Urbanization is usually understood to represent development and advancement; nevertheless, it also has a broad set of social issues that greatly influence the life of the city. In this research, the general social problems that are common in cities, such as poverty, unemployment, lack of housing, slum formation, poor health, poor sanitation, crime, and increasing inequality, are critically examined. These problems, though frequently interconnected, differ in severity from one urban context to another because of socio-economic variation, governance systems, and resource allocation. The aim of this paper is to identify, evaluate, and analyze the underlying social issues that are typically witnessed in urban contexts, both with respect to systemic causes and actual impacts on urban communities. Based on a mixed-methods research strategy using surveys, interviews, and secondary data analysis, the work brings to the fore the manner in which these social problems have transformed over the last few years as a result of fast population growth, unauthorized development, environmental pressure, and socio-political considerations. The work gives special emphasis to vulnerable populations like women, migrants, slum residents, and workers in the informal sector, who tend to suffer most from these matters but are accorded the least policy attention. This study also delves into the urban governance-citizen lived experience divide. Using grassroots perspectives and locality-level observations, it pinpoints the policy implementation and public service delivery weaknesses that worsen urban issues. The study also exposes models of urban development that advance economic growth at the expense of human development and environmental concerns. The study findings indicate that most urban problems are the outcome of disjoined planning, inadequate infrastructure, and poor participatory governance. The paper concludes by presenting actionable recommendations, such as building strong grassroots urban governance, inclusive planning, investment in urban infrastructure, and enhancing inter-agency coordination for effective policy implementation. Through the illumination of the complex and interlinked characteristics of city social issues, this research extends the understanding of urban hardship and calls for coordinated, inclusive, and human-oriented urban policy reforms.