Americans in every U.S. metropolitan area saw income gains in 2018, the first time that has happened in 26 years, according to figures published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

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No metro area saw per-capita incomes decrease two years ago, according to the data. Since 1970, there have only been four years -- 1972, 1984, 1992 and 2018 -- where every metropolitan area saw per capita personal income grow, Bureau of Economic Analysis economist Jeffrey Newman told FOX Business.

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Among metropolitan counties, Midland, Texas, a base for Permian basin shale production, posted the biggest increase in per capita personal income at 12.6 percent.

It was trailed by Odessa, Texas, another shale town at the heart of the American oil resurgence, which saw per capita personal income increase by 11.1 percent. In third place was Casper, Wyoming, with per capita income expanding by 10.6 percent, followed by Parkersburg-Vienna, West Virginia, at 7.6 percent.

San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, California rounded out the top five, with 7.6 percent growth.

Across the entire country, per capita personal income, which is calculated by dividing personal income by population, increased by 4.9 percent, compared to 4.1 in 2017. In non-metropolitan areas, growth rates for the average income per person increased by 4.9 percent, compared to 4 percent in 2017.

Midland, Texas: 12.6 percent Odessa, Texas: 11.1 percent Casper, Wyoming: 10.6 percent St. George, Utah: 7.6 percent Austin-Round Rock-Georgetown: 7.6 percent

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These metro areas saw the slowest per capita personal income growth: