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Highest Poverty in Uruguay

Top 58 cities ranked by highest poverty

Highest Poverty — Uruguay

1 Florida 07 0.2%
2 Young 12 0.2%
3 Dolores 17 0.2%
4 Delta del Tigre 16 0.2%
5 Carmelo 04 0.2%
6 Canelones 02 0.2%
7 La Paz 02 0.2%
8 Trinidad 06 0.2%
10 Fray Bentos 12 0.2%
11 Pando 02 0.2%
12 Rocha 14 0.2%
13 Treinta y Tres 19 0.2%
14 San Carlos 09 0.2%
15 Barros Blancos 02 0.2%
16 Santa Lucía 02 0.2%
17 Durazno 05 0.2%
18 San José de Mayo 16 0.2%
19 Minas 08 0.2%
20 Artigas 01 0.2%
21 Mercedes 17 0.2%
22 Melo 03 0.2%
23 Tacuarembó 18 0.2%
24 Maldonado 09 0.2%
25 Rivera 13 0.2%
26 Las Piedras 02 0.2%
27 Paysandú 11 0.2%
28 Salto 15 0.2%
29 Montevideo 10 0.2%
30 Salinas 02 0.2%
31 José Pedro Varela 08 0.2%
32 Barra de Carrasco 02 0.2%
33 Atlántida 02 0.2%
34 Sauce 02 0.2%
35 Sarandí Grande 07 0.2%
36 Joaquín Suárez 02 0.2%
37 Pan de Azúcar 09 0.2%
38 Tarariras 04 0.2%
39 Lascano 14 0.2%
40 San Ramón 02 0.2%
41 Sarandí del Yi 05 0.2%
42 Tranqueras 13 0.2%
43 Castillos 14 0.2%
44 Piriápolis 09 0.2%
45 Guichón 11 0.2%
46 Colonia Nicolich 02 0.2%
47 Punta del Este 09 0.2%
48 Chui 14 0.2%
49 Nueva Palmira 04 0.2%
50 Nueva Helvecia 04 0.2%
51 Rosario 04 0.2%
52 Libertad 16 0.2%
53 Bella Unión 01 0.2%
54 Juan L. Lacaze 04 0.2%
55 Paso de los Toros 18 0.2%
56 Río Branco 03 0.2%
57 Paso de Carrasco 02 0.2%
58 Progreso 02 0.2%

Cities with the highest poverty rates in Uruguay face deep economic challenges affecting a significant portion of their population. Florida has a poverty rate of 0.2%.

High poverty rates impact communities in multiple ways: reduced access to healthcare and healthy food, lower educational outcomes, higher crime rates, and deteriorating infrastructure. These challenges are interconnected and require comprehensive solutions.

Addressing poverty in these cities requires a multi-pronged approach including economic development, affordable housing, quality education, healthcare access, and workforce training programs targeting underserved populations.

Did You Know?

  • 1. In Florida, 0.2% of residents — roughly 1 in 100 people — live below the poverty line.
  • 2. Child poverty rates in these cities are often even higher than the overall rate, sometimes exceeding 40%.
  • 3. Poverty is measured by household income relative to family size — the threshold varies from $15,060 for an individual to $31,200 for a family of four.

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