embrace diversity everywhere
Houston is the 2nd most diverse major American city in 2025
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Diversity is good for the economy and for local communities.
Houston has always been a diverse place, embracing people of many different cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds. And the city is earning new recognition in WalletHub's just-released rankings of the most diverse large American cities for 2025.
The 2025 edition is the final installment in WalletHub's diversity study series, which annually compared 501 U.S. cities across 13 metrics in five categories that encompass "diversity" across socioeconomic, cultural, economic, household, and religious factors.
Cities were also ranked by population, with large cities defined as those with over 300,000 residents, midsize cities with 100,000 to 300,000 residents, and small cities with fewer than 100,000 residents.
Houston nearly topped the list of large U.S. cities, coming in at No. 2, and ranked at No. 5 in the overall national comparison.
The top three most diverse American cities, which have held their positions for the second consecutive year, are all located in Maryland: Gaithersburg (No. 1), Silver Spring (No. 2), and Germantown (No. 3).
Houston performed spectacularly in the study's overall rankings for socioeconomic (No. 14), cultural (No. 32), and religious diversity (No. 63), but fell behind in the categories for household (No. 129) and economic diversity (No. 165).
In the more detailed comparisons across educational-attainment, linguistic, and industry diversity, Houston ranked among the top 30 in all three categories out of all 501 cities included in the report.
Here's how Houston performed across the remaining eight categories in the study:
- No. 44 – Racial and ethnic diversity
- No. 129 – Household type diversity
- No. 200 – Household size diversity
- No. 201 – Income diversity
- No. 207 – Occupational diversity
- No. 239 – Birthplace diversity
- No. 284 – Age diversity
- No. 343 – Worker-class diversity
Embracing diversity is not only good for local communities, it's also beneficial for the economy, the report says.
"Not only have waves of immigration changed the face of the nation, they’ve also brought in fresh perspectives, skills, and technologies to help the U.S. develop a strong adaptability to change," the report's author wrote. "Economies generally fare better when they openly embrace and capitalize on new ideas. Conversely, those relying on old ways and specialized industries tend to be hurt more by changes in the market."
Houston is a repeat performer: It slipped one spot from its 2024 ranking, and previously topped the overall list in 2021 — showing that the city has consistently maintained in diversity over the years.
Other diverse Texas cities
Elsewhere in Texas, Arlington surpassed Houston as the No. 4 overall most diverse city, and took the No. 1 spot in the "large city" category.
Dallas ranked just outside the top 10 this year, landing in 11th place after previously ranking eighth overall in 2024. Dallas also appeared in sixth place in the national rankings for the most diverse large cities, so the city still has some catching up to do.
Fort Worth fell into No. 25 overall this year, in a three-place slip from last year's ranking. The city performed the best in the overall categories for socioeconomic and cultural diversity, earning a respective No. 58 and No. 61.
The top 10 most diverse cities in America in 2025 are:
- No. 1 – Gaithersburg, Maryland
- No. 2 – Silver Spring, Maryland
- No. 3 – Germantown, Maryland
- No. 4 – Arlington, Texas
- No. 5 – Houston, Texas
- No. 6 – New York, New York
- No. 7 – Charlotte, North Carolina
- No. 8 – Jersey City, New Jersey
- No. 9 – Danbury, Connecticut
- No. 10 – Los Angeles, California