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Home2022 New American City Flags Survey
The results are in!

Since 2015, hundreds of American cities and towns have adopted new or redesigned flags to represent their communities.  It is heartening to see this interest in flags.

In late 2022, NAVA asked its members and the public to rate the designs of 312 known flags (there are likely many more).  From September 1 to November 30, 2,852 people participated in the online survey: 308 NAVA members and 2,544 public participants.

They rated the design of each flag using a low-to-high scale of 0–10.  The numerical ratings for each flag were averaged and the average rating was converted to a letter grade, with grades ranging from F (lowest) to A+ (highest).


For full information on the survey results CLICK HERE.
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25 Highest-Rated New City Flags (A Grade)

[46 flags received A grades]

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Tulsa, Oklahoma

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Reno, Nevada

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Salem, Oregon

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Norman, Oklahoma

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Salt Lake City, Utah

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West Plains, Missouri

Wheeling, West Virginia

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Lincoln, Nebraska

Kingman, Kansas

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Springfield, Missouri

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Pocatello, Idaho

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Duluth, Minnesota

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Sunnyvale, Texas

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Yorba Linda, California

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South Bend, Indiana

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Madison, Wisconsin

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Topeka, Kansas

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Sioux Falls, South Dakota

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St. George, Utah

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Port Clinton, Ohio

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Newton, Kansas

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Cedar Rapids, Iowa

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Crystal, Minnesota

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Kennebunkport, Maine

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Riverside, California


25 Lowest-Rated New City Flags (F Grade)

[143 flags received F grades]

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Franklin, Wisconsin

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Gardner, Kansas

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Coal Valley Township, Illinois

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Westfield, Massachusetts

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Covington, Washington

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Spring Hill, Kansas

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Republic, Missouri

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Miami Township (Clermont Co.), Ohio

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Azle, Texas

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Odessa, Texas

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Holly Springs, Mississippi

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Richmond Heights, Missouri

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Richfield, Minnesota

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Woodland, Mississippi

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Oolitic, Indiana

Ballwin_MO.png

Ballwin, Missouri

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Balch Springs, Texas

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Springfield Township, Illinois

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Caldwell, Idaho

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Pontotoc, Mississippi

Belle_Glade_FL.png

Belle Glade, Florida

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Nitro, West Virginia

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Overland Park, Kansas

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Westhampton, Massachusetts

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Ranger, Texas



The overall average grade for the 312 flags included in the survey was a D+ (a rating of 3.65). 

Distribution by grade:
A: 46 flags  (15% of total)
B: 50 flags  (16% of total)
C: 24 flags  (8% of total)
D: 49 flags  (15% of total)
F: 143 flags  (46% of total)

Ratings by the public closely paralleled those by NAVA members, showing that both amateurs and experts alike can learn how to recognize a successful flag design.  The results are not a scientific analysis, but rather the cumulative judgment of a large group of people familiar with many flags and their uses.  Exact ratings are less important that the general grades.  

See a map of all cities showing the grades of their flags, plus full listings of the results (by city, by state, and by rating) HERE



NAVA itself does not judge flags; the opinions of its members and the public are reflected in the survey results.  NAVA supports flag design through its publications, such as "Good" Flag, "Bad" Flag, its members' own activities, and case studies and surveys.

A well-designed city flag can foster civic pride and community cohesion.  It can support the city's branding and promotion.  And a simpler flag usually costs the city and its residents less, leading to its broader use.

Designing a flag reflects “Form Follows Function”.

A flag’s usual purpose is to:
• represent a place, organization, or person,
• generally on a rectangular piece of cloth,
• to be seen at a distance, often moving, from both sides,
• and reproduced in quantity, and in many sizes.

This drives the basic principles of flag design:  simplicity, meaningful symbolism, few colors, no lettering or seals, and distinctiveness.

In most cases, a city flag should represent the entire city, not just the government.  Thus city-wide symbolism is preferred over a city seal or a city logo (government symbols).
These flags have been designed by professionals, by amateurs, by young and old, often with remarkable success.  Sometimes they have been commissioned by the city; often they are the result of a public competition.  NAVA applauds all efforts to advance and improve civic symbolism in the form of flags, and welcomes all interested in flags to join.

A large number of these new flags were likely inspired by municipal officials and their constituents watching the 2015 TED Talk by Roman Mars:  Why city flags may be the worst-designed thing you never noticed.  The talk, with 7 million views,  explains effective flag design, shows examples of city flags, and calls listeners to action.

This follows NAVA's previous survey of 150 American city flags in 2004.  Many low-rated flags in that survey have since been updated and rated in the current survey.  In fact, the city that scored last in 2004 (Pocatello, Idaho) changed its flag in 2017 and got an A grade this time around.


RESOURCES

For full information on the survey results CLICK HERE.


Also...

Download the reports (pdfs):
2022 New American City Flags Survey by City
2022 New American City Flags Survey by State
2022 New American City Flags Survey by Rating

Download all flag images as one batch (zip files):


For media inquiries, please contact media@nava.org.

We're happy to share the raw survey data with academics/researchers.  Please relay requests to NAVA's secretary.
Please send any research or analysis based on the survey results to us so that we may share it with the vexillological world.