, California
Dearborn, Michigan has the highest concentration of Arab Americans in the United States, at over 40%. The rest of
Metro Detroit has an even larger population of Lebanese residents.
Brooklyn, New York has one of the oldest Lebanese populations in America, dating over 125 years; one large center is in the
Bay Ridge section. Once predominantly Christian, the Lebanese in Bay Ridge are today equally split between Muslims and Christians.
South Paterson,
New Jersey historically had a large Lebanese Christian population dating back to the 1890s, but only a few remain, and the neighborhood has largely been replaced by
Palestinian immigrants. Brooklyn holds a significant Lebanese community, with a Maronite Cathedral the center of one of two eparchies for Maronite Lebanese in the United States, the other being in Los Angeles. Lebanese Americans are categorized as White for census purposes. Lebanese Festival The
Arab American Institute reports the top five states where Lebanese Americans reside are: Michigan (11%), California (9%), Ohio (6%), Florida (6%), and Massachusetts (5%). As the oldest and most well-established immigrant community among Arab Americans, Lebanese Americans represent a sizable majority of Middle Eastern Americans, counting at roughly 35% of all Middle Eastern Americans in the
2020 census. Despite this, the rapid growth of other Arab communities has displaced them as the largest Middle Easterner community in most urban areas (with notable exceptions such as
Phoenix,
Miami, and
Detroit), and they now represent the majority of (and sometimes the only) Arab communities in most of rural and suburban America instead, also making them the least dense Arab community in the United States. ==Notable people==