Score
High Population
Larger places score higher on a log population scale.
Higher values rank better for this score.
How It's Calculated
The latest published score is normalized to a 0-100 scale. The method below explains what the score rewards, with technical source metadata available for audit.
How the ranking is built
High Population rewards larger places on a logarithmic population scale.
- 1
Log population is converted to a 0-100 score where higher population scores higher.
- 2
The normalization uses the full observed current canonical place population range.
Technical details
Read from the current master score table for this criterion.
The top 10 below ignore your blended relocation weights and sort only by High Population.
What This Score Means
High Population rewards larger places on a logarithmic population scale.
Statistics Feeding This Score
- Total populationSource: U.S. Census Population Estimates Program
Current canonical place population, using Census Population Estimates Program data where available and ACS fallback otherwise.
- Log populationSource: Derived from canonical population inputs
Derived as log10(total population) so large cities do not overwhelm the scale.
Source Data
Known Limits
- PEP does not publish every Census-designated place, so ACS is used as a fallback when no PEP incorporated-place match exists.
- Uses place population, not metro-area population or commute-shed population.
Top 10 Locations
Ranked by High Population.