3D Map: The U.S. Cities With the Highest Economic Output

At over $21 trillion, the U.S. holds the title of the world’s largest economy—accounting for almost a quarter of the global GDP total. However, the fact is that a few select cities are responsible for a large share of the country’s total economic output.

This unique 3D map from HowMuch puts into perspective the city corridors which contribute the most to the American economy at large.

Top 10 Metros by Economic Output

The visualization pulls the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA, 2018), and ranks the top 10 metro area economies in the country.

One thing is immediately clear—the New York metro area dwarfs all other metro area by a large margin. This cluster, which includes Newark and Jersey City, is bigger than the metro areas surrounding Los Angeles and Chicago combined.

Rank Metro Area State codes GDP (2018) #1 New York-Newark-Jersey City NY-NJ-PA $1.77T #2 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim CA $1.05T #3 Chicago-Naperville-Elgin IL-IN-WI $0.69T #4 San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley CA $0.55T #5 Washington-Arlington-Alexandria DC-VA-MD-WV $0.54T #6 Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington TX $0.51T #7 Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land TX $0.48T #8 Boston-Cambridge-Newton MA-NH $0.46T #9 Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington PA-NJ-DE-MD $0.44T #10 Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Alpharetta GA $0.40T Total GDP $6.90T

Coming in fourth place is San Francisco on the West Coast, with $549 billion in total economic output each year. Meanwhile in the South, the Dallas metroplex brings in $478 billion, placing it sixth in the ranks.

It’s worth noting that using individual metro areas is one way to view things, but geographers also think of urban life in broader terms as well. Given the proximity of cities in the Northeast, places like Boston, NYC, and Washington, D.C. are sometimes grouped into a single megaregion. When viewed this way, the corridor is actually the world’s largest in economic terms.

U.S. States: Sum of Its Parts

Zooming out beyond just these massive cities demonstrates the combined might of the U.S. in another unique way. Tallying all the urban and rural areas, every state economy can be compared to the size of entire countries.

According to the American Enterprise Institute, the state of California brings in a GDP that rivals the United Kingdom in its entirety.

By this same measure, Texas competes with Canada in terms of pure economic output, despite a total land area that’s 15 times less that of the Great White North.

With COVID-19 continuing to impact parts of the global economy disproportionately, how will these kinds of economic comparisons hold up in the future?