For their sample, they included only the “city proper” in 515 small, midsize and large cities.

Of the 66 large cities on the list, Austin came out on top, followed by Miami; Seattle; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Denver.

Atlanta ranked 64th overall and 10th among large cities, a small bump from last year’s spot at No. 11.

Philadelphia, for what it’s worth, ranked 51st among the the largest cities in the country. Cleveland was dead last.

Of the 249 midsize cities, Midland, Texas earned top honors. Fort Myers, Florida, topped the list of 200 small cities.

Other Georgia cities on the list:

Sandy Springs (No. 16 among midsize cities)

Athens-Clarke (No. 34 among midsize cities)

Savannah (No. 93 among midsize cities)

Roswell (No. 119 among small cities)

Albany (No. 188 among small cities)

Augusta (No. 231 among midsize cities)

Columbus (No. 242 among midsize cities)

Here’s more on how Atlanta fared:

Overall rank among 515 cities: 64

Overall rank among 66 large cities: 10

Poverty rate decrease: 65

Job growth: 74

Median house price growth: 95

Working-age population growth: 100

Median household income growth: 118

Foreclosure rate decrease: 131

Unemployment rate decrease: 147

Regional GDP growth: 149

Growth in number of businesses: 216

Explore the full report at wallethub.com.

This isn’t the first time Atlanta’s been in the spotlight for its booming population and economic growth.

» RELATED: Census: Metro Atlanta's population approaches 5.8 million

Between 2016 and 2017, the city of Atlanta gained an estimated 9,900 new residents, the AJC previously reported. That's more than double its running average annual growth rate of 4,214 since 2010.

The metro region overall gained 89,000 new residents in 2017. Currently, it boasts a population of approximately 5.8 million.

According to Mike Carnathan, manager of the Atlanta Regional Commission’s research and analytics group, Atlanta had its strongest year of population growth since the Great Recession.

Along with that population growth, the city region also added 103,100 jobs between 2016-2017, the AJC reported.

But while Atlanta's current job growth mirrored that of the 2002-2007 housing boom, "to say it's normal and robust would be wrong," according to AJC business reporter Michael Kannell. Incomes aren't jumping, folks are still out of work, but the longer trend is positive, he said.

» RELATED: Atlanta traffic among worst in the world, study finds

And, “as Atlanta grows at a rate far above other top American metro areas, including New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, its surging populace is putting stress on its transportation infrastructure and housing market,” reporters Alex Soderstrom and Jacquelyn Elias recently pointed out.

Atlanta is also becoming increasingly diverse, more walkable and is attracting more individuals between 20-29 years of age.

Read more about Atlanta’s economic growth.