This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
For each Member State, there is a three-level hierarchy of regional subdivisions which are based on minimum and maximum population thresholds, as shown below.
The third level is a subdivision of the second level, the second level is a subdivision of the first level and the first level is a subdivision of the Member States. NUTS does not cover the local (municipality) level. Where the population of a Member State as a whole is below the minimum threshold for a given NUTS level, the Member State itself constitutes a NUTS territorial unit of that level.
The existing administrative units in the Member States have to be taken into account in NUTS. The NUTS level of an existing administrative level is determined by the average population size of its administrative units, as shown below.
| Level | Minimum population | Maximum population |
|---|---|---|
| NUTS 1 | 3 million | 7 million |
| NUTS 2 | 800,000 | 3 million |
| NUTS 3 | 150,000 | 800,000 |
If there is no existing administrative level of adequate size in a Member State for a given level in the classification, that level is made up by aggregating an adequate number of smaller neighbouring administrative units. The resulting aggregated units form a ‘non-administrative level’, at which each non-administrative unit has to respect the population thresholds shown above. Exceptions occur under particular geographical, socioeconomic, historical, cultural or environmental circumstances, especially in islands and the outermost regions.
Territorial typologies (Tercet)
Amending Regulation (EU) 2017/2391 establishes a legal recognition of territorial typologies for the purpose of EU statistics. This makes it possible for thematic statistics regulations and policy initiatives to refer to these typologies for the purposes of collecting EU statistics and/or to target specific territories in policies, such as cities, or urban, rural or coastal areas and regions.
The regulation covers existing territorial typologies based on either NUTS level 3 (e.g. urban–rural typology, metropolitan regions) or the local administrative units (e.g. degree of urbanisation, cities, coastal areas). The regulation also covers the 1 km2 grid level required to calculate the typologies, which are based on population distribution and density in the grid cells. It also lays down the conditions for the adoption of delegated acts by the European Commission, where appropriate.
The current NUTS classification, valid from , lists 92 regions at NUTS 1 level, 242 regions at NUTS 2 level and 1,166 regions at NUTS 3 level.
Under the implementing act, Regulation (EC) No 11/2008, when an amendment is made to the NUTS classification, the Member State concerned must send to the Commission the time series for the new regional classification to replace previous data.
It has applied since .
Regulation (EC) No 1059/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council of on the establishment of a common classification of territorial units for statistics (NUTS) (OJ L 154, , pp. 1–41).
Successive amendments to Regulation (EC) No 1059/2003 have been incorporated into the original text. This consolidated version is of documentary value only.
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