Virginia Beach landed on the top spot of cities where African Americans fare best economically and where Black businesses thrive.
www.washingtoninformer.com
According to the personal finance website Smart Asset, Virginia Beach also has the seventh-highest median Black household income, at roughly $65,600, and the sixth-highest Black labor force participation rate, at 78.7 percent.
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I'm gonna continue to advocate for Virginia Beach as one of the very best cities for black people in America. The national black mhi is ~$45,000---->VIRGINIA BEACH IS OVER 40% HIGHER THAN THAT!
Top 10 in median household income and labor participation rate. Top 10 primary education district in Virginia (Virginia Beach City School District). Only behind Philly and Detroit in black homeownership rate (43.9%). No large city is "cheap" to live especially on the coasts, but VB isn't crazy expensive, black people can afford to live here...
And for those it matters to, weed is legal in Virginia

. And the city is right in the middle politically, not too far right or left...
Virginia Beach doesn't have a major university within city limits, but it has two things in its favor: a)branches of ODU and VT within the city, in addition to several smaller colleges; and b)it is in VIRGINIA, a Top 10 state in primary education and Top 12 in higher education. This means a black child growing up in The Beach not only grows up within one of the strongest school districts in VA, that child has access to all of higher education infrastructure of the entire Commonwealth...
The city is 18-19% black in a city of ~460,000 people, comfortably above national average, so community is here. Virginia Beach is pretty integrated, which I think is a plus, but not intensely so the way Sac is which is a minus as we have no black majority neighborhood in Sac and few plurality black neighborhoods---->The Beach itself has just one majority black neighborhood, and only four neighborhoods that are plurality Black:
•Campus East, 65.7%, mhi $69,343
•Level Green/College Park, 48.7%, mhi $65,247
•Boulevard Manor, 39.3% (not the greatest neighborhood but not completely fukked up, mhi is below city average for black people)
•Lake Edward/Baker, 38.6% (this is the hood though and not anywhere you'd suggest someone with resources to go better to move, but I'm listing it solely for the purpose of it being a hood where black people are the largest demo)
But the typical Beach neighborhood on the NW and SW sides where most black folk are, is between 20-25% black and integrated among other groups, there aren't many majority-anybody hoods in NWVB or SWVB. That integration provides a balanced cultural education for black people growing up and living in VB, who experience the spectrum of living around others...
So community is here, and just to contextualize the contrast, Norfolk has around 25-26 plurality-to-majority black neighborhoods compared to VB's 4, and only one on the level of Campus East or Level Green ($60k-plus mhi)---->that's Poplar Hall/Woodbine...
The Beach has one of the lowest black poverty rates of large cities (only 10% per the link), which correlates in part to VB's low rate of violent crime; the city is only at 19 homicides with 39 days left in '22, and this is a higher than average year in murders. Understanding that all 19 victims weren't black, in a city with over 82,000 black people, this trend true also of robbery and assaults are all much lower against black people in VB than almost everywhere...
In most cases the social life of The Beach and Nfk is intertwined, and to the extent of value of black social life, it's excellent here: black businesses in abundance, black events, places for Black people to go be around other black people.
Listen, I've lived in 14-15 cities across 7 states. I've been to 33 of the 50 states here and half of the major cities. I've been around, the greatest lived experience I've seem for black folk are Virginia Beach and Raleigh, with Charlotte a little behind...
I live in Raleigh. I lived in VB before here, and lived in Charlotte before there...
Ultimately, I plan on moving back to VB to live my life out in wonderful fashion once my daughters get a little older. I prefer it to anywhere I've ever lived, including Raleigh where I'm at now, and have grown to love itself. If life happens and plans change and I end up stuck in Raleigh, it's certainly not the worst thing that could happen to me...
But I love Virginia Beach and it has as strong an argument as any city as being the best city for black people in the US!