1. Sarajevo – 275,000
The capital and cultural heart of the country.
2. Banja Luka – 185,000
Administrative center of Republika Srpska.
3. Bijeljina – 115,000
Large town in the fertile Semberija region.
4. Tuzla – 110,000
Industrial city known for salt and chemical industry.
5. Zenica – 110,000
Steel-producing city in central Bosnia.
6. Mostar – 105,000
Famous for its historic bridge and old town.
7. Brčko – 85,000
Self-governing district and river port.
8. Prijedor – 80,000
Industrial city in the northwest.
9. Doboj – 75,000
Major rail hub and trade center.
10. Cazin – 66,000
Town in the northwest known for agriculture.
11. Zvornik – 63,000
Town on the Drina River.
12. Travnik – 57,000
Historic city and former Ottoman capital.
13. Bihać – 56,000
City on the Una River near the Croatian border.
14. Sanski Most – 47,000
Town in northwestern Bosnia.
15. Gradačac – 45,000
Town with a historic fortress.
16. Lukavac – 45,000
Known for its chemical industry.
17. Velika Kladuša – 45,000
Town near the Croatian border.
18. Teslić – 41,000
Spa town with a chemical industry.
19. Kakanj – 38,000
Coal mining town in central Bosnia.
20. Zavidovići – 35,000
Industrial town in Zenica-Doboj Canton.
21. Bugojno – 35,000
Town in central Bosnia with forestry economy.
22. Foča – 32,000
Town on the Drina near the Sutjeska National Park.
23. Čapljina – 30,000
Southern town near the Neretva River delta.
24. Konjic – 26,000
Mountain town with Cold War-era bunker.
25. Goražde – 25,000
City on the Drina known for wartime resilience.
The above is subject to change.
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