Municipalities and Local Government in the U.S. Virgin Islands

The U.S. Virgin Islands operates under a territorial government structure that concentrates most legislative and administrative authority at the territorial level rather than distributing it across independent municipal governments. The territory's 3 principal islands — St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John — are organized into 2 municipalities, each with defined geographic jurisdiction and limited autonomous authority. This page addresses the structural definition of those municipalities, the mechanisms through which local governance functions, the practical scenarios in which municipal-level authority is exercised, and the jurisdictional boundaries that separate municipal from territorial power. For broader context on how the territory is organized, see the U.S. Virgin Islands Government Authority.


Definition and scope

The U.S. Virgin Islands is divided into 2 municipalities: the Municipality of St. Croix and the Municipality of St. Thomas and St. John. This structure is established under the Revised Organic Act of 1954, the foundational federal statute governing the territory's internal organization (48 U.S.C. § 1405 et seq.). The Revised Organic Act granted the Virgin Islands a civilian government, replacing the earlier naval administration that had governed the territory since the 1917 transfer from Denmark.

Unlike U.S. states, where municipalities typically derive authority from state constitutions and enabling legislation as independent legal entities, Virgin Islands municipalities do not hold autonomous sovereign power. Their authority flows from the territorial government, which itself operates under congressional oversight. The territory's unicameral legislature — the Virgin Islands Legislature — enacts laws that apply across both municipalities, and the Governor exercises executive authority over territorial agencies island-wide. The Organic Act of the U.S. Virgin Islands remains the primary legal instrument defining the limits of local governance.

St. John, though geographically distinct, is administratively grouped with St. Thomas within a single municipality. The combined land area of St. Thomas and St. John is approximately 85 square miles, while St. Croix — the largest island — covers approximately 84 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Island Areas Censuses).


How it works

Municipal governance in the U.S. Virgin Islands does not follow the mayor-council or county commission models common in U.S. states. Instead, the primary governing body for the territory as a whole is the 15-member Virgin Islands Legislature, with senators representing both municipalities. The executive branch of the U.S. Virgin Islands administers territorial departments and agencies that deliver services across both municipalities without a separate layer of municipal executive offices.

The principal local governance mechanism specific to each municipality is the Municipal Council, established under Virgin Islands law:

  1. St. Croix Municipal Council — A deliberative body that advises on matters specific to St. Croix, including local land use recommendations, community concerns, and coordination with territorial agencies.
  2. St. Thomas–St. John Municipal Council — The corresponding advisory body for that municipality, functioning under the same statutory framework.

Municipal councils in the U.S. Virgin Islands hold advisory rather than legislative power. They do not independently enact binding ordinances with the force of territorial law. Funding for municipal services — road maintenance, public works coordination, community programs — flows through the territorial budget process managed by the central government. The U.S. Virgin Islands budget and fiscal policy framework governs how allocations reach each island district.

The Virgin Islands Code, compiled and maintained by the Virgin Islands Legislature, codifies all territorial law applicable across both municipalities, including provisions that touch on local administration, zoning frameworks, and property regulation (see also U.S. Virgin Islands local laws and codes).


Common scenarios

The distinction between territorial and municipal authority surfaces in identifiable administrative situations:


Decision boundaries

The central jurisdictional boundary in Virgin Islands local governance separates territorial authority from federal authority, with municipal bodies occupying a comparatively narrow advisory band between the two.

Level Body Authority Type
Federal U.S. Congress Plenary authority over territories under Art. IV, § 3 of the U.S. Constitution
Territorial V.I. Legislature / Governor Legislative and executive authority over both municipalities
Municipal Municipal Councils Advisory; no independent legislative power

Federal preemption applies broadly: the U.S. Congress retains authority to override territorial law, and federal agencies administer programs — including customs, immigration, and certain environmental regulations — that operate outside territorial legislative reach. The U.S. Virgin Islands federal relationship page addresses this jurisdictional layering in detail.

Municipal councils cannot levy independent taxes, issue general obligation bonds, or enact enforceable zoning ordinances without territorial legislative backing. This contrasts with the structure found in many incorporated U.S. municipalities, which hold taxing authority and ordinance-making power by virtue of state charters. The practical consequence is that residents seeking zoning variances, tax adjustments, or public works decisions engage territorial agencies and the territorial legislature — not a local municipal government — as the binding decision-making authority.

Efforts to expand Virgin Islands self-governance have historically focused on the territorial level rather than the municipal level, including constitutional convention efforts detailed at U.S. Virgin Islands constitution efforts and ongoing status debates covered at U.S. Virgin Islands self-governance and autonomy.


References