Coronavirus infection rates are falling in every borough except one - which has seen a significant rise in cases.
Bolton currently has the highest proportion of cases per 100,000 people, with the number increasing week-on-week.
The rate of infection there was 288.3 cases per 100,000 people in the week ending February 6.
There were 829 new positive tests in the last seven-day period, that's a significant increase of eight per cent from the week before.
Early data suggests that the rate of infection in Bolton may continue to rise over the next few days.
Greater Manchester's current Covid-19 hotspot is Horwich North, where cases appear to be spiking at an alarming rate.
The local ward had a rolling infection rate of 694 per 100,000 as of February 5, which is dramatically higher than other parts of the conurbation.
Eight boroughs in Greater Manchester now have an infection rate that is higher than the national average.
Bury has become the latest area to record a higher proportion of cases than England as a whole.
In the week ending February 6, the average infection rate in England was 194 cases per 100,000 people.
Only two boroughs across the conurbation now have an infection rate which is lower - Trafford and Tameside.
Cases are currently falling fastest in Tameside, Wigan and Trafford.
In Tameside, there were 416 new cases of Covid-19 in the last seven days, a fall of 35 per cent week-on-week.
It's the only borough where the number of cases are falling quicker than the national average, which is currently 26 per cent.
In Bury, which is the eighth area to move above the national average, cases fell by 18 per cent in the week ending February 6.
The rate of infection in the borough is currently 202.1 per 100,000.
There is some disparity in the speed at which cases are falling in some boroughs, compared to others.
Infection rates in Rochdale and Salford are still coming down, but the rate at which they are falling appears to have slowed.
There were 517 new positive tests in Rochdale in the week ending February 6, a fall of just five per cent week-on-week.
In Salford, which has the second highest infection rate in the conurbation, at 261.6, cases fell by seven per cent compared to the week before.
The latest infection rate figures come as a further 34 more people died in Greater Manchester's Hospitals after testing positive for Coronavirus.
It brings the region's hospital death toll to 5,255.
NHS England announced a further 664 deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities in NHS hospitals in England to 77,253.