Working-class city with growing diversity
Green Bay is predominantly white, but Hmong, Latino, and Somali communities are growing rapidly. The Oneida and Menominee Nations are close neighbors.
Green Bay has approximately 106,000 residents, with a historically white population of Belgian, German, Polish, and French origin. In recent decades, Latinos (mostly Mexican), Hmong, Somali, and Congolese communities arrived in distinct waves and changed the city's demographic profile.
The Oneida Nation reservation is located just to the west, within the metropolitan area, with a strong presence in cultural life and employment at Oneida Casino. The Menominee Nation is farther north. Brazilians are few, generally connected to hospitality, agribusiness, and partnerships with locals.
Most of the city is Christian, with a strong Catholic presence (Belgian and Polish parishes), Lutherans, and Evangelicals. Growing communities have brought mosques, Buddhist temples, and Hispanic Pentecostal churches. The age profile is relatively young, driven by the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay and young families.
- English
- Spanish
- Hmong
- Somali
- Oneida (in community use)
- Catholicism
- Lutherans
- Evangelicals
- Islam
- No religion