U.S. cities with significant Korean-American populations | |
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Cities with significant Korean American populations represent municipalities with critical masses of Korean Americans in their total urban or suburban populations. Information is based on the 2005-2009 American Community Survey or as specified in each table. The list includes those who have emigrated from South Korea as well as Korean Americans of multiple generations. There are numbers of North Koreans living in the United States, despite North Korean citizens being unable to freely emigrate out of their country. As of 2009, Americans of Korean descent made up about 0.4% of the population, or 1,307,000 people.
The four metropolitan areas with the highest Korean American populations as per the 2009 American Community Survey were the Greater Los Angeles Combined Statistical Area (300,000), the Greater New York Combined Statistical Area (200,000), the Washington-Baltimore Metropolitan Area (93,000), and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Area (80,000).[1][2] Southern California and the New York City Metropolitan Area[3] have the largest populations of Koreans outside of the Korean Peninsula.[4] Among Korean Americans born in Korea, the Los Angeles metropolitan area had 226,000 as of 2012; Greater New York (including Northern New Jersey) was home to 153,000 Korean-born Korean Americans; and metropolitan Washington, 60,000.[5]
By percentage, the Korean American population of Bergen County, New Jersey, in the New York City Metropolitan Area, was 6.3% by the 2010 United States Census,[6] the highest of any county in the United States. In 2010, Bergen County, host to the county's highly ranked Academies magnet public high school[7][8][9] as well as to the North American headquarters operations of South Korean chaebols including Samsung,[10] LG Corp,[11] and Hanjin Shipping,[12] was home to all of the nation's top ten municipalities by percentage of Korean population[13] and an absolute total of 56,773 Korean Americans.[6] The concentration of Korean Americans in Palisades Park, New Jersey, within Bergen County, was the highest of any municipality in the United States in 2010,[14] at 52% of the population.[6] The city of Los Angeles contained the highest Korean American population of any city proper in 2010, approximately 108,282.[15]
The list of large cities (population greater than 250,000) with a Korean-American population of at least 1% of the total population.
Rank | City | State | Korean-Americans 2010 | Percentage 2010 | Korean-Americans 2015 | Percentage 2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Los Angeles | California | 108,282 | 2.9% | 110,679 | 2.8% |
2 | Honolulu | Hawaii | 22,179 | 2.3%[16] | 20,729 | 2.1% |
3 | Anaheim | California | 6,575 | 2.0% | 6,696 | 1.9% |
4 | San Jose | California | 12,409 | 1.3% | 12,939 | 1.3% |
5 | New York City | New York | 96,741 | 1.2%[3] | 91,729 | 1.1% |
6 | Aurora | Colorado | 3,646 | 1.2% | 3,379 | 1.0% |
7 | Anchorage | Alaska | 3,251 | 1.2% | 3,799 | 1.3% |
8 | San Francisco | California | 8,661 | 1.1% | 9,601 | 1.1% |
9 | Seattle | Washington | 5,801 | 1.0% | 7,203 | 1.1% |
10 | Plano | Texas | 2,521 | 1.0% | 3,116 | 1.1% |
List of medium-sized cities (population between 100,000 and 250,000) with a Korean-American population of at least 1% of the total population.
Rank | City | State | Korean-Americans | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fullerton | California | 15,544 | 11.5% |
2 | Torrance | California | 10,857 | 7.8% |
3 | Irvine | California | 13,130 | 6.6% |
4 | Glendale | California | 10,723 | 5.5% |
5 | Santa Clara | California | 3,494 | 3.0% |
6 | Bellevue | Washington | 3,459 | 2.9% |
7 | Ann Arbor | Michigan | 2,885 | 2.5% |
8 | Schaumburg | Illinois | 2,576 | 2.1% |
9 | Killeen | Texas | 1,869 | 2.15% |
10 | Berkeley | California | 2,036 | 2.0% |
11 | Cambridge | Massachusetts | 1,699 | 1.6% |
12 | Fremont | California | 2,968 | 1.5% |
13 | Tacoma | Washington | 2,416 | 1.4% |
14 | Carrollton | Texas | 2,524 | 1.3% |
15 | Santa Clarita | California | 1,854 | 1.1% |
Main articles: Koreatown, Palisades Park (팰리세이즈파크 코리아타운) and Koreatown, Fort Lee (포트리 코리아타운)
(Note that Manhattan and Queens are official boroughs of New York City.)
Rank | Municipality | County | State | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Palisades Park[17] | Bergen County | New Jersey | 51.5% |
2 | Leonia | Bergen County | New Jersey | 26.5% |
3 | Ridgefield | Bergen County | New Jersey | 25.7% |
4 | Fort Lee | Bergen County | New Jersey | 23.5% |
5 | Closter | Bergen County | New Jersey | 21.2% |
6 | Englewood Cliffs | Bergen County | New Jersey | 20.3% |
7 | Norwood | Bergen County | New Jersey | 20.1% |
8 | Edgewater | Bergen County | New Jersey | 19.6% |
9 | Cresskill | Bergen County | New Jersey | 17.8% |
10 | Demarest | Bergen County | New Jersey | 17.3% |
New York City has the second-largest Korean population outside of Korea with...