Historically, this status was derived from a city's possession of a
city charter, but
city rights are now granted and regulated by statute. In the modern era, the status was first conferred on 24 February 1843, when seven of the eight cities that had previously been granted charters were reinstated as cities (
Clervaux was not). They were (in the order given in the law):
Luxembourg City,
Diekirch,
Grevenmacher,
Echternach,
Wiltz,
Vianden, and
Remich. For over sixty years, no more cities were added, but the vast demographic shift during the last part of the nineteenth century made it impossible to leave the arrangements unchanged. Thus, on 29 May 1906,
Esch-sur-Alzette was promoted; Esch was followed by
Differdange,
Dudelange,
Ettelbruck, and
Rumelange on 4 August 1907. An area of the (now extinct) commune of
Hollerich was conferred the title on 7 April 1914, under the title of Hollerich-
Bonnevoie; this status was lost when Hollerich was merged into Luxembourg City on 26 March 1920. The last such statute affecting city status in Luxembourg was the
Loi communale du 13 décembre 1988. In the order outlined in that legislation (i.e. alphabetical, except with Luxembourg City first), the twelve communes with city status are: Luxembourg City, Diekirch, Differdange, Dudelange, Echternach, Esch-sur-Alzette, Ettelbruck, Grevenmacher, Remich, Rumelange, Vianden, and Wiltz. In spite of their city status, some of the municipalities are very small and more like villages or small towns. There are also municipalities without city status that have more inhabitants than several of the official cities (especially in the Luxembourg City and
Red Lands urban areas, but also elsewhere, such as
Mersch). Apart from the capital, Luxembourg City, which is a city with now over 135,000 inhabitants, only the three or five next largest municipalities (Esch-sur-Alzette, Differdange, Dudelange, plus possibly Ettelbruck and Diekirch) have long been urbanised enough to be described as cities. However, most municipalities are now growing with the continuously high figures of immigration to Luxembourg. There is a town planning project that aims at developing Ettelbruck, Diekirch and four bordering municipalities into a new centre called
Nordstad ("North City") with an expected population of 30,000. In 2026, responding to a parliamentary inquiry from
DP deputy André Bauler, Internal Affairs minister
Léon Gloden (himself the former mayor of
Grevenmacher, a commune with city status) stated that there were no plans to grant new communes the city title or to establish formal conditions for the title. He cited the fact that the title carries with it no added value, and that the government's priority was to encourage commune mergers. == List of cities ==