Special municipality (Taiwan)
| Special Municipality | |
|---|---|
Special municipalities are shown in pink | |
| Category | Special municipalities, counties, and cities |
| Location | Free area of the Republic of China |
| Number | 6 |
| Populations | 1,881,204–4,014,560 |
| Areas | 272–2,952 |
| Government |
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| Subdivisions | |
| This article is part of a series on |
| Administrative divisions of Taiwan |
|---|
| Centrally governed |
| Township-level |
| Village-level |
| Neighborhood-level |
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Historical divisions of Taiwan (1895–1945) Republic of China (1912–49) |
Special municipality, historically known as Yuan-controlled municipality, is a first-level administrative division unit in Taiwan. It is the highest level of the country's administrative structure and is equivalent to a province. After the suspension of the provincial governments of 2018, the special municipalities along with provincial cities and counties have all governed directly under the central government.
Currently total six cities are designated as special municipalities: Taipei, Taoyuan, New Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, and Kaohsiung, all located in the most densely populated regions in the western half of the island. These special municipalities encompass five most populous metropolitan areas in Taiwan, accounting for more than two-thirds of the national population.