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The following is a list of bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States. The list also includes bishops in the American territories of Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The Catholic Church in the United States comprises:
The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) consists of all active and retired bishopsâÂÂdiocesan, coadjutor, and auxiliaryâÂÂin the fifty states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The bishops in the five inhabited territories of the United States are members of different episcopal conferences:
The 176 Latin Church dioceses in the United States are divided into 33 ecclesiastical provinces. Each province has a metropolitan archdiocese led by an archbishop, and at least one suffragan diocese. Each suffragan diocese is led by a bishop. The Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA is the only American archdiocese that is not designated as a metropolitan archdiocese. The pope appoints all archbishops and bishops, who must be at least ordained priests. The pope chooses from a list of candidates provided by the papal nuncio of the United States to the Dicastery for Bishops in Rome.
In some rare cases, the pope will name a titular archbishop as the bishop of a suffragan diocese. The most recent example in the United States was that of Celestine Damiano, whom Pope John XXIII named as bishop of the Diocese of Camden in 1960.
In most nations that have a large Catholic population and are located in non-missionary geographical areas, the bishops are usually appointed from that country's native-born priests. An exception to this rule is the United States, which has a significant number of foreign-born bishops, with most serving as auxiliary bishops in culturally diverse dioceses. As of 2025, forty-one active foreign-born bishops are serving in the United States, representing about 14% of all active American bishops.
The following nations have produced at least one bishop who is serving in the United States: Italy, Nicaragua, Haiti, Ireland, Uganda, Colombia, Lebanon, Peru, Spain, Cuba, South Africa, Malta, Argentina, El Salvador, and Cameroon.
Two archdioceses (Los Angeles and San Antonio) and ten dioceses (Charleston, San Diego, Fall River, Las Cruces, Raleigh, Houma-Thibodaux, Saint Thomas, Salt Lake City, Monterey (CA) and San Bernardino) are led by a foreign-born archbishop or bishop. Five archdioceses and one diocese have more than one foreign-born active bishop assigned to them:
Additionally, there are several dozen bishops currently serving in the United States who are first-generation American-born children of immigrant parents.
The majority of Eastern Catholic bishops in the U.S. are foreign-born.
The United States has two Eastern Catholic metropoliae, each led by a metropolitan archbishop called an archeparch:
Pope Leo XIV, born Robert Francis Prevost, is the first American-born pope.
Although the majority (53%) of the United States' Roman Catholic population now live in Western and Southern states, there are no active cardinals west of the Archdiocese of Chicago and none in the Southern States.
three metropolitan archdioceses are led by a cardinal:
Seven archdioceses have a retired archbishop who served as cardinal-archbishop:
Three archdioceses have a former archbishop who was created a cardinal after he completed his tenure as diocesan archbishop:
Two other American cardinals serve in the Holy See:
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Puerto Rican Episcopal Conference
Episcopal Conference of the Pacific
The Ukrainian Catholic Metropolitan Province of Philadelphia consists of four eparchies of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, and covers the entire United States.
The Metropolis of Pittsburgh is a sui iuris metropolitan province of the Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church. The metropolis consists of four eparchies and covers the entire United States. It's geographic remit also includes the Exarchate of Toronto in Canada.
The metropolis has ecclesiastical jurisdiction over all Ruthenian Catholics in the United States, as well as other Byzantine Rite Catholics without an established hierarchy in the country.
The other Eastern Catholic Churches with eparchies (dioceses) or exarchates established in the United States are not grouped into metropoliae. All are immediately subject to the Holy See, with limited oversight by the head of their respective sui iuris churches.
Several Eastern Catholic churches have jurisdictions that include members and congregations in both the United States and Canada.
The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter is a special diocese comprising Anglican converts to Catholicism. Under canon law, if the personal ordinary is not a bishop, he is treated as the equivalent of a diocesan bishop.