populationMaster Score

Score

Outskirts Fit

Places on the metro fringe or near a larger center without strong suburban intensity score highest.

Scale0-100

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.

Scoring Method

How the ranking is built

Outskirts Fit rewards places whose population scale and surrounding settlement context fit metro-edge and exurban contexts near, but less embedded in, a larger center.

  1. 1

    The scorer calculates own population scale, population density, total nearby population gravity, external nearby population gravity, and proximity to external larger centers.

  2. 2

    Bucket assignment uses explicit rules: large standalone cities and dense high-gravity metro fabric score Urban

  3. 3

    places close to a larger core or with very strong external metro context score Suburban

  4. 4

    very small low-density places are guarded toward Outskirts

  5. 5

    weaker or farther metro context scores Outskirts

  6. 6

    standalone town-scale places score Small Town

  7. 7

    and very small low-context places score Rural.

  8. 8

    Outskirts Fit scores highest when the assigned bucket matches metro-edge and exurban contexts near, but less embedded in, a larger center

  9. 9

    neighboring buckets get partial credit.

Technical details
Score TypeMaster Score

Read from the current master score table for this criterion.

Ranking BasisSingle Score

The top 10 below ignore your blended relocation weights and sort only by Outskirts Fit.

No source details available for this score.

What This Score Means

Outskirts Fit rewards places whose population scale and surrounding settlement context fit metro-edge and exurban contexts near, but less embedded in, a larger center.

Statistics Feeding This Score

  • Total population

    Current canonical place population, using Census Population Estimates Program data where available and ACS fallback otherwise.

    Source: U.S. Census Population Estimates Program
  • Nearby population gravity

    Population of nearby places within 60 miles, distance-decayed so closer centers matter more. The stored nearby value includes the place itself.

    Source: Derived from canonical population inputs and place coordinates
  • Population density

    Current place population divided by Census Gazetteer land area in square miles, used to distinguish dense urban fabric from lower-density suburbs and outskirts.

    Source: Derived from canonical population inputs and Census Gazetteer land area
  • External population gravity

    Distance-decayed nearby population excluding the scored place itself, used to distinguish standalone cities and towns from metro-embedded places.

    Source: Derived from canonical population inputs and place coordinates
  • Larger-center proximity

    Distance to nearby 50k, 200k, and 1M population centers, including external 200k and 1M centers for metro-context rules.

    Source: Places location coordinates
  • Settlement bucket

    The assigned Urban, Suburban, Outskirts, Small Town, or Rural bucket.

    Source: Derived settlement-context model

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.
  • The model uses representative place points, current place populations, Census Gazetteer land area when available, and straight-line distance.
  • It does not yet use tract/block urban-area polygons, commute flows, road travel time, or neighborhood-level urban form.

Top 10 Locations

Ranked by Outskirts Fit.

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