Nouméa


Nouméa is the capital and largest city of the French special collectivity of New Caledonia and is also the largest Francophone city in Oceania. It is situated on a peninsula in the south of New Caledonia's main island, Grande Terre, and is home to the majority of the island's European, Polynesian, Indonesian, and Vietnamese populations, as well as many Melanesians, Ni-Vanuatu and indigenous Kanaks who work in one of the South Pacific's most industrialised cities. The city lies on a protected deepwater harbour that serves as the chief port for New Caledonia.
Nouméa was greatly affected by the 2024 New Caledonia riots, which destroyed many businesses throughout the city and its suburbs, and pushed thousands of people to leave the Greater Nouméa area and move either to the rest of New Caledonia or to Metropolitan France. As a result, the April 2025 census recorded a marked population decline for Nouméa, with only 173,814 inhabitants living in the metropolitan area of Greater Nouméa, down from 182,341 at the 2019 census, and 85,976 in the city of Nouméa proper, down from 94,285 at the 2019 census. This is the first time since the start of statistical records that Greater Nouméa, which covers the communes of Nouméa, Le Mont-Dore, Dumbéa and Païta, has experienced a population decline.
At the 2025 census, 65.7% of the population of New Caledonia lived in Greater Nouméa, down from 67.2% at the 2019 census.

History

The first European to establish a settlement in the vicinity was British trader James Paddon in 1851. Eager to assert control of the island, the French established a settlement nearby three years later in 1854, moving from Balade in the north of the island. This settlement was initially called Port-de-France and was renamed Nouméa in 1866. The area served first as a penal colony, later as a centre for the exportation of the nickel and gold that was mined nearby.
From 1904 to 1940, Nouméa was linked to Dumbéa and Païta by the Nouméa-Païta railway, the only railway line that ever existed in New Caledonia.
During World War II, the United States Navy built Naval Base Noumea and Nouméa served as the headquarters of the United States military in the South Pacific. The five-sided U.S. military headquarters complex was adopted after the war as the base for a new regional intergovernmental development organisation: the South Pacific Commission, later known as the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, and later still as the Pacific Community.
The city maintains much of New Caledonia's unique mix of French and old Melanesian culture. Even today the United States wartime military influence lingers, both with the warmth that many New Caledonian people feel towards the United States after experiencing the relative friendliness of American soldiers and also with the names of several of the quarters in Nouméa. Districts such as "Receiving" and "Robinson", or even "Motor Pool", strike the anglophone ear strangely, until the historical context becomes clear.
In May 2024, protests and riots emerged in Nouméa and New Caledonia at large, due to concerns over an electoral bill that was seen as a threat towards potential independence. The unrest caused damage to the city, along with a major decline in tourism and an exodus of recently arrived residents.

Geography

The city is situated on an irregular, hilly peninsula near the southeast end of New Caledonia, which is in the south-west Pacific Ocean.
Neighbourhoods of Nouméa include:
  • Rivière-Salée
  • 6e km, 7e km, Normandie, and Tina
  • Ducos peninsula:
  • *Ducos, Ducos industriel, Kaméré, Koumourou, Logicoop, Numbo, Tindu
  • 4e Km, Aérodrome, Haut Magenta, Magenta, Ouémo, and Portes de fer
  • Faubourg Blanchot and Vallée des Colons
  • Doniambo, Montagne coupée, Montravel, and Vallée du tir
  • Artillerie Nord, Centre Ville, Nouville, Quartier Latin, Vallée du Génie
  • Anse Vata, Artillerie Sud, Baie des Citrons, Motor Pool, N'géa, Orphelinat, Receiving, Trianon, and Val Plaisance

    Climate

Nouméa features a tropical savanna climate with hot summers and warm winters. Temperatures are warmer in the months of January, February and March with average highs hovering around 30 degrees Celsius and cooler during the months of July and August where average high temperatures are around 23 degrees Celsius. The capital's dry season months are September and October. The rest of the year is noticeably wetter. Nouméa on average receives roughly of precipitation annually.

Demographics

The Greater Nouméa metropolitan area had a total population of 173,814 inhabitants at the April 2025 census, 85,976 of whom lived in the commune of Nouméa proper.
The Greater Nouméa metropolitan area is made up of four communes:
  • Nouméa
  • Dumbéa, to the north-west of Nouméa
  • Le Mont-Dore, to the north-east of Nouméa
  • Païta, a suburb to the west of Dumbéa and the site of La Tontouta International Airport

    Historical population

Average population growth of the Greater Nouméa metropolitan area:
  • 1956–1963: +2,310 people per year
  • 1963–1969: +1,791 people per year
  • 1969–1976: +3,349 people per year
  • 1976–1983: +1,543 people per year
  • 1983–1989: +2,091 people per year
  • 1989–1996: +3,020 people per year
  • 1996–2009: +3,382 people per year
  • 2009–2014: +3,106 people per year
  • 2014–2019: +562 people per year
  • 2019–2025: -1,519 people per year

    Migrations

The places of birth of the 182,341 residents in the Greater Nouméa metropolitan area at the 2019 census were the following:
  • 70.9% were born in New Caledonia
  • 18.4% in Metropolitan France or its overseas departments and territories
  • 5.6% in foreign countries
  • 5.1% in France's other Pacific territories, primarily Wallis and Futuna and to a lesser degree French Polynesia

    Ethnic communities

The self-reported ethnic communities of the 182,341 residents in the Greater Nouméa metropolitan area at the 2019 census were as follows:
At the 2009 census, 98.7% of the population in the Greater Nouméa metropolitan area whose age was 15 years and older reported that they could speak French. 97.1% reported that they could also read and write it. Only 1.3% of the population whose age was 15 years and older had no knowledge of French.
At the 2019 census, 23.4% of the population of the metropolitan area 15 years and older reported that they could speak at least one of the Kanak languages. 6.1% reported that they could understand a Kanak language but not speak it. 70.5% of the population whose age was 15 years and older had no knowledge of any Kanak language.
Due to the tourism industry, English is widely spoken as a second or third language in Nouméa. Japanese is also known due to tourism from Japan.

Economy

Although it is not currently a major tourist destination, Nouméa has experienced a construction boom in the 21st century. The installation of amenities has kept pace and the municipality boasts a public works programme. The mayor of Noumea is Sonia Lagarde; in 2020 her re-election was opposed by the former leader of the Confederation of Small and Medium Enterprises, Cherifa Linossier, whose unsuccessful campaign was based on local economic revitalisation.

Transport

, the international airline of New Caledonia, and Air Calédonie, the domestic airline, have their headquarters in the city. Aircal's headquarters are on the grounds of Nouméa Magenta Airport,
which serves local routes. Nouméa's international airport is La Tontouta International Airport, from the city.
The Nouméa-Païta railway, which was the only railway line that ever existed in New Caledonia, was closed in 1940.

Education

The University of New Caledonia dates to 1987 when the Université française du Pacifique was created, with two centres, one in French Polynesia and the other in New Caledonia. In 1997 the decision was made to split the two parts into separate universities and so in 1999 the Université de la Nouvelle-Calédonie and the Université de la Polynésie française were formed.
UNC welcomes around 3,000 local and international students and 100 professors and researchers each year.
The Bibliothèque Bernheim is located in Nouméa.
The city is home to several museums, including the Maritime Museum of New Caledonia.

Twin towns – sister cities

Nouméa is twinned with: