 |
Contra Costa |
 |
|
| 64 |
South Gate |
102,770 |
|
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 65 |
Temecula |
102,604 |
|
Riverside |
 |
The heart of Southern California Wine Country. |
| 66 |
Antioch |
100,957 |
|
Contra Costa |
 |
|
| 67 |
Murrieta |
100,714 |
|
Riverside |
|
|
| 68 |
Mission Viejo |
100,242 |
|
Orange |
|
|
| 69 |
Rialto |
100,022 |
|
San Bernardino |
|
|
| 70 |
Compton |
99,431 |
|
Los Angeles |
 |
|
| 71 |
Carson |
98,159 |
|
Los Angeles |
 |
Location of the Home
Depot Center , housing both of the Major League Soccer teams for Los Angeles , namely: the Los
Angeles Galaxy & Chivas
USA. |
| 72 |
El Cajon |
98,133 |
|
San Diego |
|
|
| 73 |
San Mateo |
96,557 |
|
San Mateo |
 |
|
| 74 |
Vacaville |
96,450 |
|
Solano |
|
|
| 75 |
Vista |
96,089 |
|
San Diego |
|
|
| 76 |
Clovis |
95,128 |
|
Fresno |
|
|
| 77 |
Westminster |
93,284 |
|
Orange |
|
|
| 78 |
Santa Maria |
92,542 |
|
Santa Barbara |
|
|
| 79 |
Santa Monica |
92,494 |
|
Los Angeles |
 |
Home
of the world famous Santa Monica Pier . |
| 80 |
Redding |
90,898 |
|
Shasta |
 |
Located on the banks of the Sacramento River, Redding is the
largest city in California north of Sacramento. It is the gateway to
numerous recreation areas including Shasta Lake , the Trinity Alps , and Mount Shasta . It is also home to the Sundial Bridge,
designed by Santiago Calatrava, which also happens to be the
world's largest sundial. |
| 81 |
Santa Barbara |
90,308 |
|
Santa Barbara |
 |
|
| 82 |
Hawthorne |
89,979 |
|
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 83 |
Alhambra |
89,171 |
|
Los Angeles |
 |
|
| 84 |
Hesperia |
88,184 |
|
San Bernardino |
|
|
| 85 |
Chico |
87,713 |
|
Butte |
 |
Chico is the retail hub of the
mid-Sacramento Valley and is home to institutions such as Bidwell
Park , California State University
Chico , and Sierra Nevada Brewing
Company. |
| 86 |
Citrus Heights |
87,565 |
|
Sacramento |
 |
|
| 87 |
Whittier |
86,788 |
|
Los Angeles |
 |
|
| 88 |
Newport Beach |
86,252 |
|
Orange |
 |
|
| 89 |
Livermore |
84,409 |
|
Alameda |
 |
|
| 90 |
Chino |
84,173 |
|
San Bernardino |
|
|
| 91 |
Lakewood |
83,508 |
|
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 92 |
Buena Park |
83,385 |
|
Orange |
|
Home
of Knott's
Berry Farm . |
| 93 |
San Marcos |
83,149 |
|
San Diego |
|
|
| 94 |
San Leandro |
82,472 |
|
Alameda |
 |
Historically a town with dozens of huge cherry farms and a
Spanish missionary ranch, San Leandro today is a rapidly growing
city of worldwide industries and a suburb of Oakland. Founded in
1872, it is one of the oldest cities in California. |
| 95 |
Indio |
82,230 |
|
Riverside |
|
|
| 96 |
Tracy |
81,714 |
|
San Joaquin |
 |
|
| 97 |
Baldwin Park |
81,445 |
|
Los Angeles |
|
|
| 98 |
Merced |
80,542 |
|
Merced |
 |
| 99 |
Chino Hills |
78,725 |
|
San Bernardino |
 |
| 100 |
Lake Forest |
78,344 |
|
Orange |
|
|