Hispanic America - Largest Cities

Largest Cities

City Country Population Metro
Mexico City Mexico 8,851,080 20,137,152
Buenos Aires Argentina 3,050,728 13,400,000
Bogotá Colombia 7,434,453 8,600,000
Lima Peru 7,605,742 8,472,935
Santiago Chile 5,428,590 7,200,000
Guadalajara Mexico 1,564,514 4,328,584
Caracas Venezuela 1,815,679 4,196,514
Monterrey Mexico 1,133,814 4,080,329
Medellín Colombia 2,636,101 3,729,970
Guayaquil Ecuador 2,432,233 3,328,534
Santo Domingo Dominican Republic 1,111,838 3,310,171
La Habana Cuba 2,350,000 3,073,000
Guatemala City Guatemala 942,348 2,945,080
Maracaibo Venezuela 2,201,727 2,928,043
Cali Colombia 2,068,386 2,530,796
San Juan Puerto Rico 434,374 2,509,007
Puebla Mexico 1,399,519 2,109,049
Asunción Paraguay 680,250 2,089,651
Montevideo Uruguay 1,325,968 1,868,335
Quito Ecuador 1,397,698 1,842,201
Managua Nicaragua 1,380,300 1,825,000
Barranquilla Colombia 1,148,506 1,798,143
Santa Cruz Bolivia 1,594,926 1,774,998
Valencia Venezuela 894,204 1,770,000
Tegucigalpa Honduras 1,230,000 1,600,000
La Paz Bolivia 872,480 1,590,000
San Salvador El Salvador 540,090 2,223,092
Tijuana Mexico 1,286,187 1,553,000
Toluca Mexico 467,712 1,531,000
Barquisimeto Venezuela 1,116,000 1,500,000
León Mexico 1,278,087 1,488,000
Córdoba Argentina 1,309,536 1,452,000
Ciudad Juárez Mexico 1,301,452 1,343,000
Tegucigalpa Honduras 1,250,000 1,300,000
Maracay Venezuela 1,007,000 1,300,000
San José Costa Rica 386,799 1,284,000
Rosario Argentina 908,163 1,203,000
Panama City Panama 464,761 1,200,000
Torreón Mexico 548,723 1,144,000
Bucaramanga Colombia 516,512 1,055,331
  • Mexico City

  • Buenos Aires

  • Bogotá

  • Lima

  • Santiago de Chile

  • Guadalajara

  • Caracas

  • Monterrey

  • Medellín

  • Centre économique de Guayaquil.jpg

    Guayaquil

  • Santo Domingo

  • Edificioshabana.JPG

    La Habana

  • Guatemala City

  • Maracaibo

  • Santiago de Cali


Read more about this topic:  Hispanic America

Famous quotes containing the words largest and/or cities:

    The largest business in American handled by a woman is the Money Order Department of the Pittsburgh Post-office; Mary Steel has it in charge.
    Lydia Hoyt Farmer (1842–1903)

    Just as language has no longer anything in common with the thing it names, so the movements of most of the people who live in cities have lost their connexion with the earth; they hang, as it were, in the air, hover in all directions, and find no place where they can settle.
    Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926)