* indicates monthly or quarterly data series

Migrant population, percent of total population, 2015:

The average for 2015 based on 20 countries was 2 percent. The highest value was in Costa Rica: 9 percent and the lowest value was in Brazil: 0 percent. The indicator is available from 1990 to 2015. Below is a chart for all countries where data are available.

Measure: percent; Source: United Nations Population Division
Select indicator
* indicates monthly or quarterly data series


Countries Migrant population, 2015 Global rank Available data
Costa Rica 9 1 1990 - 2015
Puerto Rico 7 2 1990 - 2015
Argentina 5 3 1990 - 2015
Panama 5 4 1990 - 2015
Venezuela 5 5 1990 - 2015
Domin. Rep. 4 6 1990 - 2015
Chile 3 7 1990 - 2015
Ecuador 2 8 1990 - 2015
Paraguay 2 9 1990 - 2015
Uruguay 2 10 1990 - 2015
Bolivia 1 11 1990 - 2015
El Salvador 1 12 1990 - 2015
Mexico 1 13 1990 - 2015
Nicaragua 1 14 1990 - 2015
Brazil 0 15 1990 - 2015
Colombia 0 16 1990 - 2015
Guatemala 0 17 1990 - 2015
Haiti 0 18 1990 - 2015
Honduras 0 19 1990 - 2015
Peru 0 20 1990 - 2015



Definition: International migrant stock is the number of people born in a country other than that in which they live. It also includes refugees. The data used to estimate the international migrant stock at a particular time are obtained mainly from population censuses. The estimates are derived from the data on foreign-born population--people who have residence in one country but were born in another country. When data on the foreign-born population are not available, data on foreign population--that is, people who are citizens of a country other than the country in which they reside--are used as estimates. After the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 people living in one of the newly independent countries who were born in another were classified as international migrants. Estimates of migrant stock in the newly independent states from 1990 on are based on the 1989 census of the Soviet Union. For countries with information on the international migrant stock for at least two points in time, interpolation or extrapolation was used to estimate the international migrant stock on July 1 of the reference years. For countries with only one observation, estimates for the reference years were derived using rates of change in the migrant stock in the years preceding or following the single observation available. A model was used to estimate migrants for countries that had no data.

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