Community Corner

Atlanta Metro Climbs 'Best Places to Live' Rankings

Atlanta has risen out of the bottom half of the top 100 metro areas in rankings out Tuesday from U.S. News and World Report.

ATLANTA, GA — The Atlanta metro area is no longer in the bottom half of the "Best Places to Live," according to new rankings out Tuesday from U.S. News and World Report. Atlanta is No. 50. Austin, Texas, was at the top of the list, followed by Denver, Colorado, and San Jose, California.

The report from U.S. News looked at the 100 most populous metro areas in the country and and graded them based on several factors, including the job market, affordability, income, schools, crime and more.

Atlanta was at No. 61 in the first "Best Places" list published last year. Migration into the region helped push Atlanta up the list, along with better-than-average median prices and lower cost of living.

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Other metros in the region were also ranked: Augusta, Georgia was at No. 72 and Chattanooga, Tennessee was at No. 42.

Here were the top 10 places to live in the country, according to the rankings:

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10. Salt Lake City, UT

Austin jumped up one spot to No. 1, switching places with last year's top city of Denver. You can click here to see last year's rankings.

These were the categories used to come up with the rankings, along with how heavily they were weighted:

  • Job Market Index (20 percent): A look at both the 12-month moving unemployment rate and the median salary, weighted equally.
  • Value Index (25 percent): A comparison of the median annual household income against the blended annual cost of living, which looks at utility costs and taxes compared against mortgage rates and monthly rents.
  • Quality of Life Index (30 percent): A look at how satisfied residents are with their daily lives, which takes into account crime rates, quality and availability of health care, quality of education, well-being and the commuter index.
  • Desirability Index (15 percent): Based off of a nationwide Google Consumer Survey that asked people which city they would like to live in.
  • Net Migration (10 percent): Looking at how fast people are moving in or out of major metro areas.

You can read the full methodology.

And here were the bottom 10 metro areas ranked by U.S. News & World Report:
100. San Juan, PR
99. Modesto, CA
98. Stockton, CA
97. Bakersfield, CA
96. Fresno, CA
95. New Orleans, LA
94. McAllen, TX
93. Memphis, TN
92. Miami, FL
91. Jackson, MS
90. Birmingham, AL

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