Skip to content
 

What Is a Frontier Community?

Yes, the American frontier still exists!

Map of Frontier Counties in America

Photo from Rural Health Information Hub

Frontier counties (marked in green) are often defined as having a population density of fewer than six people per square mile.

According to the National Center for Frontier Communities, “Frontier America consists of sparsely populated areas that are geographically isolated from population centers and services. Frontier, like rural, suburban, or urban, is a term intended to categorize a portion of the population continuum. Frontier refers to the most remote end of that continuum (in some states the wilderness designation is considered most remote).”

Click on the image to learn how to order or download this free publication. 

“Unfortunately, there is not a single universally-accepted definition of frontier,” notes the Rural Health Information Hub. “Definitions of frontier used for state and federal programs vary, depending on the purpose of the project being researched or funded. While frontier is often defined as counties having a population density of six or fewer people per square mile, this simple definition does not take into account other important factors that may isolate a community. Therefore, preferred definitions are more complex and address isolation by considering distance in miles and travel time in minutes to services.”

The National Rural Health Association identifies several factors to consider in classifying an area as frontier. The following conditions, explains the association, “may cause significant problems in access to health services, create poor economic opportunities and other conditions causing health and social disparities.” 

  • population density
  • distance from a population center or specific service
  • travel time to reach a population center or service
  • functional association with other places
  • service or market area
  • availability of paved roads
  • travel inhibiting weather
  • seasonal changes in access to services

“Rural is typically defined ... as ‘non-metropolitan’ or ‘non-urban.’ This doesn’t tell us much. Perhaps due to this lack of precision and our nation’s agrarian roots, people still commonly equate rural with agriculture, fields of corn, cows and hardscrabble farmers. This is not only inaccurate; it is wide of the mark. From vibrant college towns to communities gone bust from the flight of paper mills or coal mines, from hopping cultural tourism locales to centers of furniture, machinery and textile manufacturing, rural America is anything but simply farmland, and it is anything but uniform.”

The Aspen Institute Community Strategies Group, “Rural Development Hubs: Strengthening America’s Rural Innovation Infrastructure” (November 2019)

Stay Informed — For Free! See Past Issues

The weekly, award-winning AARP Livable Communities e-Newsletter provides local leaders with information and inspiration for making their town, city or neighborhood more livable for older adults and people of all agesSubscribe today!

Our Free Publications!

See the complete list at AARP.org/LivableLibrary

Follow Us

Contact Us

 
  • Email AARP Livable Communities at Livable@AARP.org.

  • Ask about the AARP Livability Index by completing this online form.

  • AARP Members: For questions about your benefits, AARP The Magazine or the AARP Bulletin, visit the AARP Contact Us page or call 1-888-OUR-AARP (1-888-687-2277).