Localities of Mexico

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Localities (Spanish: Localidades) are the basic level of administrative divisions of Mexico that correspond to distinct settlements. In the Mexican administrative hierarchy, localities are under the municipalities and boroughs. As of December 2024, there are in total 296,814 localities under the 2,478 municipalities in Mexico.[1]

Administration

The Constitution of Mexico has defined Mexico a federal republic of 32 federative entities (31 states and Mexico City), it also outlines that the federative entities to be divided into municipalities (Spanish: municipios) and boroughs (Spanish: demarcaciones territoriales). The divisions of municipalities and boroughs are regulated solely by constitutions and laws of the respective federative entities.

Among the states, settlement classification schemes vary. Common types of localities include:

  • City (Spanish: Ciudad) — for more populous places,
  • Town (Spanish: Villa) — for middle populous places, and
  • Village (Spanish: Pueblo or Poblado) — for less populous places.

Other classifications include ranchería, congregación (población), or ejido.

Mexico City further divides its boroughs into neighborhoods (Spanish: colonias).

The federal government has established the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Spanish: Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía, INEGI) to maintain the statistics and encoding of the administrative divisions across the country. The INEGI uses the term localities (Spanish: localidades) to collectively refer to these types of division. The INEGI's definition of localities is: "All places with one or more dwellings, who may be inhabited or not, and can be classed as urban or rural."[2]

Statistics

According to INEGI's data, there are in total 296,814 localities under the 2,478 municipalities in Mexico as of December 2024. [3]

More information Federative entity, Municipalities and boroughs ...
Federative entityMunicipalities
and boroughs
Localities
CodeNameUrbanRuralTotal
01 Aguascalientes11 402,9623,002
02 Baja California7 447,7037,747
03 Baja California Sur5 164,1484,164
04 Campeche13 334,9815,014
05 Coahuila38 5910,3081,0367
06 Colima10 212,8852,906
07 Chiapas124 20627,37227,578
08 Chihuahua67 8923,32723,416
09 Mexico City16 33687720
10 Durango39 619,96110,022
11 Guanajuato46 17510,94711,122
12 Guerrero85 1519,1959,346
13 Hidalgo84 2635,0285,291
14 Jalisco125 28518,91119,196
15 México125 5714,5845,155
16 Michoacán113 22910,89511,124
17 Morelos36 951,7631,858
18 Nayarit20 554,7434,798
19 Nuevo León51 10410,70210,806
20 Oaxaca570 61212,52013,132
21 Puebla217 4337,3897,822
22 Querétaro18 1132,7032,816
23 Quintana Roo11 284,2474,275
24 San Luis Potosí59 838,8238,906
25 Sinaloa20 888,7408,828
26 Sonora72 10416,25016,354
27 Tabasco17 1042,5982,702
28 Tamaulipas43 6313,92013,983
29 Tlaxcala60 1371,6101,747
30 Veracruz212 39026,19326,583
31 Yucatán106 1339,7579,890
32 Zacatecas58 866,0586,144
Total2,478 4,904291,910296,814
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City

Cities (Spanish: Ciudades) are usually the most populous localities within the state. Each city elects its own city mayor (Spanish: alcalde de la ciudad). Note that the term city mayor should not be confused with municipal president (Spanish: presidente municipal), leader of a municipality, the city's upper-level division.

Some larger cities are consolidated with its own municipality and form a single level of governance. Some of these cities are further divided into boroughs (Spanish: delegaciones) or neighborhoods (Spanish: colonias) in locality level.

See also

Refs

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