No towns meet the strict criteria for “Nebraska – Wyoming Bordering Towns.”
Note the search asks for towns that sit directly on or within one mile of the Nebraska–Wyoming state line. Set that rule and you get no matches. The border runs through very rural land. Municipal limits on both sides stop short of the line. Expect ranches, crossroads and county roads, but not incorporated towns that meet the definition for Nebraska – Wyoming Bordering Towns.
Understand why this happens. State lines are survey lines and rarely follow roads or town plats. Towns form where rail stops, water, and highways lie — not on exact survey lines. The Nebraska Panhandle and eastern Wyoming are lightly settled. Local governments usually place town limits well inside one state. That makes a zero-result list for the precise keyword both logical and predictable.
Consider close alternatives that do exist. Look for small unincorporated settlements, ranch headquarters, and towns a few miles from the border. Check county seats and highway towns just inland on either side. Use county maps, state DOT maps, or the GNIS database to find near-border places. If your goal is travel or research, search for “towns near the Nebraska–Wyoming border,” “Panhandle border towns,” or “unincorporated communities along NE–WY county line” to find useful nearby places.


