Urban growth is the increase in the absolute population and physical size of cities and metropolitan areas, driven by rural-to-urban migration, natural increase, economic development, and government policy (AP Human Geography Unit 6, Topics 6.1, 6.3, 6.6, 6.9).
Urban growth means cities are getting bigger, both in how many people live there and how much land they cover. It happens when people move from rural areas to cities (usually chasing jobs and services), when urban populations grow through births, and when cities physically expand outward into new territory.
The CED breaks down what drives this growth. Under EK PSO-6.A.1, a city's site (its physical characteristics, like a natural harbor) and situation (its location relative to other places, like sitting on a trade route) shape how big it gets. Under EK PSO-6.A.2, changes in transportation, communication, population growth, migration, economic development, and government policies all push urban growth forward. That's why a port city with rail connections explodes while a nearby fishing village stays small. Urban growth also reshapes the land itself, changing density patterns, land use, and the built environment as cities absorb more people.
Urban growth is the engine behind almost everything in Unit 6 (Cities and Urban Land-Use Patterns and Processes). It directly supports learning objective 6.1.A, which asks you to explain the processes that initiate and drive urbanization and suburbanization. It also shows up in 6.3.A, because the fastest-growing cities are often the ones plugged into global networks, and in 6.6.A, because growth determines whether a city builds dense high-rises or sprawling low-density suburbs. Topic 6.9 (LO 6.9.A) is where you prove urban growth with evidence, using quantitative census data to track population change and qualitative narratives to capture how residents experience that change. There's even a Unit 3 connection (LO 3.3.A), since growing cities pull in diverse migrant groups whose languages, religions, and ethnicities reshape the cultural landscape and can act as centripetal or centrifugal forces.
Keep studying AP® Human Geography Unit 3
Suburbanization (Unit 6)
Urban growth doesn't always mean the center city grows. In the U.S. after World War II, metro areas kept growing while inner cities actually lost population, because growth shifted to the suburbs. The 2017 FRQ tested exactly this dynamic of suburbanization draining the urban core.
Megacity (Unit 6)
A megacity (10+ million people) is what urban growth looks like when it runs at full speed, mostly in the developing world today. Rapid growth there often outpaces infrastructure, which is why squatter settlements and informal economies cluster in fast-growing megacities.
Bid-Rent Theory (Unit 6)
Urban growth raises demand for land, and bid-rent theory explains who ends up where. As a city grows, land near the CBD gets more expensive, pushing residential development outward and producing the density gradient you see in Topic 6.6.
Cultural Patterns (Unit 3)
Growing cities are migration magnets, so they collect ethnic neighborhoods, religious landscapes, and multiple languages. That diversity can build a strong sense of place (centripetal) or fuel segregation and tension (centrifugal), which is the core of LO 3.3.A.
Multiple-choice questions usually test the causes of urban growth rather than the definition. Expect stems comparing growth across countries (like urbanization in South Korea versus Indonesia since 1970, where the difference comes down to economic development), asking why some coastal cities boomed while others stayed villages (that's site and situation), or describing government policies that restrict rural-to-urban migration. On FRQs, urban growth shows up as the backdrop for bigger arguments. The 2017 FRQ asked about U.S. cities that declined when suburbanization pulled growth out of the inner city, and the 2024 SAQ used metacities and world cities to connect urban growth to globalization. Your job is to explain the processes driving growth and to read data (maps, census tables, GDP figures) that show its causes and effects.
Urban growth is an absolute increase in a city's population or physical size. Urbanization is the increase in the percentage of a country's people living in urban areas. A megacity can keep growing (urban growth) even after its country's urbanization rate levels off. The reverse works too. A country can urbanize rapidly while its individual cities stay relatively small if growth spreads across many cities. On the exam, watch whether the question is about raw numbers or proportions.
Urban growth is the increase in the absolute population and physical extent of cities, while urbanization is the rising share of a population living in urban areas.
Site and situation explain why some cities grow large and others stay small, which is why port cities on trade routes historically outgrew isolated settlements (EK PSO-6.A.1).
Transportation, communication, migration, economic development, and government policies are the CED's five big drivers of urban growth (EK PSO-6.A.2).
Today's fastest urban growth is happening in developing countries, producing megacities where infrastructure often can't keep up with population.
Geographers measure urban growth with quantitative census data on population size and composition, and with qualitative field studies that capture how residents feel about urban change (Topic 6.9).
Urban growth in U.S. metro areas after WWII often meant suburban expansion paired with inner-city decline, a pattern the 2017 FRQ tested directly.
Urban growth is the increase in a city's population and physical size, driven by rural-to-urban migration, natural increase, economic development, and government policies. It's central to Unit 6, especially Topic 6.1 on the origins and influences of urbanization.
No. Urban growth measures the absolute increase in city population or area, while urbanization measures the rising percentage of people living in urban areas. A city can experience urban growth even in a country whose urbanization rate has plateaued.
The CED lists five drivers: changes in transportation and communication, population growth, migration, economic development, and government policies (EK PSO-6.A.2). A city's site and situation also shape its origin, function, and growth potential.
Urban growth is the overall increase in a city's population and size, while urban sprawl is a specific low-density, car-dependent pattern of outward expansion. Sprawl is one possible form urban growth can take, not a synonym for it.
No. In many U.S. metro areas after WWII, growth happened in the suburbs while inner cities actually declined due to deindustrialization and suburbanization, a pattern the 2017 FRQ asked about directly.
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