Toluca, city, capital of México estado (state), central Mexico. It is located about 30 miles (50 km) west-southwest of Mexico City, at the base of Nevado de Toluca volcano, the peak of which rises above 15,000 feet (4,570 meters) just southwest of the city. Toluca itself lies in a cool valley at an elevation of about 8,790 feet (2,680 meters), one of the highest cities in North America. Toluca was founded in 1530 and attained city status in 1533. Its oldest church was erected soon after the Spanish conquest and was rebuilt in 1585. The designation “de Lerdo” was adopted in 1861 in honor of the Mexican president Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada.
Toluca is a center for commerce, communications, and other services, but agriculture (wheat, corn [maize], beans, and other vegetables) and livestock raising in the vicinity are also important. Industries include textile manufacturing, brewing and distilling, and food processing. It is well connected by railway and highway with Mexico City and other plateau cities. Toluca is the seat of the Autonomous University of the State of México (1828; present status 1956). Colonies of migratory monarch butterflies winter in the forested highlands of Nevado de Toluca National Park southwest of the city. Pop. (2010) 489,333; metro. area, 1,846,116; (2020) 223,876; metro. area, 2,353,924.