Generate Random Cities

Need a quick list of cities for your next project, game, or travel inspiration? The Random Cities Generator creates instant lists from a database of over 200 cities worldwide. Whether you’re planning a virtual world tour, creating geography quizzes, or just curious about different places, this tool makes it simple to discover cities you might never have considered.

The generator covers all six continents and lets you filter results by region, city size, or capital status. You can generate anywhere from a single city to 100 cities at once, with options to include country names, sort alphabetically, or format as numbered lists. It’s perfect for educators, travelers, game developers, or anyone who needs location data fast.

Total cities: 5
Options
Include country
No duplicates
Sort alphabetically
Capitals only
Maximize output
Output format:
City size:

How to Use:

1. Set Your Preferences

  • Choose the number of cities you want (1-100)
  • Select a specific continent or keep it set to “All Continents”
  • Pick your preferred city size: all cities, major cities only, or megacities

2. Configure Display Options

  • Toggle “Include country” to show or hide country names with each city
  • Enable “No duplicates” to prevent the same city appearing twice
  • Turn on “Sort alphabetically” for ordered results
  • Check “Capitals only” if you only want capital cities

3. Choose Output Format

  • List: Simple line-by-line format
  • Numbered: Each city gets a number (1., 2., 3., etc.)
  • Comma-separated: All cities in one line, separated by commas

4. Generate and Use Results

  • Click “Generate Cities” to create your random list
  • Use “Copy” to copy the results to your clipboard
  • Click “Export to File” to download as a .txt file
  • Enable “Maximize output” for better viewing of long lists

What Random Cities Generator Can Do:

The Random Cities Generator draws from a comprehensive database spanning six continents and over 200 cities. You can filter results by continent to focus on specific regions like Asia’s megacities, Europe’s capitals, or North America’s major urban centers. The tool distinguishes between regular cities, major metropolitan areas, and megacities with populations over 10 million.

Geography educators find it useful for creating quiz questions and teaching materials about world cities. Travel enthusiasts use it for bucket list inspiration or planning multi-city trips. Game developers and writers often need realistic city names for fictional scenarios. The tool also works well for icebreaker activities, trivia games, or social media content about global destinations.

The flexible formatting options mean you can generate data that fits right into spreadsheets, presentations, or other applications. Whether you need a simple comma-separated list for a form or a numbered list for a presentation, the generator adapts to your workflow.

Example:

Input Settings: 7 cities, Europe, include country, capitals only, numbered format

Before: Settings: 7 cities from European capitals

After:

1. London, United Kingdom
2. Paris, France  
3. Berlin, Germany
4. Madrid, Spain
5. Rome, Italy
6. Amsterdam, Netherlands
7. Vienna, Austria

Random Cities Generator Table:

Examples showing different output formats and filtering options.

Filter SettingsOutput FormatSample Result
5 cities, All continents, Include countryListTokyo, Japan
New York, United States
London, United Kingdom
3 cities, Asia, Capitals only, No countryNumbered1. Tokyo
2. Seoul
3. Bangkok
4 cities, Europe, Major citiesComma-separatedLondon, Paris, Berlin, Madrid
2 cities, North America, MegacitiesListNew York, United States
Mexico City, Mexico
6 cities, Africa, Capitals, AlphabeticalNumbered1. Cairo, Egypt
2. Cape Town, South Africa
3. Nairobi, Kenya
5 cities, Oceania, All sizesComma-separatedSydney, Melbourne, Auckland, Canberra, Wellington

Common Use Cases:

Teachers and educators use the Random Cities Generator to create geography lessons, quiz questions, and classroom activities about world cities. Travel bloggers and content creators generate lists for “cities to visit” articles or social media posts about global destinations. Game developers need realistic city names for virtual worlds, board games, or mobile apps with location-based features.

The tool helps with research projects that need sample city data, icebreaker activities for international teams, or brainstorming sessions for business expansion. Writers often use it to find authentic locations for stories or to add geographical variety to their work. Event planners creating themed parties or trivia nights find it useful for location-based questions and games.