United States
Christian-majority but rapidly secularizing — large evangelical (~25%), Catholic (~21%), and growing "nones" (~28%); LDS heartland in the Mountain West, Black Protestant traditions in the South, growing Muslim and Hindu populations in cities.
Localized version for English
The United States is the country where almost every modern flavor of religious deconstruction is happening at scale. Ex-Mormons in Utah and Idaho. Ex-evangelicals from megachurches in Texas, Tennessee, and the Carolinas. Ex-Catholics whose Italian or Mexican or Irish families still keep the holidays. Ex-Pentecostals from Oklahoma and the Bible Belt. Ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses everywhere there is a Kingdom Hall. Ex-Hasidim from Brooklyn and Lakewood. Ex-Muslims from immigrant families in Detroit, Houston, and the Twin Cities. The country is large enough that whatever you came out of, there is a community of other ex-members within driving distance, even if you have not found them yet.
The texture of the American exit varies enormously by tradition. Leaving the LDS Church in Utah, where 60% of the state is still LDS, looks nothing like leaving an evangelical church in Brooklyn. Leaving Catholicism in Boston after the 2002 Globe investigation looks nothing like leaving Catholicism in Los Angeles. Leaving the Watchtower in Tennessee, where shunning is strict and family compliance is high, is not the same as fading out in California where the wider culture is post-religious anyway. The page that fits you depends less on the country and more on what you came out of.
What is consistent across the United States: the extended family pressure, the holiday gravity, the political fights about religion in public life, and the slow demographic reality that the country is becoming less religious every year while a smaller, more intense remaining religious population gets louder. If you are deconstructing here, you are part of the largest cohort in modern American history doing the same thing. You are not alone, even when the room feels like it.
City coverage in United States
New York City
8.2M
Los Angeles
4.0M
Chicago
2.7M
Brooklyn
2.3M
Houston
2.3M
Queens
2.3M
Philadelphia
1.6M
Phoenix
1.6M
Manhattan
1.5M
San Antonio
1.5M
San Diego
1.4M
The Bronx
1.4M
Dallas
1.3M
San Jose
1.0M
Austin
932K
Jacksonville
868K
San Francisco
865K
Columbus
850K
Fort Worth
833K
Indianapolis
830K
Charlotte
827K
Seattle
684K
Denver
683K
El Paso
681K
Detroit
677K
Boston
667K
Memphis
656K
New South Memphis
642K
Portland
632K
Oklahoma City
631K
Las Vegas
624K
Baltimore
622K
Washington, D.C.
602K
Milwaukee
600K
South Boston
571K
Albuquerque
559K
Tucson
532K
Nashville
531K
Fresno
520K
Sacramento
491K
Kansas City
475K
Long Beach
474K
Mesa
472K
Staten Island
469K
Atlanta
464K
Colorado Springs
457K
Virginia Beach
453K
Raleigh
451K
Omaha
444K
Miami
441K
Oakland
419K
Minneapolis
411K
Tulsa
404K
Wichita
390K
New Orleans
390K
Arlington
388K
Cleveland
388K
Bakersfield
374K
Honolulu
372K
Tampa
369K