Home/Countries/Uzbekistan/Population in Agglomerations >1M (% of total)

UzbekistanPopulation in Agglomerations >1M (% of total)

Category: Urban DevelopmentSource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #115 of 121Updated April 2026
Latest Value
7.2%
2025
YoY Change
-0.7%
20242025
Global Rank
#115
of 121 countries
Maximum
8.6%
2000
Minimum
7.2%
2025
CAGR
-0.7%
26 years
Last
7.2%
Previous
7.2%
Highest
8.6%
Lowest
7.2%
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators

Uzbekistan's population in agglomerations >1m (% of total) was 7.2% in 2025, ranking #115 out of 121 countries. This represents a -0.7% change from 2024. Over the past 26 years, the highest recorded value was 8.6% (2000) and the lowest was 7.2% (2025). Data sourced from the World Bank World Development Indicators.

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
20257.2%-0.7%
20247.2%-0.8%
20237.3%-0.9%
20227.4%-0.9%
20217.4%-0.8%
20207.5%-0.8%
20197.6%-0.7%
20187.6%-0.6%
20177.7%-0.5%
20167.7%-0.6%
20157.7%-0.6%
20147.8%-0.5%
20137.8%-0.4%
20127.9%-0.3%
20117.9%-0.4%
20107.9%-0.4%
20097.9%-0.4%
20088.0%-1.2%
20078.1%-1.0%
20068.2%-0.9%
20058.2%-0.9%
20048.3%-0.9%
20038.4%-0.8%
20028.4%-0.9%
20018.5%-1.1%
20008.6%

Top Countries — Population in Agglomerations >1M (% of total)

#CountryValueYear
1Hong Kong SAR, China100.0%2025
2Singapore100.0%2025
3Puerto Rico (US)76.3%2025
4Kuwait68.4%2025
5Japan65.7%2025
6Congo, Rep.65.3%2025
7Australia61.1%2025
8United Arab Emirates58.9%2025
9Israel57.1%2025
10Uruguay52.8%2025
View all 121 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

Population in urban agglomerations of more than one million is the percentage of a country's population living in metropolitan areas that in 2018 had a population of more than one million people.

Methodology

Data compiled by World Urbanization Prospects 2018, United Nations (UN), uri: https://population.un.org/wup/, publisher: UN Population Division, date published: 2018.

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsCoverage: 20002025View original source →