Acara

Acara, officially the State of Acara, is a state of Cartadania, located in the lower Charente region on the island of Urlazio. It is the 21st-largest state by area and the 21st-most populous of the thirty-two states. As of January 2026, the population of Acara was estimated to be 5.1 million. Acara is bordered to the north by Aleira and Milan, to the east by Triessa, and to the south and west by the Urlazio Sea. Its capital and largest city is Dorado, with a population of approximately 413,000. Its metropolitan area has a population of just under one million inhabitants.

On 28 April 1769, Acara became the eighth state to be admitted into Cartadania and the second state to form from the Charente territory. By 1800, it had become the largest producer of in Cartadania, accounting for 26% of the nation's yield. It is still one of the largest coffee-producing states in the country today, largely due to Acara's rural inland. The state is not very urbanized and a large portion of its economy is based on agriculture. A majority of its 83 counties are rural or suburban in nature, except those in the Dorado metro area which are somewhat urban in character.

Acara lies entirely within the Urlazio coastal plain, and generally consists of lowland plains and low hills. The far northwestern portion of the state, at its tri-point with Aleira and Triessa, is the only mountainous portion of the state and contains its highest peak, Monte Silva, rising to 2876 m. The state lies mostly north of the equator, with a small portion of the Bayona Peninsula extending across it. Acara has a mostly equatorial climate, with Monte Silva having a temperate climate.