Houston may have fallen out of the top 50 in this year’s World’s Best Cities list-but the Bayou City isn’t backing down.
The 2026 rankings from Resonance Consultancy, a global advisory firm that evaluates cities on livability, culture, economic strength, and overall appeal, placed Houston at No. 58 worldwide, slightly down from last year but still outperforming many global peers.
2026 World’s Best Cities
1  London  Â
2   New York  Â
3   Paris  Â
4   Tokyo  Â
5   Madrid  Â
6   Singapore Â
7   Rome Â
8   Dubai Â
9   Berlin  Â
10   Barcelona Â
11   Sydney  Â
12   Los Angeles Â
13   Seoul Â
14   Amsterdam  Â
15 Â Â BeijingÂ
The study looked at hundreds of global metros with more than a million residents, grading them on factors like livability, culture, prosperity and appeal.
The consulting firm credited Houston for its “economic gravity,” highlighting its 16th-place ranking among large companies and 19th-place ranking for economic output, both signs of the city’s continued draw for corporate relocations and job growth.
“Houston keeps defying gravity,” the report notes. The metro added nearly 200,000 residents last year, pushing its population above 7.8 million. Chevron’s move of its headquarters from California to Houston, supported by $100 million in renovations, caps a wave of relocations fueled by record 2024 Port Houston throughput of more than four million containers and a projected 71,000 new jobs in 2025. Meanwhile, the city’s No. 37 Standard of Living ranking continues to climb.
Among Texas cities, Houston still led the pack on overall economic measures, finishing ahead of Dallas (No. 78) and Austin (No. 87). Dallas earned praise for its global airport connectivity, while Austin scored high for innovation but fell on affordability.
Still, those same factors that make Houston an economic magnet aren’t translating to global appeal.
The city landed outside the top 150 in livability measures, pulled down by its 174th-place ranking for quality of life-a category that includes transportation, cost of living and access to green space. Houston also ranked 48th for “lovability,” which tracks culture, dining, nightlife and social media buzz.
That mix of strengths and weaknesses places Houston between Washington, D.C. and Auckland, New Zealand on this year’s global list-still competitive but edged out by cities investing heavily in public infrastructure, culture and housing affordability.
For now, Houston’s global reputation rests where it’s always been strongest: business, energy and growth. But keeping up with cities that balance prosperity and livability may be the next big challenge.
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This article originally published at Houston slides in global list, still outshines Dallas and Austin.