One of the most diverse cities in the state of Michigan
With a population of around 87,000, Troy combines a white majority of European descent with significant Asian, Arab, and Indian communities, reflecting decades of skilled immigration.
Troy's population is approximately 87,000 and has grown steadily over recent decades. The ethnic composition is among the most diverse in Michigan: a white majority of European descent, alongside a strong presence of South, East, and Southeast Asian residents, as well as Arab communities from Lebanon, Iraq, and Syria, who arrived through the metropolitan Detroit area's long tradition of immigrant settlement.
English is the dominant language, but Mandarin, Hindi, Gujarati, Telugu, Arabic, and Korean can be heard regularly in markets, temples, and schools. The city's median household income is above the state average, with a strong concentration of professionals in engineering, information technology, finance, and healthcare. The population is, on average, more educated and older than the Michigan average.
Religious diversity is visible: traditional Catholic and Protestant churches coexist with Hindu temples, Sikh gurdwaras, mosques, Chaldean Orthodox churches, and Buddhist temples. This plurality is reflected in the public schools, where calendars recognize holidays from multiple traditions, and in the specialty grocery stores that have spread throughout the city.
- English
- Mandarin
- Hindi
- Arabic
- Korean
- +2 more
- Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, Chaldean Orthodox)
- Hinduism
- Islam
- Sikhism
- Buddhism
- +1 more