Counties in the Omaha Metro Area: Douglas, Sarpy, and Beyond

The Omaha metropolitan area spans multiple counties across two states, forming a regional geography that shapes everything from transit funding to school district boundaries. This page identifies the counties that make up the Omaha metro, explains how their boundaries are defined by federal standards, and clarifies how county membership affects regional planning, services, and governance. Understanding which counties belong to the metro — and why — is essential context for anyone analyzing Omaha metro population and demographics, regional policy, or economic data.

Definition and scope

The official geographic frame for the Omaha metro is the Omaha-Council Bluffs Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), a designation maintained by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The OMB defines MSAs based on urban core counties and adjacent counties with strong commuting ties to that core, as documented in OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 (July 2023).

Under that classification, the Omaha-Council Bluffs MSA includes the following 8 counties across Nebraska and Iowa:

Nebraska counties:
1. Douglas County — the urban core, home to the City of Omaha
2. Sarpy County — the fastest-growing county in Nebraska, located directly south of Douglas
3. Cass County — rural and exurban, southeast of Sarpy
4. Washington County — north of Douglas, anchored by Blair
5. Saunders County — west of Douglas, largely agricultural

Iowa counties:
1. Pottawattamie County — contains Council Bluffs, the largest Iowa city in the metro
2. Harrison County — rural county west of Pottawattamie along the Missouri River corridor
3. Mills County — south of Pottawattamie, small population with agricultural character

The 5-county Nebraska grouping and 3-county Iowa grouping together constitute the federally recognized MSA. The Omaha metro statistical area definition page covers the OMB methodology in greater technical detail.

How it works

County-level boundaries determine eligibility for federal formula funding, regional transportation planning authority, and census data aggregation. The Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) for the area — the Metropolitan Area Planning Agency (MAPA) — holds jurisdiction over transportation planning for the Nebraska counties plus Pottawattamie County in Iowa. MAPA's planning boundary does not always match the full 8-county MSA, since Harrison and Mills counties in Iowa fall under a separate planning umbrella.

Douglas County functions as the dominant fiscal and population center. According to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2020 Decennial Census, Douglas County's population exceeded 571,000, representing more than half the total MSA population. Sarpy County recorded approximately 182,000 residents in the same count, reflecting its rapid suburban expansion south of Omaha along the U.S. Highway 370 and Interstate 80 corridors.

The Omaha Metro area overview provides a broader picture of how these county geographies interact with city limits and regional service delivery.

Common scenarios

County membership in the MSA affects residents and institutions in concrete ways:

Decision boundaries

Two distinctions consistently create confusion in metro geography:

MSA vs. Combined Statistical Area (CSA): The Omaha-Council Bluffs MSA is the tighter, commuter-defined unit. A broader Combined Statistical Area would pull in Lincoln, Nebraska, but Lincoln is typically treated as a separate MSA. For most federal data and funding purposes, the 8-county MSA boundary applies, not the CSA.

County boundary vs. city limit: Douglas County contains the City of Omaha, but Douglas County also includes unincorporated areas and smaller municipalities such as Ralston, La Vista (partly), and Bennington. Sarpy County contains Bellevue, Papillion, La Vista (partly), Gretna, and Springview. Neither Douglas nor Sarpy is coterminous with any single city. The distinction between the city of Omaha and the broader metro geography is addressed directly on the Omaha metro vs. Omaha city limits page.

A practical illustration of the contrast: Washington County's seat is Blair, a city of approximately 8,000 residents with a manufacturing presence but no direct Omaha transit connection. Its inclusion in the MSA reflects OMB commuting-flow analysis, not administrative linkage to Omaha city services.

The Omaha Metro government structure page explains how these county distinctions translate into governance and intergovernmental coordination, including the role of MAPA as the federally designated MPO. The full /index of this reference site provides entry points to all major metro topics organized by subject area.

References