What You Need to Know About the Nord Department
Indeed, we present to you a department that is part of the Hauts-de-France region. It is actually department 59, called the Nord department. It is one of the northernmost French departments in France. Furthermore, the largest city, prefecture, and administrative center of the department is called Lille. However, its sub-prefectures are: Valenciennes, Avesnes-sur-Helpe, Cambrai, Douai, Dunkerque.
Its population, called the Nordistes, currently stands at 2,068,346 inhabitants, and the territory covers an area of 5,743 km2, which means the population density is 454 inhabitants per km2. This means that department 59 is the most populous in France. Moreover, its metropolis is where the majority of inhabitants live, that is, more than 50% of the inhabitants of the Nord department. Regarding the administrative subdivisions of the Nord department, there are 6 Arrondissements, 21 legislative constituencies, 41 cantons, 17 intercommunalities, and 648 communes.

Which Departments Border the Nord Department?
Since department 59 is part of the Hauts-de-France region, its neighbors are the department of Aisne, the Pas-de-Calais department, and the Somme department. Furthermore, it shares a common border with Belgium, specifically with the Belgian provinces of Flanders and Hainaut. It is also bordered by the North Sea. Several waterways cross it, notably the Yser (a maritime navigable waterway), the Lys, the Escaut, the Scarpe, and the Sambre. The Deûle trench crosses Lille, its prefecture.
What Is the Climate Like in the Nord Department?
Department 59 benefits from a warm maritime climate without a dry season according to the Köppen-Geiger classification. This territory has an exceptionally mild character along the coasts, with low temperature variations (mild winters with little snow and cool summers).
As one moves away from the coast, the climate becomes more continental, with fewer maritime influences but rather more pronounced temperature contrasts. The Nord department is an area with high precipitation. Indeed, even during the driest month, there are many showers. Over the year, the typical temperature in the Nord department is 10.2°C and regular precipitation totals 698.1 mm.
What Are the Most Important Cities in the Nord Department?
We have ranked these cities based on the number of tourists who visit them. Therefore, these 10 cities we present to you are the 10 must-visit tourist cities when passing through the Nord department:
- Lille
- Roubaix
- Dunkerque
- Villeneuve d’Ascq
- Marcq-en-Baroeul
- Bondues
- Saint-Amand-les-Eaux
- Lambersart
- Gravelines
- Tourcoing
- Mons-en-Baroeul

What Are the Largest Communes in the Nord Department?
To make this ranking, we referred to the area of each commune in the Nord department.
- Locquignol
- Dunkerque
- Trélon
- Loon-Plage
- Saint-Amand-les-Eaux
- Morbecque
- Bailleul
- Bourbourg
- Lille
- Raismes
Regarding this second ranking of communes in the Nord department, we grouped them according to population density per km2:
- Lille
- Dunkirk
- Villeneuve-d’Ascq
- Douai
- Marcq-en-Barœul
- Roubaix
- Tourcoing
- Valenciennes
- Wattrelos
- Maubeuge
