Real Estate Broad | 2 minute read
America’s Best Cities for Religion
BY Roxana Baiceanu | Jun 3, 2015
If you think religion, which U.S. city first comes to mind?
While we know that a city with many places of worship doesn’t necessarily become a “religious city,” we were still curious to find which of the largest metropolises have the most religious venues per population density. For this, we looked into our database of over 18 million properties and, for the cities we took into account, we counted the properties which are considered “for religious use.”
Results: If you thought one of the Bible Belt locales made it to the #1 spot, you’re miles away from the truth. The highest on the list, as you can see in the slideshow below, is Indianapolis, IN with one religious venue for every 289 people.
#2 in the list is Seattle, WA with one religious place for every 481 people. Seattle’s case, in fact, is rather insightful, since an analysis recently run by the nonpartisan and nonprofit Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) reveals that in this city the percentage of religiously unaffiliated residents is 33%, which also ranks Seattle as the 2nd city in the U.S. by number of residents not following religion.
As for the rest, take a look at our slideshow featuring the top 20 US cities with the most religious places per population:
If you’d like to share this slideshow, use the code below to embed it to your website. We’d appreciate crediting us as source:
Cities with Many Religious Venues vs. Cities with Many Religiously Unaffiliated People
As shown by the Public Religion Research Institute’s analysis, the top 5 most religiously unaffiliated US cities are in the West: Portland, Seattle, San Francisco, Denver, and Phoenix. You’re probably not that surprised to see this, but if you take a look back at our list you’ll see that 3 of these cities also rank quite high in terms of numbers of religious venues per population density.
Seattle was already mentioned above, but San Francisco and Phoenix are also interesting cases.
In the Phoenix Metropolitan area, 26% of the population say they are not affiliated to any organized religion; still, there is one place of worship for as few as 1,300 people. San Francisco counts 33% of its inhabitants as religiously unaffiliated and yet has one religious place for every 1,565 people.
Check out the graphic below to see how other cities did:
Latest Posts
Want to stay on top of the real estate market?
Access comprehensive property data and ownership information with intuitive research tools.
POSTED IN: Real Estate Broad
Roxana is an associate editor with Multi-Housing News and Commercial Property Executive. In the past, she also created content for PropertyShark and Point2Homes’ blog pages. She also has 5 years of experience as a marketing copywriter.
Recent Reports
World Cup or Your Mortgage/Rent? Ticket Prices Rival Host City Housing Costs
World Cup ticket prices rival monthly housing expenses in the 11 U.S. host cities, with even the cheapest seats covering weeks or even months of rent or mortgage payments.
Locked-In Owners, Mobile Renters: Homeowners Stay Put as Renters Move 3.7x More Across Largest U.S. Cities
Renters became the primary drivers of long-distance mobility across the largest U.S. cities, moving 3.7 times more than owners in 2024, as high mortgage rates and housing costs kept many homeowners in place.
$4.6M Hudson Yards Maintains Top Spot, Luxury Sales in Malba Set $2.5M Price Record for Queens
Despite prices declining, Hudson Yards remained the most expensive NYC neighborhood, but TriBeCa’s growth closed the gap to under $400,000, while Malba set a new historic price record for Queens at $2.5 million, securing the highest ranking ever for the borough at #5.
