No cities meet the criteria for “Poorest Cities in Greece”
Understand that a strict, city-level list titled “Poorest Cities in Greece” returns no clear results. Official poverty statistics rarely report comparable poverty rates for individual cities. National sources and EU surveys give data by region or by municipality with limits on small-area reliability.
Know that the metric you choose matters. Agencies such as ELSTAT, Eurostat, and the OECD publish at-risk-of-poverty rates, median disposable income, and unemployment mainly at national, regional (NUTS2) or broad municipal levels. City boundaries and population sizes change, sample sizes are small, and data protection rules suppress many city-level estimates, so a reliable, sourced Top 15 of “poorest cities” does not exist.
Consider close alternatives that do exist and are useful. Look at poorest municipalities by taxable income or median income, regional (NUTS2) poverty and unemployment maps from Eurostat, and city neighborhood studies by universities or NGOs. Explore regional poverty rankings, municipal income lists, unemployment rate tables, or the EU-SILC and ELSTAT datasets instead.


