1990 United States Census


The United States Census of 1990, conducted by the Census Bureau, was the first census to be directed by a woman, Barbara Everitt Bryant. It determined the resident population of the United States to be 248,709,873, an increase of 9.8 percent over the 226,545,805 persons enumerated during the 1980 Census.
Approximately 16 percent of households received a "long form" of the 1990 census, which contained over 100 questions. Full documentation on the 1990 census, including census forms and a procedural history, is available from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series.
It was the first census to designate "Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander" as a racial group separate from Asians.
To increase black participation in the 1990 United States Census, the bureau recruited Bill Cosby, Magic Johnson, Alfre Woodard, and Miss America Debbye Turner as spokespeople. The Integrated Public Use Microdata Series. Aggregate data for small areas, together with electronic boundary files, can be downloaded from the National Historical Geographic Information System. Personally identifiable information will be available in 2062.
This was the first census since 1890 in which Chicago was not the second-largest city, having been overtaken by Los Angeles. As of the 2020 Census, Los Angeles is expected to remain the nation's second-largest city.

State rankings

RankStatePopulation as of
1980 Census
Population as of
1990 Census
ChangePercent
change
1'23,667,90229,760,021 6,092,119 25.7%
2'17,558,07217,990,455 432,383 2.5%
3'14,229,19116,986,510 2,757,319 19.4%
4'9,746,32412,937,926 3,191,602 32.7%
5'11,863,89511,881,643 17,748 0.2%
6'11,426,51811,430,602 4,084 0.0%
7'10,797,63010,847,115 49,485 0.4%
8'9,262,0789,295,297 33,219 0.4%
9'7,364,8237,730,188 365,365 5.0%
10'5,881,7666,628,637 746,871 12.7%
11'5,463,1056,478,216 1,015,111 18.6%
12'5,346,8186,187,358 840,540 15.7%
13'5,737,0376,016,425 279,388 4.9%
14'5,490,2245,544,159 53,935 1.0%
15'4,916,6865,117,073 200,387 4.1%
16'4,705,7674,891,769 186,002 3.9%
17'4,591,1204,877,185 286,065 6.2%
18'4,132,1564,866,692 734,536 17.8%
19'4,216,9754,781,468 564,493 13.4%
20'4,075,9704,375,099 299,129 7.3%
21'4,205,9004,219,973 14,073 0.3%
22'3,893,8884,040,587 146,699 3.8%
23'3,660,7773,685,296 24,519 0.7%
24'2,718,2153,665,228 947,013 34.8%
25'3,121,8203,486,703 364,883 11.7%
26'2,889,9643,294,394 404,430 14.0%
27'3,107,5763,287,116 179,540 5.8%
28'3,025,2903,145,585 120,295 4.0%
29'2,633,1052,842,321 209,216 7.9%
30'2,913,8082,776,755 -137,053 -4.7%
31'2,520,6382,573,216 52,578 2.1%
32'2,363,6792,477,574 113,895 4.8%
33'2,286,4352,350,725 64,290 2.8%
34'1,949,6441,793,477 -156,167 -8.0%
35'1,461,0371,722,850 261,813 17.9%
36'1,569,8251,578,385 8,560 0.5%
37'1,302,8941,515,069 212,175 16.3%
38'1,124,6601,227,928 103,268 9.2%
39'800,4931,201,833 401,340 50.1%
40'920,6101,109,252 188,642 20.5%
41'964,6911,108,229 143,538 14.8%
42'943,9351,006,749 62,814 6.7%
43'947,1541,003,464 56,310 5.9%
44'786,690799,065 12,375 1.6%
45'690,768696,004 5,236 0.8%
46'594,338666,168 71,830 12.1%
47'652,717638,800 -13,917 -2.1%
'638,333606,900 -31,433 -4.9%
48'511,456562,758 51,302 10.0%
49'401,851550,043 148,192 36.8%
50'469,557453,588 -15,969 -3.4%
'226,545,805248,709,87322,164,0689.8%

Reapportionment

The results of the 1990 census determined the number of seats that each state receives in the United States House of Representatives starting with the 1992 elections. Consequently, this affected the number of votes each state has in the Electoral College for the 1992 presidential election.
Because of population changes, twenty-one states had changes in their number of seats. Eight states gained at least one seat, and thirteen states lost at least one seat. The final result involved 19 seats being switched.
Gained seven seatsGained four seatsGained three seatsGained one seatLost one seatLost two seatsLost three seats
CaliforniaFloridaTexasArizona
Georgia
North Carolina
Virginia
Washington
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Montana
New Jersey
West Virginia
Illinois
Michigan
Ohio
Pennsylvania
New York

City rankings

Top five

Top 100