Biggest Native American tribes in the U.S. today

Published 6:00 am Saturday, November 6, 2021

Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Biggest Native American tribes in the U.S. today

It’s commonly believed that Native American origins reach far back to late in the Ice Age when the first humans ventured across the Bering Strait and into what is now North America. Over time, they dispersed across the continent and into South America, establishing distinct tribes, territories, and cultures. Some Native American tribes believe humans were always here, and many researchers are confident waves of people arrived at different times and by different means.

When Christopher Columbus and other explorers sailed to North America, they sought to colonize the Native Americans’ territory and claim it as their own. Through decades of wars and treaties, Native Americans have had a complicated, painful history with European colonists. As they were experts of the North American landscape and its resources, Native Americans were able to build a strong economy based on trade with the Europeans. But as colonial presence grew and “Manifest Destiny” rhetoric set in, Native Americans had trouble living on the land they had known for generations in the face of widespread westward expansion. In 1830, President Andrew Jackson passed the Indian Removal Act, leading to many tribes being forced from their ancestral lands and pushed west onto reservations. Though some customs and traditions have been lost to colonization, war, and missionary efforts, many tribes still maintain a unique identity that honors their rich ancestral history.

In celebration of the robust history of North America’s ancestral people, Stacker used 2019 estimates from the Census, the most comprehensive recent population report on the United States’ Native American population, to compile a list of 42 of the largest Native American tribes in the country today. As of the 2010 Census, there are about 1.6 million Native Americans total living in the United States. The tribes are ranked based on the number of people who identify as a member of this tribe alone or in any combination. For example, someone who is Cherokee and white would be included in the Cherokee population. The list also includes people who identify as each tribe in combination with other Native American groups (e.g., Apache and Navajo) as well as people who identify solely as a member of one Native American tribe. Native American groups unconnected to specific tribes (e.g., Mexican American Indian, Canadian and French American Indian) are not included in this list. Read ahead to dive into the rich culture of the country’s most prominent Native American tribes.

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#42. Tsimshian (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 4,728
– Tribe alone: 2,359

The Tsimshians reside in the Northwest coast along the Nass and Skeena Rivers as well as in nearby areas of British Columbia. They were heavily involved in the fur trade with Europeans starting in the 1700s, eventually founding the large trade town of Fort Simpson. Today, the tribe relies on salmon fishing as the main form of sustenance and trade.

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#41. Cree

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 10,672
– Tribe alone: 2,414

With a wide reach from northern Ontario to Montana, the Cree were also highly successful in the fur trade. They used their influence to gain economic and political influence amongst other tribes. The tribe is much more populous in Canada than in the U.S.

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#40. Yuman

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 11,817
– Tribe alone: 8,129

The Yuman live primarily in the Southwest United States and western Mexico, spanning from western Arizona to Southern California and down the Baja Peninsula. The origins of the name of their tribe draw from the name of their tribal language: Hokan. Though it’s their common language that unites the Yuman’s many tribes, they have a combative history and maintain a separate identity from each other.

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#39. Yakama

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 11,978
– Tribe alone: 8,334

Officially named Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, the Yakama Nation comprises 14 different bands. The Yakama Nation occupies the Columbia Plateau in south-central Washington. The unique location of the Columbia Plateau provided isolation from European influence, resulting in a well-preserved indigenous culture.

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#38. Arapaho

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 12,364
– Tribe alone: 8,449

The Arapaho comprise two separate tribes: the Northern Arapaho in Wyoming and the Southern Arapaho in Oklahoma. Their home in the plains became a battlefield of conflict for European settlers moving west seeking to strike it big during the gold rush.

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#37. Colville

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 12,843
– Tribe alone: 8,957

The Colville are a tribe that make up the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation along with the Lakes, Okanogan, Moses-Columbia, Wenatchi, Entiat, Chelan, Methow, Nespelem, Sanpoil, Chief Joseph Band of Nez Perce, and Palus Indians. The Colville Reservation spans from southwestern Canada to the Idaho/Oregon border. The tribes on this reservation move throughout the land depending on the season in a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.

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#36. Ottawa

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 13,866
– Tribe alone: 6,295

The name “Ottawa” originates from the word “adawe,” meaning to trade, so it’s easy to guess what this tribe’s strength was. Originally claiming territory around the coastal areas of the lower peninsula of Michigan, the tribe has since moved to reservations in Kansas and Oklahoma and parts of Ontario. Along with trade, the Ottawa were highly skilled fishermen, primarily using nets in the bodies of water within the Great Lakes region.

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#35. Menominee

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 14,290
– Tribe alone: 9,495

Residing in the Midwest in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Illinois, the Menominee have a legacy of being experts in agriculture and trapping. However, in current times, they have come up against many hardships since the reservation period. With the depletion of government funding leading to a lack of vital resources for the community, the tribe struggles to maintain its robust culture.

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#34. Kiowa

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 14,603
– Tribe alone: 8,196

The Kiowa where fierce horseback warriors, becoming one of the most prominent tribes in the plains region. Eventually, the Kiowa allied with the Comanche and Apache tribes and their alliance dominated the southwestern plains. They have preserved their native language after which their tribe is named and continue to teach it in their schools.

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#33. Ute

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 14,958
– Tribe alone: 9,486

The Ute are masters at adapting to the characteristics of their territory. The Western Ute in Utah retained the traditional Great Basin lifestyle, while the Eastern Ute in Colorado and New Mexico took on the equestrian, trade-based plains lifestyle. The infiltration of the Mormons to the Great Basin in 1849 resulted in two wars—the Walker War and the Black Hawk War—that resulted in the displacement of the Western Ute.

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#32. Houma

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 16,315
– Tribe alone: 10,033

Closely related to the Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Chakchiuma tribes, the Houma reside mostly in Louisiana. During the French Period (1699–1766), the Houma allied themselves with Louisiana, thriving through trade. However, throughout time, the Houma have had to battle with the effects of environmental change, reclaiming their native language, and maintaining a robust population.

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#31. Crow

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 18,285
– Tribe alone: 11,812

The Crow people refer to themselves as Absaroka, meaning “Children of the Large Beaked Bird.” For 10,000 years they have lived in Bighorn Canyon and gain much of their identity through living in the valley of the Bighorn River and the Bighorn Mountains. During the Indian Wars, the Crow allied with the U.S. government, and in turn, were allowed to keep their sacred lands and live peacefully in Bighorn Canyon.

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#30. Shoshone

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 18,581
– Tribe alone: 10,802

The Shoshone have lived primarily by the lifestyle of the plains since their acquisition of horses in the late 1600s. The tribe lives off of hunting both large and small game—from buffalo to fish—and agriculture. As with most plains lifestyle tribes, the Shoshone celebrate the Sun Dance which symbolizes the renewal of the people and the land.

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#29. Paiute

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 19,832
– Tribe alone: 12,966

The Paiute live in the Great Basin and are accustomed to frequently moving from season to season following animal migration patterns and harvest seasons in groups of three to five households. This tribe is often associated with Jack Wilson, the Northern Paiute Mystic who began the Ghost Dance movement that hoped to bring peace between settlers and Native Americans.

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#28. Cheyenne

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 21,728
– Tribe alone: 11,171

The Cheyenne are a tribe of the Great Plains and are closely related to the Arapaho. Living in both Montana and Oklahoma with inhospitable weather for crops, the tribe adopted a hunter-gatherer lifestyle and moved throughout the plains often. Indigenous musical styles and songs play a large part in Cheyenne culture, and the tribe has maintained the tradition through to current times.

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#27. Puget Sound Salish

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 24,206
– Tribe alone: 14,850

The Puget Sound Salish are composed of around 10,000 groups, including the Duwamish, Muckleshoot, and Nisqually. Originally in the northwestern coastal region, their diet mostly comprised shellfish, salmon, and berries. The Salish are accomplished woodworkers, building their dwellings from wood and practicing wood carving.

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#26. Osage

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 24,242
– Tribe alone: 9,085

Another great tribe of the plains, the Osage are one tribe of the Dhegiha Sioux including the Kaw, Omaha, Ponca, and Quapaw tribes. They hold the legacy of a strong military force and a skill for making beautiful crafts composed of beadwork, weaving, and silver metalwork.

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#25. Aleut (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 24,656
– Tribe alone: 13,677

Arriving in the Aleutian Islands from mainland Alaska in 2000 B.C.E., the Aleut are culturally and linguistically related to the Eskimo people. The Aleut were highly creative in living in a harsh climate and created unique semi-subterranean living structures that had roofs of sod supported by rafters made from driftwood and whalebone.

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#24. Delaware

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 24,847
– Tribe alone: 8,048

The Lenni Lenape or Delaware people originally lived along the Delaware River in New Jersey. They speak a dialect of the Algonquian language and are related to the Miami, Ottawa, and Shawnee tribes. Upon the arrival of British colonists, the Delaware were forced from their land and have since settled primarily in Oklahoma.

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#23. Hopi

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 25,438
– Tribe alone: 17,164

In northeastern Arizona, the Hopi live by the belief in being peaceful and humble farmers, respectful of the land and its resources. The westernmost of the Pueblo Indian tribes, the Hopi are the only tribe to speak a Shoshonean language of the Uzo-Aztecan tribes. Their villages have a distinct design with homes built of native stone and arranged in a circle surrounding a kiva, or building used for traditional ceremonies.

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#22. Alaskan Athabascan (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 28,720
– Tribe alone: 17,461

The Athabascan of the interior Alaskan and Canadian region faced harsh climate conditions and would sometimes have to battle against famine. They made up for their lack of agricultural sustenance with their hunting prowess that they used to track caribou. The Athabascan then traded the pelts with neighboring tribes along with their much-prized beaded skins.

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#21. Comanche

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 29,325
– Tribe alone: 12,268

Allied with the Kiowa in the plains, the Comanche’s life was predicated on the movements of great bison herds. Like many nomadic plains tribes, the Comanche lived in tipis they made from bison skins. They also became skilled at breaking wild horses and domesticating them for tribal use.

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#20. Tlingit-Haida (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 30,878
– Tribe alone: 15,160

The Tlingit Nation and Haida Nation exist as two separate and distinct entities, but both nations live in southeast Alaska. Both the Tlingit and Haida take pride in cultivating and harvesting resources from both land and sea in a responsible, sustainable manner.

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#19. Pima

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 30,965
– Tribe alone: 24,121

Originally named “Akimel O’odham,” meaning river people, the Pima got their modern name from the Spanish. They live along the Gila and Salt Rivers near Phoenix, Arizona, and speak the Pima language of the Aztecan branch of the Aztec-Tanoan linguistic family.

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#18. Tohono O’odham

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 32,910
– Tribe alone: 25,996

The Tohono O’odham have territory spanning from Sonora, Mexico, to central Arizona. Having territory that straddles two countries has proven difficult for modern Tohono O’odham to practice their migratory rituals. It has prevented many from being able to move freely within their land and visit spiritual sites and visit other members.

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#17. Seminole

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 41,411
– Tribe alone: 14,229

The Seminole are descendants of the Creek and Lamar cultures of Alabama and Georgia but eventually migrated to Florida. The name “Seminole” was given to the Florida Native Americans in the 1770s, meaning “runaways.”

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#16. Potawatomi

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 43,481
– Tribe alone: 21,297

The Potawatomi are an Algonkian-speaking tribe closely related to the Ottawa and the Ojibwa. The tribe lived seasonally, moving between different villages during winter and summer and shifting crops based on the season. Spirituality was very important to the Potawatomi and villages included shamans and other types of diviners.

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#15. Iñupiat (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 45,131
– Tribe alone: 30,307

The Inupiat reside within the harsh arctic climate of Alaska and have developed expert hunting and fishing skills because of the scarcity of foraging food in the region. They mostly eat whale, caribou, fish, and roots. The Inupiat are also part of the larger Inuit culture in Alaska.

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#14. Yup’ik (Alaska Native)

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 46,086
– Tribe alone: 37,350

The Yup’ik are part of the Asiatic Eskimo group who live on the Chukotka Peninsula in northeastern Siberia. They survive mostly on sea mammals, fish, and birds. Their land and its resources provide for a large part of their culture. Its isolated location has allowed them to maintain most of their ancient tribal customs.

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#13. Yaqui

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 50,821
– Tribe alone: 28,348

The Yaqui are native to the Sonoran Desert in what is now Mexico. They belong to the Cahita Subgroup along with the Mayo, whom they share a language with. The Yaqui lived primarily off of crops such as maize, beans, and cotton, but also supplemented their crops with hunting and foraging.

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#12. Chickasaw

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 72,440
– Tribe alone: 27,699

In 1855, the Chickasaw separated from the Choctaw Nation and created their own autonomous nation. The Chickasaw then migrated to what is now Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama, and Tennessee and gained the name “Spartans of the Lower Mississippi Valley” until they were forced to move to Oklahoma.

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#11. Pueblo

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 81,374
– Tribe alone: 61,221

Named after the iconic houses that they made from stone, adobe, and wood, the Pueblo live in the southwest Mesa Verde region. They have gained a reputation for being a peaceful people who thrive in the arts, making beautiful paintings and pottery that have earned high prices in the global art world.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP // Getty Images

#10. Lumbee

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 94,755
– Tribe alone: 75,903

The Lumbee Tribe resides near the swamps in the eastern corner of North Carolina and is named for the Lumbee River. The tribe moved to this location in the 1700s to escape war and disease that was manifesting on the Carolina coast. The area became a respite for other tribes, some whites, and free blacks, resulting in a very diverse culture.

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#9. Creek

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 108,368
– Tribe alone: 44,041

The Creek, like the Iroquois or the Puget Sound Salish, are a nation composed of many tribes that are held together by a sophisticated political structure. The Creek, or Muscogee, Nation are probably best known for their traditional semi-subterranean pyramid buildings they built along the river in what is now Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina.

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#8. Iroquois

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 114,568
– Tribe alone: 47,230

The Iroquois was originally a confederacy of five North American tribes, including the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca, with the sixth tribe, the Tuscarora, joining in 1712. All six tribes are united by languages in the Iroquoian language family. They were known as great farmers, even creating a drying method when there were surplus crop years to preserve food for the winter. Though the modern Iroquois no longer continue their tradition of farming, their traditional festivals and ceremonies associated with planting and harvesting have been preserved.

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#7. Apache

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 150,120
– Tribe alone: 74,702

Because of constant conflicts with westward settlers, the Apache became well known for their fierce warriors. They were mostly friendly with neighboring tribes and often spent winter seasons with the Pueblos. It was from this relationship with the Pueblos the Apache were introduced to horses and became known as skilled riders that raided neighboring tribes and lived nomadically.

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#6. Blackfeet

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 159,394
– Tribe alone: 29,575

Thought to be one of the first tribes to be pushed from their ancient home in the Great Lakes region, the name “Blackfeet” is thought to be derived from the soles of their moccasins after their relocation to what was to be their new home in Montana. The disappearance of buffalo had a big impact on the tribe’s food resources but also on their spiritual culture. Today, the Blackfeet are working alongside neighboring tribes to preserve the buffalo population.

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#5. Sioux

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 207,684
– Tribe alone: 118,850

Known for their strong hunting and warrior culture, the Sioux live in North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, and Montana as well as Canada. They are best known in recent times for the protest against the building of the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock Indian Reservation. The media coverage of the protests mobilized a flood of supporters who made the journey to stand with the Sioux at Standing Rock.

TORSTEN BLACKWOOD/AFP // Getty Images

#4. Chippewa

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 214,026
– Tribe alone: 119,229

Also known as the Ojibwa or Anishinaabe people, the Chippewa are closely related to the Ottawa, Potawatomi, and other Algonquian-speaking tribes. Historically, they lived around Lake Superior and, for the most part, have remained. The Chippewa were highly involved in the fur trade with the French and often intermarried with French fur traders.

Tony Webster // Wikimedia Commons

#3. Choctaw

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 255,677
– Tribe alone: 100,605

The Choctaw are historically from Mississippi and parts of Alabama, but they were one of the first of the five great southern tribes to be relocated to Oklahoma on the Trail of Tears. Though the tribe has come up against many outside influences—including incoming settlers and missionaries—the Choctaw have attempted to maintain their traditions. The Choctaw culture remains unique in that it highly values women and assigns them the head of every family household.

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#2. Navajo

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 399,567
– Tribe alone: 332,389

One of the most widely recognized and the second-largest tribe, the Navajo live in the Southwest across Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. Close relatives to the Apache, the Navajo created an architecture that resembled the Pueblos’ but included multi-room structures that were intended to defend the tribe from outsiders. Because the tribe had a unique language, the U.S. used the Navajo language to create a secret code in World War II.

Jerome Pollos // Getty Images

#1. Cherokee

– Tribe alone or in any combination: 1,116,990
– Tribe alone: 292,555

It’s the Cherokee who hold the place as the largest tribe in the United States. Descendents of the Iroquois, the Cherokee eventually took on a lot of European customs and often intermarried with them. This included adopting European clothes, farming methods, and architecture, which has created a melting-pot culture that the tribe maintains today.

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