Plymouth has officially secured the crown as the finest place to call home in the state.
According to the highly anticipated 2026 "Best Places to Live" rankings released (May 19th, 2026) by U.S. News & World Report, Plymouth placed #1 among all evaluated Minnesota cities. Nationally, the city locked in the #31 spot overall and climbed to #19 in the United States for Best Small Cities. The city of Maple Grove ranked closed second in Minnesota.
While several major metropolitan areas and legacy suburbs across Minnesota saw minor slips in this year's index due to shifting macroeconomic factors, Plymouth bucked the trend. The city’s strategic investments in infrastructure, stable tax base, and unmatched quality of life have solidified its position as the premier crown jewel of the West Metro.
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The Metrics Behind the Medal
The annual U.S. News & World Report rankings evaluate cities across four core categories: quality of life, value, job market strength, and overall desirability. Plymouth scored exceptionally high across all pillars, propelled by several local factors:
- Educational Dominance: The reputation of Wayzata Public Schools and Robbinsdale Area Schools continues to serve as a massive magnet for families, heavily padding the city's quality of life scores.
- Economic Resilience: Plymouth’s diverse business ecosystem—anchored by thriving medical technology, corporate hubs, and the newly opened Coborn’s lifestyle market—keeps local employment opportunities robust.
- Parks and Recreation Capital: The city's bold, ongoing "$135M Play It Forward" park referendum initiative signaled a heavy commitment to recreational infrastructure that caught national attention.
A Suburb in High Demand
Local real estate professionals note that national rankings like these mirror the intense demand seen on the ground. Despite higher interest rates compressing inventory across the Twin Cities, Plymouth homes continue to command premium valuations.
The ranking highlights a uniquely balanced ecosystem: a city that offers the quiet, trail-lined charm of the Medicine Lake ripple effect while maintaining the economic muscle of a major regional commercial hub.
As municipal leaders push forward with the 2050 Master Plan and navigate the active 2026 construction boom, this national recognition reinforces a simple truth known well by local residents: Plymouth isn't just growing—it is thriving.

What is your favorite part about living in Plymouth? Is it the trail systems, the schools, or our community events? Become a contributor and share your insights and perspectives with your West Metro neighbors.


Image Credit: U.S. News & World Report