Not Miami. Not Austin. The Happiest City In America Is Fremont, California.

https://www.profitableratecpm.com/f4ffsdxe?key=39b1ebce72f3758345b2155c98e6709c
Lake Elizabeth at sunset, Fremont Central Park

Fremont Central Park’s beautiful Lake Elizabeth at sunset. (© Olga – stock.adobe.com)

Meanwhile, the Motor City is miserable.

In A Nutshell

  • Depression rates are three times higher at the bottom of the list than at the top, and poor sleep, food insecurity, and weak community ties consistently travel together in the lowest-ranked cities.
  • Fremont, California, ranked as the happiest city in America in WalletHub’s 2026 analysis of 182 large U.S. cities, topping better-known destinations including Austin, Miami, and Los Angeles.
  • Fremont leads the country in life satisfaction, has the lowest divorce rate nationally at 9.3%, and has the lowest share of adults reporting frequent mental health struggles.
  • The analysis used 29 metrics across emotional well-being, income, and community factors; cities where most residents earn above $75,000 a year tend to score higher, though that figure is based on 2010 research and may not reflect current costs of living.

Most people asked to name the happiest city in America would probably guess somewhere glamorous or well-known. A new national ranking says they’d be wrong.

Fremont, California, a mid-sized Bay Area city best known for its Tesla factory and East Bay hills, ranked No. 1 in WalletHub’s 2026 analysis of happiness across more than 180 large American cities. It beat out coastal favorites, Sun Belt boom towns, and cities with far bigger reputations.

What put it at the top wasn’t weather or prestige. It was a mix of things that tend to get overlooked in conversations about where to live: stable marriages, good mental health, enough money to take the edge off, and neighbors who look out for each other.

According to WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo, “The ideal city provides conditions that foster good mental and physical health, like reasonable work hours, short commutes, good weather, and caring neighbors.” Fremont delivers on those fronts more reliably than anywhere else in the country.

Fremont’s Unlikely Formula for Happiness

A closer look at Fremont’s numbers makes the ranking hard to argue with. Nearly 80% of households there earn above $75,000 a year: the income level often cited in happiness research as the point where additional earnings stop making much difference. It’s worth noting that figure comes from a 2010 study, and in a high cost-of-living city like Fremont, $75,000 doesn’t go as far as it once did. Even so, when the majority of a city’s residents are earning well above that line, it likely reflects a broader financial cushion that shapes daily life in ways that show up in the data.

The financial picture, though, is only part of the story. Fremont has the lowest separation and divorce rate in the country, at just 9.3%. It has the lowest share of adults reporting 14 or more mentally unhealthy days per month. Residents report the highest life-satisfaction scores of any city in the study. And Fremont ranks fifth among the most caring cities in America, a metric that captures civic engagement, volunteerism, and whether people feel their neighbors genuinely have their backs.

None of that sounds like a city people dream about moving to. It sounds like a city where life is quietly going well.

fremont, california
Afternoon aerial view of the city of Fremont, California, USA. (Credit: Matt Gush on Shutterstock)

Why the Happiest Cities Aren’t the Ones You’d Expect

Cities that dominate relocation conversations landed well outside the top tier. Austin came in at No. 39. Denver ranked 65th. Los Angeles finished 87th. Miami placed 78th. Each scores reasonably well on income and employment, but loses ground on the measures that carry more weight in this analysis: depression rates, sleep quality, community ties, and mental health.

The cities that cracked the top ten share Fremont’s profile more than its geography. Bismarck, North Dakota, ranked second, with the most average daily leisure time of any city in the analysis, high community well-being scores, and residents among the most likely in the country to get a full night’s sleep. South Burlington, Vermont, came in fourth, ranking first nationally for adequate sleep. Overland Park, Kansas, placed sixth, finishing second in the country on emotional and physical well-being.

What those cities share is less about climate or culture and more about the day-to-day conditions that let people rest, connect, and feel financially stable.

The Wide Gap Between America’s Happiest and Least Happy Cities

The bottom of the list is just as revealing as the top. Detroit ranked last among all 182 cities, with the worst sleep rates in the country and near-last scores on emotional well-being. Memphis ranked 181st. Shreveport finished 180th.

Depression rates showed a threefold difference between the best and worst cities. Jersey City, New Jersey, had the lowest depression rate nationally; Huntington, West Virginia, had the highest. Sleep followed the same divide, with South Burlington topping the list and Detroit finishing last.

Poor sleep, high depression, food insecurity, and weak community ties don’t tend to appear on their own. In many cities near the bottom of the rankings, those problems show up together.

“Where you live matters tremendously! Every year, the consistent finding from The World Happiness Report is that individuals living in Nordic countries are among the happiest in the world. The countries with the highest levels of happiness are Finland, Denmark, and Iceland,” says Dr. Diane Phillips, a professor of marketing at Saint Joseph’s University, in the WalletHub release. “Why are these people so consistently happy? These individuals enjoy lives in which they have easy and equal access to jobs, income, education, healthcare, and a variety of other social structures. The least happy people in the world are those that are plagued by government corruption, poverty, and conflict.”

How WalletHub Ranked America’s Happiest Cities

WalletHub compared 182 cities across three categories: emotional and physical well-being, income and employment, and community and environment. Those were broken into 29 individual metrics, each weighted based on how strongly prior happiness research ties it to well-being. Emotional and physical well-being counted for half the final score; income and community each counted for a quarter. Data came from sources including the U.S. Census Bureau, the CDC, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Sharecare’s Community Well-Being Index, collected as of February 10, 2026.

Fremont didn’t top this list because it’s the most exciting place to live. It topped it because the basic ingredients of a good daily life (health, rest, stability, connection) are more reliably in place there than almost anywhere else in the country. That turns out to be harder to build than a recognizable skyline, and according to this data, considerably more valuable.

Full List: Happiest Cities in the U.S.

Overall Rank  City Total Score  Emotional & Physical Well-Being Rank  Income & Employment Rank  Community & Environment Rank 
1 Fremont, CA 74.09 1 89 4
2 Bismarck, ND 73.11 5 23 1
3 Scottsdale, AZ 71.36 11 14 2
4 South Burlington, VT 70.15 4 9 48
5 Fargo, ND 69.36 12 33 5
6 Overland Park, KS 68.45 2 55 68
7 Charleston, SC 68.44 17 10 3
8 Irvine, CA 67.99 8 39 32
9 Gilbert, AZ 67.96 14 27 6
10 San Jose, CA 67.79 7 45 42
11 Burlington, VT 67.54 21 2 13
12 Madison, WI 66.35 13 30 19
13 Columbia, MD 66.28 3 162 101
14 Chandler, AZ 65.69 19 52 10
15 Seattle, WA 65.62 6 7 152
16 Plano, TX 65.34 15 72 22
17 San Francisco, CA 64.99 10 75 69
18 Lincoln, NE 64.90 26 54 8
19 Portland, ME 64.59 42 3 12
20 Tempe, AZ 64.30 31 15 26
21 San Diego, CA 64.25 24 24 36
22 Raleigh, NC 63.47 22 92 29
23 Peoria, AZ 63.38 37 81 7
24 Durham, NC 62.84 34 49 34
25 Huntington Beach, CA 62.80 20 70 80
26 Omaha, NE 62.58 35 91 15
27 Nashua, NH 62.49 38 80 11
28 Honolulu, HI 62.10 43 48 30
29 Mesa, AZ 61.40 52 36 25
30 Chula Vista, CA 61.31 36 87 45
31 Jersey City, NJ 61.14 16 154 75
32 Boise, ID 60.96 44 5 92
33 Washington, DC 60.85 9 74 173
34 Minneapolis, MN 60.79 25 32 117
35 Aurora, IL 60.74 27 141 52
36 Sioux Falls, SD 60.71 23 28 154
37 Missoula, MT 60.55 61 21 43
38 Yonkers, NY 60.38 18 146 99
39 Austin, TX 60.36 40 20 97
40 Santa Clarita, CA 60.28 33 131 62
41 Cape Coral, FL 60.27 50 101 18
42 Pembroke Pines, FL 60.24 30 150 47
43 Glendale, CA 60.23 46 119 24
44 Chesapeake, VA 59.99 58 121 14
44 Santa Rosa, CA 59.99 54 50 50
46 Pearl City, HI 59.86 29 156 90
47 Oceanside, CA 59.79 41 82 83
48 Garden Grove, CA 59.73 63 47 36
49 Rancho Cucamonga, CA 59.69 51 77 46
50 Charlotte, NC 59.64 57 117 21
51 Manchester, NH 59.10 66 58 33
52 Oakland, CA 59.03 28 123 114
53 Fort Lauderdale, FL 58.39 47 98 91
54 Virginia Beach, VA 58.19 60 112 60
55 Anaheim, CA 58.07 68 69 61
56 Phoenix, AZ 58.05 67 78 59
57 Cedar Rapids, IA 57.99 56 130 55
58 Nampa, ID 57.91 80 13 73
59 New York, NY 57.63 48 152 71
60 Salt Lake City, UT 57.30 70 40 85
61 Port St. Lucie, FL 57.14 73 84 67
62 Pittsburgh, PA 56.94 76 11 105
63 Boston, MA 56.88 45 8 172
64 Santa Ana, CA 56.80 90 18 56
65 Denver, CO 56.74 32 139 150
66 Warwick, RI 56.59 62 113 96
67 Orlando, FL 56.59 69 19 133
68 Tampa, FL 56.46 77 68 81
69 Huntsville, AL 56.40 96 35 20
70 Irving, TX 56.39 78 83 79
71 St. Paul, MN 56.33 53 122 119
72 Fontana, CA 56.15 91 62 35
73 Colorado Springs, CO 56.13 87 73 53
74 Oxnard, CA 56.07 88 100 31
75 Glendale, AZ 55.86 82 97 74
76 Atlanta, GA 55.77 64 86 131
77 Billings, MT 55.76 101 46 28
78 Miami, FL 55.74 65 12 162
79 Juneau, AK 55.56 39 43 181
80 Sacramento, CA 55.54 84 25 110
81 Portland, OR 55.36 58 106 142
82 Aurora, CO 55.18 49 158 128
83 Chicago, IL 54.97 55 167 98
84 Rapid City, SD 54.85 81 16 157
85 Ontario, CA 54.77 99 59 49
86 Columbia, SC 54.49 121 66 9
87 Los Angeles, CA 54.46 75 96 126
88 Henderson, NV 54.46 102 149 16
89 Anchorage, AK 54.32 71 79 145
90 Grand Rapids, MI 54.28 100 44 77
91 St. Petersburg, FL 54.23 85 88 108
92 Garland, TX 54.20 95 115 54
93 Riverside, CA 54.19 97 37 89
94 Long Beach, CA 54.18 72 126 123
95 New Haven, CT 54.14 103 53 72
96 Bridgeport, CT 54.01 79 178 38
97 Reno, NV 53.91 112 42 57
98 Providence, RI 53.52 118 6 100
99 Winston-Salem, NC 53.47 116 99 40
100 Tallahassee, FL 53.39 98 38 107
101 Hialeah, FL 53.29 83 102 135
102 West Valley City, UT 53.18 120 63 39
103 Des Moines, IA 52.56 92 124 104
104 Salem, OR 52.41 110 65 93
105 Tacoma, WA 52.40 86 118 148
106 Grand Prairie, TX 52.34 111 147 27
107 Moreno Valley, CA 52.33 123 95 44
108 Greensboro, NC 52.03 106 107 94
109 Lexington-Fayette, KY 51.83 93 143 103
110 Cheyenne, WY 51.71 89 60 167
111 Dallas, TX 51.63 94 116 129
112 Modesto, CA 51.42 127 94 65
113 Fort Worth, TX 50.93 126 120 78
114 Vancouver, WA 50.34 74 129 178
115 Stockton, CA 50.18 115 85 138
116 Worcester, MA 50.12 109 57 164
117 Columbus, OH 50.02 119 151 84
118 Spokane, WA 49.98 108 34 169
119 Arlington, TX 49.91 128 133 87
120 Oklahoma City, OK 49.57 141 136 51
121 Las Cruces, NM 49.37 113 41 171
122 Tucson, AZ 49.22 138 90 106
123 Norfolk, VA 48.98 122 137 125
124 Albuquerque, NM 48.97 105 67 174
125 Jacksonville, FL 48.92 139 132 86
126 Richmond, VA 48.86 104 161 147
127 Kansas City, MO 48.79 124 135 120
128 Houston, TX 48.78 107 148 153
129 Casper, WY 48.55 114 109 163
130 North Las Vegas, NV 48.43 156 159 17
131 Springfield, MO 48.14 152 64 82
132 Fort Wayne, IN 48.14 130 153 118
133 Nashville, TN 48.14 129 108 151
134 Newport News, VA 48.13 134 155 95
135 Lubbock, TX 48.12 144 31 139
136 Fresno, CA 47.96 143 51 140
137 El Paso, TX 47.95 145 105 102
138 Las Vegas, NV 47.87 146 160 66
139 San Bernardino, CA 47.72 148 76 111
140 Laredo, TX 47.71 160 4 121
141 Louisville, KY 47.67 117 173 127
142 Rochester, NY 47.54 137 114 144
143 Amarillo, TX 47.51 158 71 76
144 Philadelphia, PA 47.35 136 134 136
145 Lewiston, ME 47.28 175 1 63
146 Cincinnati, OH 47.07 142 144 109
147 Newark, NJ 47.04 131 175 112
148 Indianapolis, IN 46.91 135 169 115
149 Buffalo, NY 46.89 132 128 160
150 Brownsville, TX 46.79 167 29 70
151 Wichita, KS 46.70 133 127 161
152 Bakersfield, CA 46.44 153 111 113
153 Milwaukee, WI 45.61 140 164 137
154 San Antonio, TX 45.58 149 93 158
155 Corpus Christi, TX 45.53 157 61 146
156 Chattanooga, TN 45.50 147 110 156
157 Fayetteville, NC 45.42 166 142 41
158 Tulsa, OK 45.33 168 103 88
159 New Orleans, LA 45.19 154 104 149
160 Mobile, AL 44.85 159 166 58
161 Little Rock, AR 44.48 155 138 134
162 Wilmington, DE 44.34 125 145 180
163 Knoxville, TN 44.04 164 26 166
164 St. Louis, MO 43.53 150 170 143
165 Jackson, MS 42.60 165 177 64
166 Charleston, WV 42.18 176 17 159
167 Gulfport, MS 41.65 178 157 23
168 Montgomery, AL 41.35 163 172 129
169 Columbus, GA 40.61 170 174 116
170 Baton Rouge, LA 40.47 169 140 165
171 Birmingham, AL 40.37 161 165 170
172 Baltimore, MD 40.28 151 179 176
173 Akron, OH 40.11 171 168 122
174 Dover, DE 39.08 162 125 182
175 Fort Smith, AR 38.66 180 56 132
176 Augusta, GA 38.24 172 163 168
177 Toledo, OH 37.21 177 176 155
178 Huntington, WV 37.20 182 22 124
179 Cleveland, OH 36.50 173 171 177
180 Shreveport, LA 34.93 179 180 141
181 Memphis, TN 34.39 174 181 179
182 Detroit, MI 29.55 181 182 175

Note: With the exception of “Total Score,” all of the columns in the table above depict the relative rank of that city, where a rank of 1 represents the best conditions for that metric category.


Survey Notes

Methodology

WalletHub’s 2026 happiness ranking compared 182 U.S. cities, including the 150 most populous in the country plus at least two of the most populous cities in each state. Each city was scored across 29 metrics drawn from positive-psychology research, grouped into three categories: emotional and physical well-being (which carried half the total score), income and employment (one quarter), and community and environment (one quarter).

The metrics covered a wide range of factors linked to happiness in prior research, including depression rates, adequate sleep, life expectancy, food insecurity, sports participation, job satisfaction, commute time, divorce rates, hate crime rates, leisure time, and access to parkland, among others. Each metric was scored on a 100-point scale, with 100 representing the best conditions. Cities were then ranked by their weighted average across all 29 measures.

Data was collected as of February 10, 2026, from sources including the U.S. Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Sharecare’s Community Well-Being Index, Feeding America, Glassdoor, and WalletHub’s own research. Some metrics were available only at the state level and were applied uniformly to cities within those states.

Limitations

WalletHub’s analysis covers 182 of the largest U.S. cities, meaning smaller towns, rural areas, and mid-sized cities outside the top population tiers aren’t reflected. Happiness is inherently subjective, and no ranking of 29 data points can fully capture individual well-being. Some metrics were available only at the state level rather than the city level, which may reduce precision for those specific measures. The $75,000 income threshold cited in the report is drawn from research published in 2010 and has been the subject of considerable debate since, particularly in high cost-of-living metros where that income carries far less purchasing power. The analysis also does not account for personal factors such as genetics, life history, and personality, which happiness researchers acknowledge can account for a substantial share of individual well-being.

Funding and Disclosures

This report was produced by WalletHub, a personal finance website operated by Evolution Finance, Inc. WalletHub is a commercially operated platform that earns revenue through advertising and affiliate relationships with financial institutions. The report is not peer-reviewed and was not published in an academic journal. It was written by WalletHub financial writer Adam McCann and published on March 10, 2026. The methodology draws on published academic research in positive psychology, but the ranking itself was produced independently by WalletHub’s editorial team.

Publication Details

Report Title: Happiest Cities in America (2026) Author: Adam McCann, WalletHub Financial Writer Publisher: WalletHub / Evolution Finance, Inc. Published: March 10, 2026

Note: This is an industry-produced survey report, not a peer-reviewed academic study. Findings should be interpreted accordingly.

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