No authoritative list exists for “Poorest Cities in Trinidad and Tobago.”
Understand that this search returns nothing because official data are not published as a simple, ranked list of cities by poverty. Note that Trinidad and Tobago reports social and economic data by larger administrative units — regional corporations, municipalities, or constituencies — and by household surveys. Define your metric first (poverty rate, income, or multidimensional poverty) before expecting a reliable city-level ranking.
Understand the technical reasons for this gap. City boundaries and names vary, sample sizes for surveys are too small for many individual cities, and agencies aggregate data to protect privacy and accuracy. Use trusted sources such as the Trinidad & Tobago CSO, World Bank, and CARICOM for regional or household-level data instead of a city ranking. Near matches include poverty rates by region or municipal corporation, unemployment and median-income tables by area, and household-survey maps.
Consider these ready alternatives. Look for ranked lists of regions or regional corporations (for example, Port of Spain, San Fernando, Chaguanas are municipal units often used in reports), constituency- or community-level poverty maps, unemployment rates by area, or multidimensional poverty analyses. Check the CSO’s regional reports, World Bank and CARICOM profiles, and recent household surveys — and always show the year and the metric used. Instead of a city list, explore region/municipality rankings and official CSO reports.

