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Demographics of New York City

New York City is a large and ethnically diverse metropolis.[1] It is the largest city in the United States with a long history of international immigration. New York City was home to over 8.3 million people in 2019,[2] accounting for over 40% of the population of New York State and a slightly lower percentage of the New York metropolitan area, home to approximately 23.6 million people across parts of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Over the last decade the city has been growing faster than the region. The New York region continues to be by far the leading metropolitan gateway for legal immigrants admitted into the United States.[3][4][5][6]

Demographics of New York City
Population pyramid of New York City in 2021
Population8,335,897 (2022 est.)
Population growth (blue) and population loss (red) from 1990 to 2000. (Click on image to see full key and data.)
Poster from 1907:
The many ways in which New Yorkers say "Merry Christmas" or its equivalent;
in Arabic, Armenian, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, Flemish, French, Gaelic, German, Greek, Yiddish (labeled as "Christian Hebrew"), Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
"Gotham's citizens have been called "The Sons of Elsewhere", and their language that spoken at the Tower of Babel..."

Throughout its history, New York City has been a major point of entry for immigrants; the term "melting pot" was coined to describe densely populated immigrant neighborhoods on the Lower East Side. As many as 800 languages are spoken in New York,[7][8][9] making it the most linguistically diverse city in the world.[8][10][11] English remains the most widely spoken language, although there are areas in the outer boroughs in which up to 25% of people speak English as an alternate language, and/or have limited or no English language fluency. English is least spoken in neighborhoods such as Flushing, Sunset Park, and Corona.

Jurisdiction Population Land area Density of population GDP †
Borough County Census
(2020)
square
miles
square
km
people/
sq. mile
people/
sq. km
billions
(2012 US$) 2
Bronx
1,472,654 42.2 109.3 34,920 13,482 $38.726
Kings
2,736,074 69.4 179.7 39,438 15,227 $92.300
New York
1,694,251 22.7 58.8 74,781 28,872 $651.619
Queens
2,405,464 108.7 281.5 22,125 8,542 $88.578
Richmond
495,747 57.5 148.9 8,618 3,327 $14.806
8,804,190 302.6 783.8 29,095 11,234 $885.958
20,215,751 47,126.4 122,056.8 429 166 $1,514.779
GDP = Gross Domestic Product    Sources:[12][13][14][15] and see individual borough articles.

Population

 
Looking down Broadway in Midtown Manhattan. New York City had an estimated population density of 29,302.37 inhabitants per square mile (11,313.71/km2) in 2020, as the most densely populated major U.S. city. Manhattan (New York County) alone was home to 74,870.7 inhabitants per square mile (28,907.7/km2), rendering it the most densely populated municipality in the United States.
Historical population
YearPop.±%
16984,937—    
17125,840+18.3%
17237,248+24.1%
173710,664+47.1%
174611,717+9.9%
175613,046+11.3%
177121,863+67.6%
179033,131+51.5%
180060,515+82.7%
181096,373+59.3%
1820123,706+28.4%
1830202,589+63.8%
1840312,710+54.4%
1850515,547+64.9%
1860813,669+57.8%
1870942,292+15.8%
18801,206,299+28.0%
18901,515,301+25.6%
19003,437,202+126.8%
19104,766,883+38.7%
19205,620,048+17.9%
19306,930,446+23.3%
19407,454,995+7.6%
19507,891,957+5.9%
19607,781,984−1.4%
19707,894,862+1.5%
19807,071,639−10.4%
19907,322,564+3.5%
20008,008,288+9.4%
20108,175,133+2.1%
20208,804,190+7.7%
2022 est.8,335,897−5.3%
1880 & 1890 figures include part of the Bronx. Beginning with 1900, figures are for consolidated city of five boroughs. For the same area before 1900, see #Historical population data, below. Sources: 1698–1771,[16] 1790–1990,[17] 2000 and 2010 Censuses,[18] 2020 Census,[19] and 2022 estimate[20]

New York City is the most populous city in the United States, with an estimated 8,804,190 people living in the city, according to the 2020 U.S. Census[19] (up from 8,175,133 in 2010; 8.0 million in 2000; and 7.3 million in 1990).[18] This amounts to about 44% of New York State's population and a similar percentage of the metropolitan regional population. New York's two key demographic features are its population density and cultural diversity. The city's population density of 29,091.3 people per square mile (11,232/km2), makes it the densest of any American municipality with a population above 100,000.[21] Manhattan's population density is 74,781 people per square mile (28,872/km2), highest of any county in the United States.[22][23]

New York City is multicultural. About 36% of the city's population is foreign-born,[24] one of the highest among US cities. The eleven nations constituting the largest sources of modern immigration to New York City are the Dominican Republic, China, Jamaica, Guyana, Mexico, Ecuador, Brazil, Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, Colombia, Russia and El Salvador.[25]

Ethnicity

The New York City metropolitan area is home to the largest Dominican population in the United States, and as of 2023 Dominicans are the largest Latino Group in New York City, and the largest ethnic group in Manhattan. New York City is also home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel.[26] It is also home to nearly a quarter of the nation's Indian Americans and 15% of all Korean Americans;[27][28] the largest African American community of any city in the country; and including 6 Chinatowns in the city proper,[29] comprised as of 2008 a population of 659,596 overseas Chinese,[30] the largest outside of Asia. New York City alone, according to the 2010 Census, has now become home to more than one million Asian Americans, greater than the combined totals of San Francisco and Los Angeles.[31] New York contains the highest total Asian population of any U.S. city proper.[32] 6.0% of New York City is of Chinese ethnicity, with about forty percent of them living in the borough of Queens alone. Koreans make up 1.2% of the city's population, and Japanese at 0.3%. Filipinos are the largest southeast Asian ethnic group at 0.8%, followed by Vietnamese who make up only 0.2% of New York City's population. Indians are the largest South Asian group, comprising 2.4% of the city's population, with Pakistanis at 0.4% and Bangladeshis at 0.8%, respectively.[33]

The largest ethnic groups as of the 2023 census estimates are: Dominicans, African American, African or Caribbean, Puerto Ricans, Italians, West Indians, Dominicans, Chinese, Irish, Russian, and German.[34][35] The Puerto Rican population of New York City is the largest outside Puerto Rico.[36] The New York City metropolitan area is also home to the largest Italian population in North America and the third largest Italian population outside of Italy. Italians emigrated to the city in large numbers in the early 20th century, establishing several "Little Italies". The Irish also have a notable presence, along with Germans.

New York City has a high degree of income variation. In 2005 the median household income in the highest census tract was reported to be $188,697, while in the lowest it was $9,320.[37] The variance is driven by wage growth in high income brackets, while wages have stagnated for middle and lower income brackets. In 2006 the average weekly wage in Manhattan was $1,453, the highest and fastest growing among the largest counties in the United States.[38] The borough is also experiencing a "baby boom" among the wealthy that is unique among U.S. cities. Since 2000, the number of children under age 5 living in Manhattan has grown by more than 32%.[39]

In 2000, about 3 out of every 10 New York City housing units were owner-occupied, compared to about 2 owner-occupied units out of every 3 units in the U.S. as a whole.[40] Rental vacancy is usually between 3% and 4.5%, well below the 5% threshold defined to be a housing emergency, justifying the continuation of rent control and rent stabilization. About 33% of rental units fall under rent stabilization, according to which increases are adjudicated periodically by city agencies. Rent control covers only a very small number of rental units.[41] Some critics point to New York City's strict zoning and other regulations as partial causes for the housing shortage, but during the city's decline in population from the 1960s through the 1980s, a large number of apartment buildings suffered suspected arson fires or were abandoned by their owners. Once the population trend was reversed, with rising prospects for rentals and sales, new construction has resumed, but generally for purchasers in higher income brackets.

Profile and comparison

Comparison with other cities

New York is the largest city in the United States, with the city proper's population more than double the next largest city, Los Angeles (or roughly equivalent to the combined populations of Los Angeles, Chicago, and Houston, the United States' second, third, and fourth most populous cities respectively). In 2006, demographers estimated New York's population would reach 9.1 million by 2030.[42] In 2000 the reported life expectancy of New Yorkers was above the national average. Life expectancy for females born in 2009 in New York City is 80.2 years and for males is 74.5 years.[43]

New York City compared
2010
Census Data
New York City Los Angeles Chicago New York State United States
Total population 8,175,133 3,792,820 2,695,598 19,378,102 308,745,538
Population, percent change,
2000 to 2010
+2.1% +2.6% -6.9% +2.1% +9.7%
Population density 27,012
/sq. mi.
8,092
/sq. mi.
11,864
/sq. mi.
408.7
/sq. mi.
87.4
/sq. mi.
Median household income (1999) $38,293 $36,687 $38,625 $43,393 $41,994
Per capita income (1999) $22,402 $20,671 $20,175 $23,389 $21,587
Bachelor's degree or higher 27% 26% 26% 27% 24%
Foreign born 36% 41% 21.7% 20% 13%
White 44.6% 49.8% 45.0%[44] 66.4% 72.4%
Black 25.1% 9.6% 32.9% 15.5% 12.6%
Hispanic
(any race)
27.5% 48.5% 28.9% 17.3% 16.3%
Asian 11.8% 11.3% 5.5% 5.9% 4.8%

Profile

New York's two key demographic features are its density and diversity. The city has an extremely high population density of 26,403 people per square mile (10,194/km2), about 10,000 more people per square mile than the next densest large American city, San Francisco.[45] Manhattan's population density is 66,940 people per square mile (25,846/km2).[23]

The city has a long tradition of attracting international immigration and Americans seeking careers in certain sectors. As of 2006, New York City has ranked number one for seven consecutive years as the city most U.S. residents would most like to live in or near.[46]

Immigration

Throughout its history New York City has been a principal entry point for immigration to the United States. These immigrants often form ethnic enclaves, neighborhoods dominated by one ethnicity. The city experienced major immigration from Europe in the 19th century and another major wave in the early 20th century, being admitted into the United States of America primarily through Ellis Island. Since the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, and particularly since the 1980s, New York City has seen renewed rates of high immigration. Newer immigrants are from Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, Eastern Europe and Africa. 36% of the city's population is foreign-born.[24] Among U.S. cities, this proportion is higher only in Los Angeles and Miami.[23] In New York no single country or region of origin dominates. The eleven largest countries of origin are the Dominican Republic, China, Jamaica, Guyana, Mexico, Ecuador, Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, Colombia, Russia and El Salvador.[47] Between 1990 and 2000 the city admitted 1,224,524 immigrants.[48] Demographers and city officials have observed that immigration to New York City has been slowing since 1997. This is mostly due to more and more immigrants choosing directly to locate to the city's suburbs and then commute to the city or work in many of its booming edge cities such as Fort Lee, NJ, Hempstead, NY, Morristown, NJ, Stamford, CT, White Plains, NY and others. Despite the slowdown in immigration the city's overall immigrant population has continued to increase and in 2006 it numbered 3.038 million (37.0%) up from 2.871 million (35.9%) in 2000.[49][50] By 2013, the population of foreign-born individuals living in New York City had increased to 3.07 million, and as a percentage of total population, was the highest it had been in the past 100 years.[51]

2018 American Community Survey Race and ethnicity makeup of NYC
White
42.7%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race)
29.1%
Black or African American
24.3%
Asian
13.9%
Native American
0.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
0.1%
Other races
15.1%

Demographic profile

 
Ethnic origins in New York City

Minority ancestries

Immigrant Africans, Caribbeans, and African Americans make up 25.1% of New York City's population. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there were 2,086,566 black people residing in New York City. Percentage wise, approximately two out of every five black residents of New York City resides in Brooklyn (primarily in the Central, Northern, and Eastern sections of the borough), one out of every five resides in Bronx (mainly in the borough's Northeastern, Southeastern and Southern sections) one out of every five resides in Queens (mainly in the borough's Southeastern area), with the remaining black residents residing in Manhattan (primarily in Harlem) and Staten Island (mainly the North Shore of the borough).

Native Americans make up 0.4% of New York City's population. According to the survey, there were 29,569 Native Americans residing in New York City. Of 29,569 Native Americans, 2,075 were of the Cherokee tribal grouping. In addition, 213 were of the Navajo tribal grouping. Also, 42 people identified themselves as Chippewa, and 47 people identified themselves as Sioux. There is a number of Mohawks indigenous to the New York city area and/or Upstate New York, and many Mohawks arrived in the 1930s to work in the skyscraper building construction industry.[52][unreliable source?] And a few Lenape Indians indigenous to the New York city area still remain in the city, migrated from other rural parts to Manhattan.[53]

Asian Americans make up 11.8% of New York City's population. According to the survey, there were 976,807 Asian Americans residing in New York City. Of 976,807 Asian Americans, 445,145 were of Chinese descent, representing 5.4% of the city's population. In addition, there were 226,888 Indian Americans residing in the city, representing 2.7% of the population. Approximately 103,660 people identified themselves as "Other Asian", a category that includes people of Cambodian, Laotian, Hmong, and Pakistani descent. Individuals in this category represent 1.2% of the city's population. There were 88,162 Korean Americans residing in the city, representing 1.1% of the population. Other Asian American groups include those of Filipino (68,826, 0.8%), Japanese (26,096, 0.3%), and Vietnamese (18,030, 0.2%) descent.

Pacific Islander Americans make up 0.1% of New York City's population. According to the survey, there were 4,941 Pacific Islander Americans residing in New York City. Of 4,941 Pacific Islander Americans, 1,992 were Native Hawaiian. Approximately 904 were of Samoan descent, and 504 were of Guamanian descent. In addition, 1,541 were of other Pacific Islander ancestries.

Multiracial Americans make up 2.1% of New York City's population. According to the survey, there were 177,643 multiracial Americans residing in New York City. People of black and white ancestry numbered at 37,124, making up 0.4% of the population. People of white and Asian ancestry numbered at 22,242, making up 0.3% of the population. People of white/Native American ancestry (10,762) and black/Native American ancestry (10,221) each made up 0.1% of the city's population. The term "Multiracial American", however, can be very misleading. For example, many people of Latin American background may have various racial ancestries. Furthermore, there are many Americans who have multiple racial ancestries who are not aware of it. Therefore, the actual numbers are likely much higher.[citation needed]

Hispanics and Latinos make up 27.5% of New York City's population. According to the American Community Survey, there were 2,287,905 Hispanic or Latino Americans residing in New York City. The Hispanic/Latino population is categorized with four groups, "Puerto Rican" (785,618 or 9.4%), "Mexican" (297,581 or 3.6%), "Cuban" (42,377 or 0.5%), and "Other Hispanic or Latino" (1,165,576 or 14.0%).[54] While most Hispanics in New York City do not select a race in addition to their ethnicity in the American Community Survey, among those foreign-born, 33% also self-identify as white, and 9% as black.[55]

According to the 2006-2007 Center for Latin American, Caribbean & Latino Studies:[56]

Note: This source contains all of the numerical information in the data above.

White ancestries

White Americans make up 44.6% of New York City's population. According to the survey, there were 3,704,243 White Americans residing in New York City. White Americans of non-Hispanic origin make up 35.1% of the city's population. There are 2,918,976 non-Hispanic whites residing in the city. Much of New York City's European American population consists of individuals of Italian, Irish, German, Russian, Polish, English, and Greek ancestry.[57]

There is a considerable Bulgarian population in New York. Bulgarians migrated in New York in the 1900s.[58]

According to the 2006–2008 American Community Survey, the top ten White, European ancestries were the following:[59]

Other smaller European ancestries include:

Diversity of New York City's boroughs

According to a 2001 study by Claritas, four of the city's five boroughs ranked among the nation's twenty most diverse counties. Queens ranked 1st, Brooklyn 3rd, Manhattan 7th, and The Bronx 17th. In addition, Hudson County and Essex County, New Jersey, both of which are part of the New York Metropolitan Area, ranked 6th and 15th, respectively.[60]

The city has several demographically unique characteristics. Queens is the only large county in the United States where the median income among black households, about $52,000 a year, has surpassed that of whites.[61]

The New York City metropolitan area is home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel.[62] It is also home to nearly a quarter of the nation's Indian American population,[63] and the largest African American community of any city in the country. New York City, with about 800,000 Puerto Rican residents, has the largest Puerto Rican population outside of Puerto Rico. Another historically significant ethnic group are Italians, who emigrated to the city in large numbers during the late 19th century. New York City is home to the largest Italian American population in the United States. The Irish and Germans also have a notable presence.

% Foreign-born by borough 1970–2006
Borough
1970

1980

1990

2000

2006
Brooklyn 17.5 23.8 29.2 37.8 37.8
Queens 21.0 28.6 36.2 46.1 48.5
Manhattan 20.0 24.4 25.8 29.4 28.7
Bronx 15.6 18.4 22.8 29.0 31.8
Staten Island 9.0 9.8 11.8 16.4 20.9
Total 18.2 23.6 28.4 35.9 37.0
Source: NYC.gov[64]
Jurisdiction
Population
2000
census
%
white
%
black
or
African
American
%
Asian
%
Other
%
mixed
race
%
Hispanic/
Latino
of any
race
%
Catholic
% not
affiliated
%
Jewish
%
Protestant
Estimate
of % not
reporting
Race Ethnicity Religious groups
Brooklyn 2,465,326 41.2 36.4 7.5 10.6 4.3 19.8 37 4 15 8 33
Queens 2,229,379 44.1 20.0 17.6 12.3 6.1 25.0 29 37 11 5 15
Manhattan 1,537,195 54.4 17.4 9.4 14.7 4.1 27.2 37 11 20 9 19
Bronx 1,332,650 29.9 35.6 3.0 25.7 5.8 48.4 44 14 6 5 29
Staten Island 443,728 77.6 9.7 5.7 4.3 2.7 12.1 60 11 8 5 14
NYC Total 8,008,278 44.7 26.6 9.8 14.0 4.9 27.0 37 17 13 6 24
NY State 18,976,457 67.9 15.9 5.5 7.5 3.1 15.1 42 20 9 10 16
USA 281,421,906 75.1 12.3 3.6 6.5 2.4 12.5 22 37 2 23 12
Source: 2000 Census[65]

American Indian, Native Alaskan, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander make up 2.9% of the population of NYC, and have been included with "Other".

Source for religious groups: ARDA[66]

2020 Census Demographics

As according to the New York City Department of City Planning, there were a total of 8,804,190 residents. There were almost equivalent populations of 2,719,856 White residents at 30.9% and 2,490,350 Hispanic residents at 28.3%, meanwhile there were 1,776,891 Black residents at 20.2% and 1,373,502 Asian residents at 15.6%. There were even much smaller numbers of 143,632 other race residents at 1.6% and 299,959 Two or More races residents at 3.4%. Although the Asian population is still below the Black population in ranking, they are slowly catching up to being close to the Black population ranking. From 2010 to 2020, the growing Asian population outpaced the growing Hispanic population despite that the Hispanic population is still much larger than the Asian population. The Asian population rose from 1,028,119 residents (12.6% in 2010) to 1,373,502 Asian residents (15.6% in 2020) increasing by 345,383 residents or 33.6% by 2020. The Hispanic population increased marginally from 2,336,076 residents (28.6% in 2010) to 2,490,350 residents (28.3% in 2020) increasing by 154,274 residents or 6.6% by 2020, though their percentage portion from the total NYC population dropped as other populations grew. Meanwhile, the White and Black populations experienced declines from 2010 to 2020. Of all racial populations, the Black population experienced the biggest decline in NYC from being 1,861,295 residents (22.8% in 2010) to 1,776,891 residents (20.2% in 2020) decreasing by -84,404 residents or -4.5% by 2020. The White population declined from 2,722,904 residents (33.3% in 2010) to 2,719,856 residents (30.9% in 2020) decreasing by -3,048 -0.1 by 2020.[67][68][69][70][71][72] The White population declined mainly in these NYC Boroughs through these following rankings, Queens, The Bronx, and then Staten Island, though the White population increased marginally in Brooklyn and then Manhattan. The Black population experienced declines by these following rankings in these NYC Boroughs, Brooklyn, Queens, and then Manhattan, though the Black population increased marginally in The Bronx and then Staten Island. The Hispanic population increased in these NYC Boroughs by these following rankings, The Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, and then Staten Island, but experienced decline in Manhattan. The Asian population increased in these NYC Boroughs by these following rankings, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, The Bronx, and then Staten Island.[73]

According to the 2019-20 demographic data from Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs, there were 3,030,397 foreign born residents in the city. Each the foreign born White and Black populations made up 19% of the foreign born residents, Hispanics made up 31% of the foreign born residents, and the Asians made 28% of the foreign born residents. For a long time since the mid to late 20th century, the Hispanic residents made up the vast majority of the foreign born population in the city, but since the 2010s, the growing foreign born Asian residents have been catching up and now starting to challenge the Hispanic residents as the largest foreign born population.[74]

Households

The 2000 census counted 2,021,588 households with a median income of $38,293. 30% of households had children under the age of 18, and 37% were married couples living together. 19% had a single female householder, and 39% were non-families. 32% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10% were single residents 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.59 persons, and the average family size was 3.32.

% population by age range
Age range 2000 Census
Under the age of 18 24%
Between 18 and 24 10%
Between 25 and 44 33%
Between 45 and 64 21%
Aged 65 or older 12%

The median age in New York City in 2000 was 34 years. For every 100 females, there were 90 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 86 males.

During the 2000s, Manhattan experienced a "baby boom" unique among U.S. cities. Between 2000 and 2007, the number of children under age 5 living in Manhattan grew by more than 32%.[75] The increase is driven mostly by affluent white families with median household incomes over $300,000.

Income

Overall, nominal household income in New York City is characterized by large variations. This phenomenon is especially true of Manhattan, which in 2005 was home to the highest incomes U.S. census tract, with a household income of $188,697, as well as the lowest, where household income was $9,320.[76] The disparity is driven in part by wage growth in high income brackets. In 2006 the average weekly wage in Manhattan was $1,453, the highest among the largest counties in the United States.[38] Wages in Manhattan were the fastest growing among the nation's 10 largest counties.[38] Among young adults in New York who work full-time, women now earn more money than men — approximately $5,000 more in 2005.[77]

New York City's borough of Manhattan is the highest nominal income county in the United States. In particular, ZIP code 10021 on Manhattan's Upper East Side, with more than 100,000 inhabitants and a per capita income of over $90,000, has one of the largest concentrations of income in the United States. The other boroughs, especially Queens and Staten Island, have large middle-class populations.

New York City's per capita income in 2000 was $22,402; men and women had a median income of $37,435 and $32,949 respectively. 21.2% of the population and 18.5% of families had incomes below the federal poverty line; 30.0% of this group were under the age of 18 and 17.8% were 65 and older.

Of Forbes Magazine's 400 richest American billionaires, 70 live in New York City.[78] Former mayor and Presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg is one of the nation's richest men. As of 2009 New York has regained the number one spot as the city with most billionaires (55), after losing out to Moscow in 2008.

Area Median
House-
hold
Income

Mean
House-
hold
Income

Percent-
age in
Poverty
The Bronx $34,156 $46,298 27.1%
Brooklyn $41,406 $60,020 21.9%
Manhattan $64,217 $121,549 17.6%
Queens $53,171 $67,027 12.0%
Staten Island $66,985 $81,498 9.8%
New York City $48,631 $75,809 18.5%
New York State $53,514 $77,865 13.7%
United States $50,140 $69,193 13.0%

Projections

Neighborhood Tabulation Areas (NTAs) are a geographic unit created to help project populations at a small area level, as part of the long-term sustainability plan for the city known as PlaNYC, covering the years 2000–2030. The minimum population for an NTA is 15,000 people, a level seen as a useful summary level which can be used both with the 2010 Census and the American Community Survey.[79]

New York has ranked first in population among American cities since the first census in 1790. New York will maintain this position for the foreseeable future, although there are varying forecasts on how much the population will increase. The most realistic population projections from the Department of City Planning anticipate a 1.1 million increase by 2030, bringing the city's population total to 9.1 million.[citation needed]

While the city's projected 2030 population will be a new high, only two boroughs, Staten Island and Queens have reached their population peak every year for the last 5 years. The study projects that by 2030, Queens will have 2.57 million people and Staten Island 552,000. Manhattan, with 1.83 million, Bronx with 1.46 million and Brooklyn with 2.72 million, will still be below their population peaks.[80]

Disputed 2010 Census data

On March 27, 2011, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that the city would file a formal challenge to the Census results, as a result of alleged undercounting in the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn.[81] The mayor has asserted that the numbers for Queens and Brooklyn, the two most populous boroughs, are implausible.[82] According to the Census, they grew by only 0.1% and 1.6%, respectively, while the other boroughs grew by between 3% and 5%. In addition, the Mayor claims, the census showed improbably high amounts of vacant housing in vital neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights, Queens.

Historical population data

Changes in population by race and ethnicity

Changes in population by borough

Historical Population of the present area of New York City and its boroughs * [18][85][86][87][88]
Year Manhattan Brooklyn Queens Bronx Staten Is.' Total
1698 4,937 2,017 n/a n/a 727 7,681
1771 21,863 3,623 n/a n/a 2,847 28,423
1790 33,131 4,549 6,159 1,781 3,827 49,447
1800 60,515 5,740 6,642 1,755 4,563 79,215
1810 96,373 8,303 7,444 2,267 5,347 119,734
1820 123,706 11,187 8,246 2,782 6,135 152,056
1830 202,589 20,535 9,049 3,023 7,082 242,278
1840 312,710 47,613 14,480 5,346 10,965 391,114
1850 515,547 138,882 18,593 8,032 15,061 696,115
1860 813,669 279,122 32,903 23,593 25,492 1,174,779
1870 942,292 419,921 45,468 37,393 33,029 1,478,103
1880 1,164,673 599,495 56,559 51,980 38,991 1,911,698
1890 1,441,216 838,547 87,050 88,908 51,693 2,507,414
†1900 1,850,093 1,166,582 152,999 200,507 67,021 3,437,202
1910 2,331,542 1,634,351 284,041 430,980 85,969 4,766,883
1920 2,284,103 2,018,356 469,042 732,016 116,531 5,620,048
1930 1,867,312 2,560,401 1,079,129 1,265,258 158,346 6,930,446
1940 1,889,924 2,698,285 1,297,634 1,394,711 174,441 7,454,995
1950 1,960,101 2,738,175 1,550,849 1,451,277 191,555 7,891,957
1960 1,698,281 2,627,319 1,809,578 1,424,815 221,991 7,781,984
1970 1,539,233 2,602,012 1,986,473 1,471,701 295,443 7,894,862
1980 1,428,285 2,230,936 1,891,325 1,168,972 352,121 7,071,639
1990 1,487,536 2,300,664 1,951,598 1,203,789 378,977 7,322,564
2000 1,537,195 2,465,326 2,229,379 1,332,650 443,728 8,008,278
2010 1,585,873 2,504,700 2,230,722 1,385,108 468,730 8,175,133
2020 1,694,251 2,736,074 2,405,464 1,472,654 495,747 8,804,190
Year Manhattan Brooklyn Queens Bronx Staten Is. Total
* All population figures are consistent with present-day boundaries.
† First census after the consolidation of the five boroughs

Click here [89] to view the density of New York City as an interactive map of the 1900 census, shortly after municipal consolidation of the five boroughs in 1898.

Languages

In 1940, a little over half of all White New Yorker's spoke English, with large percentages speaking Yiddish, Italian, and German.

Languages spoken in NYC among White population (1940)[90]

  English (53.77%)
  Yiddish (13.05%)
  Italian (12.83%)
  German (6.14%)
  Polish (2.34%)
  Others (11.87%)
Language Speakers[90] Percent
(all)
Percent
(foreign-born)
English 3,755,580 53.77% 17.98%
Yiddish 911,280 13.05% 23.93%
Italian 896,160 12.83% 19.13%
German 429,060 6.14% 13.54%
Polish 163,500 2.34% 4.2%
Russian 149,840 2.15% 5.17%
Swedish 38,240 0.55% 1.35%
French 37,860 0.54% 1.25%
Norwegian 35,620 0.51% 1.28%
Czech 28,700 0.36% 0.6%
Finnish 13,280 0.19% 0.43%
Danish 9,140 0.13% 0.37%
Dutch 6,440 0.09% 0.25%
Slovenian 4,260 0.06% 0.12%
Others 330,680 4.73% 26.39%
Not reported 175,080 2.51% 1.99%
Total 6,984,720 100% 100%

Ethnicities and enclaves

 
Map of racial distribution in New York, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people: White, Black, Asian, Hispanic, or Other (yellow)

African Americans

 
125th Street in Harlem, an African and African-American cultural center.

According to the 2010 United States Census, New York City had the largest population of self-defined black residents of any U.S. city, with over 2,000,000 within the city's boundaries, although this number has decreased since 2000.[91] New York City had more black people than did the entire state of California until the 1980 United States Census. The black population consists of immigrants and their descendants from Africa and the Caribbean as well as native-born African-Americans. Many of the city's black residents live in Brooklyn and The Bronx. Several of the city's neighborhoods are historical birthplaces of urban black culture in America, among them the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford–Stuyvesant and Manhattan's Harlem and various sections of Eastern Queens and The Bronx. Bedford-Stuyvesant is considered to have the highest concentration of black residents in the United States. New York City has the largest population of black immigrants (at 686,814) and descendants of immigrants from the Caribbean (especially from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, Guyana, Belize, Grenada, and Haiti), and of sub-Saharan Africans. In a news item of April 3, 2006, however, the New York Times noted that for the first time since the American Civil War, the recorded African-American population was declining, because of emigration to other regions, a declining African-American birthrate in New York, and decreased immigration of blacks from the Caribbean and Africa.[92]

The Bronx

Brooklyn

Manhattan

Queens

Staten Island

Asian

Chinese

 
An intersection in Manhattan's Chinatown.

The New York City Metropolitan Area contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside Asia, enumerating an estimated 735,019 individuals as of 2012,[93] with the Manhattan Chinatown (紐約華埠), home to the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere,.[94][95][96] Other Chinatowns are included one in Queens (the Flushing Chinatown), three in Brooklyn (the Sunset Park Chinatown, the Avenue U Chinatown, and the Bensonhurst Chinatown), and one each in Edison, New Jersey and Nassau County, Long Island,[97] as well as fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area.[98] Chinese in New York constitute the fastest-growing nationality in New York State and on Long Island.[99][100][101]

Filipino

 
Spectators at the Philippine Independence Day Parade on Madison Avenue in Midtown Manhattan.

New York City was home to an estimated 82,313 Filipinos in 2011, representing a 7.7% increase from the estimated 77,191 in 2008, with 56%, or about 46,000, in Queens.[102] Immigration from the Philippines began mainly after 1965, when immigration quotas that prevented Filipino immigration for many years were abolished. While there was earlier immigration from the Philippines, it was in low numbers and mainly concentrated in Hawaii and California. Since then, Filipinos have settled in Northeastern cities, with a majority in the New York City metropolitan area. Most of these immigrants have been professionals (doctors, nurses, other medical professions, accountants and engineers). The Filipino median household income in New York City was $81,929 in 2013, and 68% held a bachelor's degree or higher.[102]

New York City annually hosts the Philippine Independence Day Parade, which is traditionally held on the first Sunday of June on Madison Avenue. The celebration occupies nearly twenty-seven city blocks which includes a 3.5-hour parade and an all-day long street fair and cultural performances.

A "Little Manila" can be found in Woodside, in the borough of Queens.[103] Filipinos are also concentrated in Jackson Heights and Elmhurst in Queens.[104] There are also smaller Filipino communities in Jamaica, Queens and parts of Brooklyn. The Benigno Aquino Triangle is located on Hillside Avenue in Hollis, Queens to commemorate the slain Filipino political leader and to recognize the large Filipino American population in the area.[105]

Although not technically part of New York City, other large Filipino populations just outside the city's borders can be found in neighboring Northern and Central New Jersey, particularly in Bergen, Hudson, Middlesex,[106] and Passaic counties. By 2013 Census estimates, the New York City metropolitan area was estimated to be home to 224,266 Filipino Americans, 88.5% (about 200,000) of them single-race Filipinos.[107] Over 150,000 Filipino-born immigrants made their home in the New York City tri-state metropolitan region in 2011.[108] In 2012, a Census-estimated 235,222 single- and multi-racial Filipino Americans lived in the broader New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area.[109]

Korean

 
Congregating in Manhattan's Koreatown.

New York City is home to 100,000 ethnic Koreans, with two-thirds living in Queens.[110] On the other hand, the overall Greater New York Combined Statistical Area[111] enumerated 218,764 Korean American residents as of the 2010 United States Census, the second-largest population of Koreans outside of Korea.[112]

Indian Subcontinent

According to 2007 American Community Survey estimates, New York City is home to approximately 315,000 people from the Indian subcontinent, which includes the countries of India (236,117), Pakistan (39,002), Bangladesh (34,332), and Sri Lanka (5,010). South Asians constitute 3.8% of New York City's population.[113] The New York City Metropolitan Area is home to approximately 600,000 Indian Americans, representing the largest Asian Indian population in the Western Hemisphere. A majority of the South Asian residents are concentrated in Queens neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights, Flushing, City Line, Ozone Park, Glen Oaks, Floral Park, Bellerose, Jamaica, Kew Gardens and Elmhurst. In the borough of Queens, the South Asian population is approximately near 200,000 and counting, where they constitute 8.2% of the population. South Asians from the Caribbean majority from Guyana, Trinidad, and a small number from Jamaica are also large in number.

According to the 2010 United States Census, there are 192,209 Asian Indians, 53,174 Bangladeshis, 41,887 Pakistanis, and 3,696 Sri Lankans in New York City.[114] The New York City Metropolitan Area contains the largest Sri Lankan community in the United States (second largest in North America after Toronto, Ontario, Canada), receiving the highest legal permanent resident Sri Lankan immigrant population.[115] The Little Sri Lanka in the Tompkinsville neighborhood of the borough of Staten Island is one of the largest Sri Lankan communities outside of the country of Sri Lanka itself.[116][117]

Japanese

As of the 2000 United States Census about over half of the 37,279 people of Japanese ancestry in New York State lived in New York City.[118]

Vietnamese

The Vietnamese are concentrated in Queens.[119]

Indonesian

Approximately 5,000 Indonesians live in New York City. Indonesians are concentrated in Elmhurst, Queens.[120]

Middle Eastern

Arab

 
A Syrian man selling cold drinks in Lower Manhattan, circa 1908

Arabs first emigrated to New York City in the 1880s, the vast majority of them came from modern-day Lebanon and Syria. Before the advent of modern Lebanon in August 1920, and due to the political and historical nature of Ottoman-ruled Syria, the majority of Lebanese and Syrians referred to themselves as "Syrian" upon arrival to Ellis Island.[121] Little by little, starting in the 1930s, immigrants from Lebanon started referring to themselves as "Lebanese-American" and immigrants from Syria retained the designation "Syrian-American". From 1880 to 1960 the overwhelming majority (90%) of Lebanese and Syrian immigrants were of the Christian faith.[122] After 1960, especially after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, Arab Muslims from other Arab countries such as Jordan, and Egypt started arriving in New York. The Syrian/Lebanese mother colony was located around Washington Street in Lower Manhattan, in a neighborhood called Little Syria.[123] Syrian immigration to the United States was very small with respect to the other ethnic groups or peoples that arrived in America. In 1910, at the peak of Syrian immigration, only 60,000 Syrians entered the United States.[121]

Around the late-1930s, Little Syria started to go into decline with the construction of skyscrapers in Lower Manhattan. In the name of urban renewal, the skyscraper era was ushered in and preceded with the destruction of five-storey tenements that Syrians called home. The final blow to Little Syria commenced with the construction of the Brooklyn battery tunnel in 1940. A large percentage of the community moved to the area around downtown Brooklyn; and set up shops and businesses on Atlantic Avenue. St. George's Syrian Catholic Church is the last physical reminder of the Syrian- and Lebanese-American community that once lived in Little Syria.[121] In Brooklyn, there are two long-time established businesses still open on Atlantic Avenue. Damascus Bakery is still in business since 1936, and Sahadi's has had a strong loyal customer base since 1948. By the 1960s, the community was to move yet again, this time to Park Slope and Bay Ridge.[124]

The New York metro area contains the largest concentration of populations with Arab and Middle Eastern ancestry in the United States, with 230,899 residents of the metro area claiming Arab ancestry in the 2000 U.S. Census.[125] An estimated 70,000 lived in New York City as of 2000.[126] New York City holds the New York Arab-American Comedy Festival, founded in 2003 by comedians Dean Obeidallah and Maysoon Zayid.

There is also a Berber community present in New York.[127]

European

Albanian

New York City has the largest Albanian population in the United States. The first large group of Albanians came in the early 1900s to New York City due to political reasons. Albanians are concentrated in the Bronx.[128]

German

Carl Schurz, a refugee from the unsuccessful first German democratic revolution of 1848, served as United States Secretary of the Interior and as United States Senator from Missouri. Carl Schurz Park in Manhattan is named after him.

The influence of German immigration can still be felt in areas of New York City. The Yorkville neighborhood on the Upper East Side of Manhattan was a center of German-American culture. As of the 2000 census 255,536 New Yorkers reported German ancestry.[129]

In the middle of the 19th century, Little Germany, situated in what is now termed Alphabet City, was the first non-English-speaking urban enclave in the United States.

Greek

Greek immigration to New York City began mainly in the 1890s. The push factors for immigration were the Balkan Wars and World War I. Greek immigration to New York City took place between 1890 and around 1917. In the latter years, more women arrived and communities began to grow, especially in Astoria, Queens. Greeks again began to arrive in large numbers after 1945, as they fled the economic devastation caused by World War II and the Greek Civil War.

In the first immigration wave, most of the Greek immigrants were men. Many of them worked in industrial labor jobs, and others created a niche in the fur business. This immigration wave brought 450,000 Greeks to the Northeast, largely concentrated in New York City. The second immigration wave, taking place between 1945 and 1982, was smaller with a total of 211,000 immigrants, mostly within the Northeast. However, new immigrants helped revive assimilating Greek communities and added new energy to a sense of ethnic identity.

The largest concentration of Greeks can still be found in Astoria. The Greek community there was established in the early 20th century during immigration. The neighborhood still has many Greek food stores and restaurants. Residents of Greek descent make up 1.0% of New York City's population.

Irish

The Irish community is one of New York's major ethnic groups and has been a significant proportion of the city's population since the waves of immigration in the mid-nineteenth century. New York City's St. Patrick's Day Parade dates to 1762.

During the Great Irish Famine (1845–1851), Irish families were forced to emigrate from Ireland; by 1854, between 1,500,000 and 2,000,000 people were forced to leave the country - about a quarter of the pre-famine population. In the United States, most of the recently arrived Irish became city dwellers as that was where work was. In addition, arriving with little money, many settled in the cities at which their ships made port. By 1850, the Irish made up a quarter of the population in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. Their arrival in the United States before other waves of Catholic immigrants meant that ethnic Irish long dominated the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. They created a strong network of churches and parochial schools to support their communities.

The Irish have long played a significant role in city politics, the Roman Catholic Church, and the New York City Fire Department and Police Department. As of the 2000 census, 520,810 New Yorkers reported Irish ancestry.[130]

According to a 2006 genetic survey by Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, about one in fifty New Yorkers of European origin carry a distinctive genetic signature on their Y chromosomes inherited from Niall of the Nine Hostages, an Irish high king of the 5th century A.D.[131][132]

Italian

 
Street vendors at the Feast of San Gennaro in Manhattan's Little Italy.

New York City has the largest population of Italian Americans in the United States of America as well as North America, many of whom inhabit ethnic enclaves in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island. New York City is home to the second largest Italian population outside of Italy, behind Buenos Aires, Argentina.

The largest wave of Italian immigration to the United States took place in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Between 1870 and 1978, 5.3 million Italians immigrated to the United States, including over two million between 1900 and 1910. Only the Irish and Germans immigrated in larger numbers. Italian families first settled in Little Italy's neighborhoods, the first and most famous one being the one around Mulberry Street, in Manhattan. This settlement, however, is rapidly becoming part of the adjacent Chinatown as the older Italian residents die and their children move elsewhere. As of the 2000 census, 692,739 New Yorkers reported Italian ancestry, making them the largest European ethnic group in the city.[133] In 2011, the American Community Survey found there were 49,075 persons of Italian birth in New York City.[134]

Moldovan

New York also has a Moldovan American community. Most of them live in Brooklyn and they mainly work in construction.[citation needed]

Polish

Polish immigration to New York City began at the end of the 19th century. In the 1980s, as a result of the Polish government's crackdown on the burgeoning Solidarność labor and political movement, Polish migration to the U.S. swelled. Polish Americans and Polish immigrants in the city generally reside in Brooklyn (neighborhoods of Greenpoint and Williamsburg) and in Queens (neighborhoods of Maspeth and Ridgewood). The combined neighborhood of Greenpoint/Williamsburg is sometimes referred to as "Little Poland" because of its large population of primarily working-class Polish immigrants, reportedly the second largest concentration in the United States, after Chicago. As of the 2000 census, 213,447 New Yorkers reported Polish ancestry.[135]

New York is home to a number of Polish and Polish-American cultural, community, and scientific institutions, including the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America (PIASA) and the Polish Cultural Institute. Polish-language publications with circulation reaching outside the city include The Polish Review, an English-language scholarly journal published since 1956 by PIASA; Nowy Dziennik,[136] founded in 1971; and Polska Gazeta [1], founded in the year 2000. The Polska Gazeta is the leading Polish-language daily newspaper in the tri-state area, delivering daily news to over 17,000 readers in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Long Island and Delaware. The Polish Newspaper SuperExpress [2], covering New York, New Jersey & Connecticut started publication in 1996.

The Pulaski Day Parade in New York on Fifth Avenue has been celebrated since 1937 to commemorate Kazimierz Pułaski, a Polish hero of the American Revolutionary War. It closely coincides with the October 11 General Pulaski Memorial Day, a national observance of his death at the Siege of Savannah, and his held on the first Sunday of October. In these parades march Polish dancers, Polish soccer teams and their mascots, Polish Scouts - ZHP and Polish school ambassadors and representatives, such as Mikolaj Pastorino (Nicholas Pastorino) and Lech Wałęsa. The Pulaski Day Parade is one of the largest parades in New York City.

Romanian

The Romanian community of New York City is the largest such community in North America. The 2000 Census reported 161,900 Romanians were living in New York City. They are mainly concentrated in Queens, as well as in parts of Manhattan and Staten Island. The Romanian Day Festival, for which the City closes a section of Broadway, demonstrates the strong sense of community of Romanians living in New York.

Russian

New York City contains a very large and growing Russian-Jewish population estimated at 300,000. There are large numbers of Russian-Jews in Brooklyn, mostly in neighborhoods of Southern Brooklyn, notably Brighton Beach, also known as "Little Odessa", where there are many businesses and billboards with signage entirely in the Russian language. There is a significant Russian Orthodox population in New York City as well.

Ukrainian

New York City contains a large and growing Ukrainian population. New York's Ukrainian population was traditionally centered around the East Village in Manhattan, as well as Brighton Beach (also known as "Little Odesa"), in Brooklyn. Urban flight and recent waves of new immigration have spread Ukrainians throughout the boroughs, with a heavy concentration in Brooklyn.

Jewish

 
Two girls wearing banners with the slogan "ABOLISH CHILD SLAVERY!!" in English and Yiddish. Probably taken during the May 1, 1909 New York labor parade.

The New York metropolitan area is home to the largest Jewish population in the world outside Israel. While most are descendants of Jews who moved from Europe, a growing number are of Asian and Middle Eastern origin. After dropping from a peak of 2.5 million in the 1950s to a low of 1.4 million in 2002 the population of Jews in the New York metropolitan area grew to 1.54 million in 2011. A study by the UJA-Federation of New York released in 2012[137] showed that the proportion of liberal Jews was decreasing while the proportion of generally conservative Orthodox Jews and recent immigrants from Russia was increasing. Much of this growth is in Brooklyn, which in 2012 was 23% Jewish and where most of the Russian immigrants live and nearly all of the ultra-orthodox.[138] The study by UJA-Federation of New York has been criticized by J.J. Goldberg, an observer at The Jewish Daily Forward, as excluding suburban Jews, for example in New Jersey, that are outside the service area of UJA-Federation of New York and also for lack of granularity with respect to the Orthodox of New York City.[139] The New York metropolitan area's Jewish population in 2001 was approximately 1.97 million, 600,000 fewer than in Israel's largest metropolitan area, denoted as Gush Dan. In 2012, an estimated 1,086,000 Ashkenazic Jews lived in New York City and constituted about 12% of the city's population, while approximately 100,000 Sephardic Jews live in the city too. New York City is also home to the world headquarters of the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitch group and the Bobover, Pupa, Vizhnitz and Satmar branches of Hasidism, ultra-Orthodox sects of Judaism.[citation needed] Many notable Jews come from New York City.

The first Jewish presence in New York City dates to the arrival of 23 Jewish refugees in 1654, who fled from Recife, Brazil, after the Portuguese conquered New Holland and brought the Inquisition with them.[140] Major immigration of Jews to New York began in the 1880s, with the increase of Anti-Semitic actions in Central and Eastern Europe. The number of Jews in New York City soared throughout the beginning of the 20th century and reached a peak of 2 million in the 1950s, when Jews constituted one-quarter of the city's population. New York City's Jewish population then began to decline because of low fertility rates and migration to suburbs and other states, particularly California and Florida.

A new wave of Ashkenazi, Kavkazi, Bukharian, and Georgian Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union began arriving in the 1980s and 1990s. Sephardic Jews including Syrian, Moroccan and other Jews of non-European origin have also lived in New York City since the 17th century. Many Jews, including the newer immigrants, have settled in Queens, south Brooklyn, and the Bronx, where at present most live in neighborhoods such as Riverdale.[citation needed] Sephardic Jews estimated at 100,000 strong have settled along Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn creating a unified community consisting of about 75,000 people in this area, while the other Sephardic Jews live in the Upper East Side of Manhattan and in Staten Island.

19th-century Jewish immigrants settled mainly in the tenement houses of the Lower East Side of Manhattan. New York City's current Jewish population is dispersed among all the boroughs; Brooklyn's Jewish population in 2011 was estimated as 561,000, and Manhattan's was 240,000.[141]

The Orthodox community is rapidly growing due to higher birthrates among Orthodox (especially Hasidic) Jews, while the numbers of Conservative and Reform Jews are declining.[142] 60% of the Jewish children in New York are Orthodox, 37% Hasidic. This accelerating dynamic is accompanied by a substantial rise in the percentage of Jews who live in poverty.[138]

Romani

New York City has one of the largest Romani populations.[143] There is a Macedonian Roma community in New York City. Macedonian Roma began immigrating to New York City in the late 1960s.[144] Many Roma moved to New York City from other parts of the United States after relief programs were put into effect in the 1930s. Roma from Hungary went to New York after the revolution in 1956.[145]

Dutch

Latin America

Puerto Rican

 
The 2005 National Puerto Rican Parade.

New York City has the largest Puerto Rican population of any city in the United States (including Puerto Rico).[146] Attributable to the changing citizenship status of the island's residents, Puerto Ricans can technically be said to have come to the City first as immigrants and subsequently as migrants. The first group of Puerto Ricans moved to New York in the mid-19th century, when Puerto Rico was a Spanish colony and its people Spanish subjects. The following wave of Puerto Ricans to move to New York did so after the Spanish–American War of 1898 made Puerto Rico a U.S. possession and after the Jones–Shafroth Act of 1917 gave Puerto Ricans U.S. citizenship, which allows travel without the need of a passport between the island and the United States mainland. The largest wave of migration came in the 1950s, in what became known as "The Great Migration"; as a result, more than a million Puerto Ricans once called New York City home. Presently the Puerto Rican population is around 800,000.[147]

Puerto Ricans have historically lived in neighborhoods such as the Lower East Side (also known in the community as Loisaida), Spanish Harlem and Williamsburg, Brooklyn since the 1950s. However, there has been an increase in Puerto Ricans in outlying areas of the city, such as the North Shore of Staten Island, and the eastern Bronx.

Dominican

Immigration records of Dominicans in the United States date from the late 19th century, and New York City has had a Dominican community since the 1930s. From the 1960s onward, after the fall of the Rafael Trujillo military regime, large waves of migration have thoroughly transnationalized the Dominican Republic, metaphorically blurring its frontier with the United States.

In 2006 New York City's Dominican population decreased for the first time since the 1980s, dropping by 1.3% from 609,885 in 2006 to 602,093 in 2007. They are the city's second-largest Hispanic group and, in 2009, it was estimated that they composed 24.9% of New York City's Latino population. According to Census data analysis by CUNY's Center for Latin American, Caribbean & Latino Studies, shows Dominicans as the new largest group of Hispanics in NYC. There were about 747,473 Dominicans in the five boroughs in 2013, compared with 719,444 Puerto Ricans.[148]

Areas with high a concentration of Dominicans are in Washington Heights, Corona, and certain areas in the Bronx.

Mexican

At the 2010 Census, there were 319,263 Mexican Americans living in New York City.[149] In 2009, it was estimated that of the city's Hispanic population, 13.5% was of Mexican origin.[148] Mexicans are the fastest growing group of Hispanic population.[91] Some estimates suggest that Mexicans will surpass both Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in 2023 to become the city's largest national Latino sub-group.[148] As of 2011, the Mexican Consulate estimated about 500,000 Mexicans lived in New York City, of whom 35,000 spoke a Mexican indigenous language.[150]

Colombian

Colombians have come in small numbers to New York City since the 1950s. The major exodus of Colombians from Colombia came in the 1970s and early 1980s when many of Colombia's cities were facing hardships from drug traffickers, crime and lack of employment. 55% of Colombians in New York City live in Queens, specifically in Jackson Heights, Corona, Elmhurst and Murray Hill.[151] In 2019, it was and estimated that 505,493 Colombians lived in New York City, representing 5.6% of the total population.[152]

Ecuadorian

In 2009, it was estimated that 211,378 Ecuadorian Americans lived in New York City, representing 8.9% of the city's Hispanic population. They are the fifth largest sub-group of Hispanics, after Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Colombians and Mexicans.[148]

Salvadoran

Since 1990, the Salvadoran population has been growing very rapidly in New York City. More than 50% of Salvadorans live in Queens, and the growth of their population is most notable in South Jamaica and Far Rockaway. Many Salvadorans reside in the Bronx as well. There are also pockets of Salvadorans in Brooklyn and in East Harlem, Manhattan.

Panamanian

Panamanians began migrating to New York City in the 1800s. Panamanians are concentrated in Brooklyn's Flatbush and Crown Heights neighborhoods.[153]

Brazilian

Approximately 80,000 to 100,000 Brazilians reside in the New York City area. There is a Brazilian community in Little Brazil.[154]

Argentine

Large influx of Argentines migrated to New York City in the 1980s and 1990s. There is an Argentine community in Junction Boulevard and Corona Avenue in Elmhurst, Queens.[155]

Oceania

Australia

Since 2010, Little Australia has emerged and is growing rapidly, representing the Australasian presence in Nolita, Manhattan.[156][157][158][159] In 2011, there were an estimated 20,000 Australian residents of New York City, nearly quadruple the 5,537 in 2005.[160][161]

See also

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External links

  • New York City Department of City Planning Population Division

demographics, york, city, further, information, demographics, york, state, york, city, large, ethnically, diverse, metropolis, largest, city, united, states, with, long, history, international, immigration, york, city, home, over, million, people, 2019, accoun. Further information Demographics of New York state New York City is a large and ethnically diverse metropolis 1 It is the largest city in the United States with a long history of international immigration New York City was home to over 8 3 million people in 2019 2 accounting for over 40 of the population of New York State and a slightly lower percentage of the New York metropolitan area home to approximately 23 6 million people across parts of New York New Jersey and Connecticut Over the last decade the city has been growing faster than the region The New York region continues to be by far the leading metropolitan gateway for legal immigrants admitted into the United States 3 4 5 6 Demographics of New York CityPopulation pyramid of New York City in 2021Population8 335 897 2022 est Population growth blue and population loss red from 1990 to 2000 Click on image to see full key and data Poster from 1907 The many ways in which New Yorkers say Merry Christmas or its equivalent in Arabic Armenian Chinese Croatian Czech Dutch Esperanto Finnish Flemish French Gaelic German Greek Yiddish labeled as Christian Hebrew Hungarian Italian Japanese Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Slovene Spanish Swedish Turkish and Ukrainian Gotham s citizens have been called The Sons of Elsewhere and their language that spoken at the Tower of Babel Throughout its history New York City has been a major point of entry for immigrants the term melting pot was coined to describe densely populated immigrant neighborhoods on the Lower East Side As many as 800 languages are spoken in New York 7 8 9 making it the most linguistically diverse city in the world 8 10 11 English remains the most widely spoken language although there are areas in the outer boroughs in which up to 25 of people speak English as an alternate language and or have limited or no English language fluency English is least spoken in neighborhoods such as Flushing Sunset Park and Corona New York City s five boroughsvteJurisdiction Population Land area Density of population GDP Borough County Census 2020 square miles squarekm people sq mile people sq km billions 2012 US 2The Bronx Bronx 1 472 654 42 2 109 3 34 920 13 482 38 726Brooklyn Kings 2 736 074 69 4 179 7 39 438 15 227 92 300Manhattan New York 1 694 251 22 7 58 8 74 781 28 872 651 619Queens Queens 2 405 464 108 7 281 5 22 125 8 542 88 578Staten Island Richmond 495 747 57 5 148 9 8 618 3 327 14 806City of New York 8 804 190 302 6 783 8 29 095 11 234 885 958State of New York 20 215 751 47 126 4 122 056 8 429 166 1 514 779 GDP Gross Domestic Product Sources 12 13 14 15 and see individual borough articles Contents 1 Population 1 1 Ethnicity 1 2 Profile and comparison 1 2 1 Comparison with other cities 1 2 2 Profile 2 Immigration 3 Demographic profile 3 1 Minority ancestries 3 2 White ancestries 3 3 Diversity of New York City s boroughs 4 2020 Census Demographics 4 1 Households 4 2 Income 5 Projections 5 1 Disputed 2010 Census data 6 Historical population data 6 1 Changes in population by race and ethnicity 6 2 Changes in population by borough 6 3 Languages 7 Ethnicities and enclaves 7 1 African Americans 7 1 1 The Bronx 7 1 2 Brooklyn 7 1 3 Manhattan 7 1 4 Queens 7 1 5 Staten Island 7 2 Asian 7 2 1 Chinese 7 2 2 Filipino 7 2 3 Korean 7 2 4 Indian Subcontinent 7 2 5 Japanese 7 2 6 Vietnamese 7 2 7 Indonesian 7 3 Middle Eastern 7 3 1 Arab 7 4 European 7 4 1 Albanian 7 4 2 German 7 4 3 Greek 7 4 4 Irish 7 4 5 Italian 7 4 6 Moldovan 7 4 7 Polish 7 4 8 Romanian 7 4 9 Russian 7 4 10 Ukrainian 7 4 11 Jewish 7 4 12 Romani 7 4 13 Dutch 7 5 Latin America 7 5 1 Puerto Rican 7 5 2 Dominican 7 5 3 Mexican 7 5 4 Colombian 7 5 5 Ecuadorian 7 5 6 Salvadoran 7 5 7 Panamanian 7 5 8 Brazilian 7 5 9 Argentine 7 6 Oceania 7 6 1 Australia 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPopulation Edit Looking down Broadway in Midtown Manhattan New York City had an estimated population density of 29 302 37 inhabitants per square mile 11 313 71 km2 in 2020 as the most densely populated major U S city Manhattan New York County alone was home to 74 870 7 inhabitants per square mile 28 907 7 km2 rendering it the most densely populated municipality in the United States Historical populationYearPop 16984 937 17125 840 18 3 17237 248 24 1 173710 664 47 1 174611 717 9 9 175613 046 11 3 177121 863 67 6 179033 131 51 5 180060 515 82 7 181096 373 59 3 1820123 706 28 4 1830202 589 63 8 1840312 710 54 4 1850515 547 64 9 1860813 669 57 8 1870942 292 15 8 18801 206 299 28 0 18901 515 301 25 6 19003 437 202 126 8 19104 766 883 38 7 19205 620 048 17 9 19306 930 446 23 3 19407 454 995 7 6 19507 891 957 5 9 19607 781 984 1 4 19707 894 862 1 5 19807 071 639 10 4 19907 322 564 3 5 20008 008 288 9 4 20108 175 133 2 1 20208 804 190 7 7 2022 est 8 335 897 5 3 1880 amp 1890 figures include part of the Bronx Beginning with 1900 figures are for consolidated city of five boroughs For the same area before 1900 see Historical population data below Sources 1698 1771 16 1790 1990 17 2000 and 2010 Censuses 18 2020 Census 19 and 2022 estimate 20 New York City is the most populous city in the United States with an estimated 8 804 190 people living in the city according to the 2020 U S Census 19 up from 8 175 133 in 2010 8 0 million in 2000 and 7 3 million in 1990 18 This amounts to about 44 of New York State s population and a similar percentage of the metropolitan regional population New York s two key demographic features are its population density and cultural diversity The city s population density of 29 091 3 people per square mile 11 232 km2 makes it the densest of any American municipality with a population above 100 000 21 Manhattan s population density is 74 781 people per square mile 28 872 km2 highest of any county in the United States 22 23 New York City is multicultural About 36 of the city s population is foreign born 24 one of the highest among US cities The eleven nations constituting the largest sources of modern immigration to New York City are the Dominican Republic China Jamaica Guyana Mexico Ecuador Brazil Haiti Trinidad and Tobago Colombia Russia and El Salvador 25 Ethnicity Edit The New York City metropolitan area is home to the largest Dominican population in the United States and as of 2023 Dominicans are the largest Latino Group in New York City and the largest ethnic group in Manhattan New York City is also home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel 26 It is also home to nearly a quarter of the nation s Indian Americans and 15 of all Korean Americans 27 28 the largest African American community of any city in the country and including 6 Chinatowns in the city proper 29 comprised as of 2008 a population of 659 596 overseas Chinese 30 the largest outside of Asia New York City alone according to the 2010 Census has now become home to more than one million Asian Americans greater than the combined totals of San Francisco and Los Angeles 31 New York contains the highest total Asian population of any U S city proper 32 6 0 of New York City is of Chinese ethnicity with about forty percent of them living in the borough of Queens alone Koreans make up 1 2 of the city s population and Japanese at 0 3 Filipinos are the largest southeast Asian ethnic group at 0 8 followed by Vietnamese who make up only 0 2 of New York City s population Indians are the largest South Asian group comprising 2 4 of the city s population with Pakistanis at 0 4 and Bangladeshis at 0 8 respectively 33 The largest ethnic groups as of the 2023 census estimates are Dominicans African American African or Caribbean Puerto Ricans Italians West Indians Dominicans Chinese Irish Russian and German 34 35 The Puerto Rican population of New York City is the largest outside Puerto Rico 36 The New York City metropolitan area is also home to the largest Italian population in North America and the third largest Italian population outside of Italy Italians emigrated to the city in large numbers in the early 20th century establishing several Little Italies The Irish also have a notable presence along with Germans New York City has a high degree of income variation In 2005 the median household income in the highest census tract was reported to be 188 697 while in the lowest it was 9 320 37 The variance is driven by wage growth in high income brackets while wages have stagnated for middle and lower income brackets In 2006 the average weekly wage in Manhattan was 1 453 the highest and fastest growing among the largest counties in the United States 38 The borough is also experiencing a baby boom among the wealthy that is unique among U S cities Since 2000 the number of children under age 5 living in Manhattan has grown by more than 32 39 In 2000 about 3 out of every 10 New York City housing units were owner occupied compared to about 2 owner occupied units out of every 3 units in the U S as a whole 40 Rental vacancy is usually between 3 and 4 5 well below the 5 threshold defined to be a housing emergency justifying the continuation of rent control and rent stabilization About 33 of rental units fall under rent stabilization according to which increases are adjudicated periodically by city agencies Rent control covers only a very small number of rental units 41 Some critics point to New York City s strict zoning and other regulations as partial causes for the housing shortage but during the city s decline in population from the 1960s through the 1980s a large number of apartment buildings suffered suspected arson fires or were abandoned by their owners Once the population trend was reversed with rising prospects for rentals and sales new construction has resumed but generally for purchasers in higher income brackets Profile and comparison Edit Comparison with other cities Edit New York is the largest city in the United States with the city proper s population more than double the next largest city Los Angeles or roughly equivalent to the combined populations of Los Angeles Chicago and Houston the United States second third and fourth most populous cities respectively In 2006 demographers estimated New York s population would reach 9 1 million by 2030 42 In 2000 the reported life expectancy of New Yorkers was above the national average Life expectancy for females born in 2009 in New York City is 80 2 years and for males is 74 5 years 43 New York City compared2010 Census Data New York City Los Angeles Chicago New York State United StatesTotal population 8 175 133 3 792 820 2 695 598 19 378 102 308 745 538Population percent change 2000 to 2010 2 1 2 6 6 9 2 1 9 7 Population density 27 012 sq mi 8 092 sq mi 11 864 sq mi 408 7 sq mi 87 4 sq mi Median household income 1999 38 293 36 687 38 625 43 393 41 994Per capita income 1999 22 402 20 671 20 175 23 389 21 587Bachelor s degree or higher 27 26 26 27 24 Foreign born 36 41 21 7 20 13 White 44 6 49 8 45 0 44 66 4 72 4 Black 25 1 9 6 32 9 15 5 12 6 Hispanic any race 27 5 48 5 28 9 17 3 16 3 Asian 11 8 11 3 5 5 5 9 4 8 Profile Edit New York s two key demographic features are its density and diversity The city has an extremely high population density of 26 403 people per square mile 10 194 km2 about 10 000 more people per square mile than the next densest large American city San Francisco 45 Manhattan s population density is 66 940 people per square mile 25 846 km2 23 The city has a long tradition of attracting international immigration and Americans seeking careers in certain sectors As of 2006 New York City has ranked number one for seven consecutive years as the city most U S residents would most like to live in or near 46 Immigration EditThroughout its history New York City has been a principal entry point for immigration to the United States These immigrants often form ethnic enclaves neighborhoods dominated by one ethnicity The city experienced major immigration from Europe in the 19th century and another major wave in the early 20th century being admitted into the United States of America primarily through Ellis Island Since the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and particularly since the 1980s New York City has seen renewed rates of high immigration Newer immigrants are from Latin America the Caribbean Asia Eastern Europe and Africa 36 of the city s population is foreign born 24 Among U S cities this proportion is higher only in Los Angeles and Miami 23 In New York no single country or region of origin dominates The eleven largest countries of origin are the Dominican Republic China Jamaica Guyana Mexico Ecuador Haiti Trinidad and Tobago Colombia Russia and El Salvador 47 Between 1990 and 2000 the city admitted 1 224 524 immigrants 48 Demographers and city officials have observed that immigration to New York City has been slowing since 1997 This is mostly due to more and more immigrants choosing directly to locate to the city s suburbs and then commute to the city or work in many of its booming edge cities such as Fort Lee NJ Hempstead NY Morristown NJ Stamford CT White Plains NY and others Despite the slowdown in immigration the city s overall immigrant population has continued to increase and in 2006 it numbered 3 038 million 37 0 up from 2 871 million 35 9 in 2000 49 50 By 2013 the population of foreign born individuals living in New York City had increased to 3 07 million and as a percentage of total population was the highest it had been in the past 100 years 51 2018 American Community Survey Race and ethnicity makeup of NYCWhite 42 7 Hispanic or Latino of any race 29 1 Black or African American 24 3 Asian 13 9 Native American 0 4 Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0 1 Other races 15 1 Demographic profile EditSee also Demographic history of New York City Ethnic origins in New York CityMinority ancestries Edit Immigrant Africans Caribbeans and African Americans make up 25 1 of New York City s population According to the U S Census Bureau there were 2 086 566 black people residing in New York City Percentage wise approximately two out of every five black residents of New York City resides in Brooklyn primarily in the Central Northern and Eastern sections of the borough one out of every five resides in Bronx mainly in the borough s Northeastern Southeastern and Southern sections one out of every five resides in Queens mainly in the borough s Southeastern area with the remaining black residents residing in Manhattan primarily in Harlem and Staten Island mainly the North Shore of the borough Native Americans make up 0 4 of New York City s population According to the survey there were 29 569 Native Americans residing in New York City Of 29 569 Native Americans 2 075 were of the Cherokee tribal grouping In addition 213 were of the Navajo tribal grouping Also 42 people identified themselves as Chippewa and 47 people identified themselves as Sioux There is a number of Mohawks indigenous to the New York city area and or Upstate New York and many Mohawks arrived in the 1930s to work in the skyscraper building construction industry 52 unreliable source And a few Lenape Indians indigenous to the New York city area still remain in the city migrated from other rural parts to Manhattan 53 Asian Americans make up 11 8 of New York City s population According to the survey there were 976 807 Asian Americans residing in New York City Of 976 807 Asian Americans 445 145 were of Chinese descent representing 5 4 of the city s population In addition there were 226 888 Indian Americans residing in the city representing 2 7 of the population Approximately 103 660 people identified themselves as Other Asian a category that includes people of Cambodian Laotian Hmong and Pakistani descent Individuals in this category represent 1 2 of the city s population There were 88 162 Korean Americans residing in the city representing 1 1 of the population Other Asian American groups include those of Filipino 68 826 0 8 Japanese 26 096 0 3 and Vietnamese 18 030 0 2 descent Pacific Islander Americans make up 0 1 of New York City s population According to the survey there were 4 941 Pacific Islander Americans residing in New York City Of 4 941 Pacific Islander Americans 1 992 were Native Hawaiian Approximately 904 were of Samoan descent and 504 were of Guamanian descent In addition 1 541 were of other Pacific Islander ancestries Multiracial Americans make up 2 1 of New York City s population According to the survey there were 177 643 multiracial Americans residing in New York City People of black and white ancestry numbered at 37 124 making up 0 4 of the population People of white and Asian ancestry numbered at 22 242 making up 0 3 of the population People of white Native American ancestry 10 762 and black Native American ancestry 10 221 each made up 0 1 of the city s population The term Multiracial American however can be very misleading For example many people of Latin American background may have various racial ancestries Furthermore there are many Americans who have multiple racial ancestries who are not aware of it Therefore the actual numbers are likely much higher citation needed Hispanics and Latinos make up 27 5 of New York City s population According to the American Community Survey there were 2 287 905 Hispanic or Latino Americans residing in New York City The Hispanic Latino population is categorized with four groups Puerto Rican 785 618 or 9 4 Mexican 297 581 or 3 6 Cuban 42 377 or 0 5 and Other Hispanic or Latino 1 165 576 or 14 0 54 While most Hispanics in New York City do not select a race in addition to their ethnicity in the American Community Survey among those foreign born 33 also self identify as white and 9 as black 55 According to the 2006 2007 Center for Latin American Caribbean amp Latino Studies 56 Puerto Rican 1 278 628 Dominican 602 093 Mexican 289 755 Ecuadorian 201 708 Colombian 113 469 Salvadoran 100 396 Other Hispanic or Latino 351 635 Note This source contains all of the numerical information in the data above White ancestries Edit White Americans make up 44 6 of New York City s population According to the survey there were 3 704 243 White Americans residing in New York City White Americans of non Hispanic origin make up 35 1 of the city s population There are 2 918 976 non Hispanic whites residing in the city Much of New York City s European American population consists of individuals of Italian Irish German Russian Polish English and Greek ancestry 57 There is a considerable Bulgarian population in New York Bulgarians migrated in New York in the 1900s 58 According to the 2006 2008 American Community Survey the top ten White European ancestries were the following 59 Italian 8 2 684 230 Irish 5 3 443 364 German 3 6 296 901 Russian 3 1 260 821 Polish 2 8 237 919 English 1 9 160 472 Greek 1 0 83 575 French 0 9 73 587 Hungarian 0 7 59 225 Ukrainian 0 6 49 643 Other smaller European ancestries include Portuguese 0 5 46 384 Scottish 0 5 41 787 Scotch Irish 0 3 28 770 Dutch 0 3 24 776 Norwegian 0 3 24 737 Swedish 0 3 22 206 59 Diversity of New York City s boroughs Edit According to a 2001 study by Claritas four of the city s five boroughs ranked among the nation s twenty most diverse counties Queens ranked 1st Brooklyn 3rd Manhattan 7th and The Bronx 17th In addition Hudson County and Essex County New Jersey both of which are part of the New York Metropolitan Area ranked 6th and 15th respectively 60 The city has several demographically unique characteristics Queens is the only large county in the United States where the median income among black households about 52 000 a year has surpassed that of whites 61 The New York City metropolitan area is home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel 62 It is also home to nearly a quarter of the nation s Indian American population 63 and the largest African American community of any city in the country New York City with about 800 000 Puerto Rican residents has the largest Puerto Rican population outside of Puerto Rico Another historically significant ethnic group are Italians who emigrated to the city in large numbers during the late 19th century New York City is home to the largest Italian American population in the United States The Irish and Germans also have a notable presence Foreign born by borough 1970 2006 Borough 1970 1980 1990 2000 2006Brooklyn 17 5 23 8 29 2 37 8 37 8Queens 21 0 28 6 36 2 46 1 48 5Manhattan 20 0 24 4 25 8 29 4 28 7Bronx 15 6 18 4 22 8 29 0 31 8Staten Island 9 0 9 8 11 8 16 4 20 9Total 18 2 23 6 28 4 35 9 37 0Source NYC gov 64 Jurisdiction Population2000census white blackorAfricanAmerican Asian Other mixedrace Hispanic Latinoof anyrace Catholic notaffiliated Jewish Protestant Estimateof notreportingRace Ethnicity Religious groupsBrooklyn 2 465 326 41 2 36 4 7 5 10 6 4 3 19 8 37 4 15 8 33Queens 2 229 379 44 1 20 0 17 6 12 3 6 1 25 0 29 37 11 5 15Manhattan 1 537 195 54 4 17 4 9 4 14 7 4 1 27 2 37 11 20 9 19Bronx 1 332 650 29 9 35 6 3 0 25 7 5 8 48 4 44 14 6 5 29Staten Island 443 728 77 6 9 7 5 7 4 3 2 7 12 1 60 11 8 5 14NYC Total 8 008 278 44 7 26 6 9 8 14 0 4 9 27 0 37 17 13 6 24NY State 18 976 457 67 9 15 9 5 5 7 5 3 1 15 1 42 20 9 10 16USA 281 421 906 75 1 12 3 3 6 6 5 2 4 12 5 22 37 2 23 12Source 2000 Census 65 American Indian Native Alaskan Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander make up 2 9 of the population of NYC and have been included with Other Source for religious groups ARDA 66 2020 Census Demographics EditAs according to the New York City Department of City Planning there were a total of 8 804 190 residents There were almost equivalent populations of 2 719 856 White residents at 30 9 and 2 490 350 Hispanic residents at 28 3 meanwhile there were 1 776 891 Black residents at 20 2 and 1 373 502 Asian residents at 15 6 There were even much smaller numbers of 143 632 other race residents at 1 6 and 299 959 Two or More races residents at 3 4 Although the Asian population is still below the Black population in ranking they are slowly catching up to being close to the Black population ranking From 2010 to 2020 the growing Asian population outpaced the growing Hispanic population despite that the Hispanic population is still much larger than the Asian population The Asian population rose from 1 028 119 residents 12 6 in 2010 to 1 373 502 Asian residents 15 6 in 2020 increasing by 345 383 residents or 33 6 by 2020 The Hispanic population increased marginally from 2 336 076 residents 28 6 in 2010 to 2 490 350 residents 28 3 in 2020 increasing by 154 274 residents or 6 6 by 2020 though their percentage portion from the total NYC population dropped as other populations grew Meanwhile the White and Black populations experienced declines from 2010 to 2020 Of all racial populations the Black population experienced the biggest decline in NYC from being 1 861 295 residents 22 8 in 2010 to 1 776 891 residents 20 2 in 2020 decreasing by 84 404 residents or 4 5 by 2020 The White population declined from 2 722 904 residents 33 3 in 2010 to 2 719 856 residents 30 9 in 2020 decreasing by 3 048 0 1 by 2020 67 68 69 70 71 72 The White population declined mainly in these NYC Boroughs through these following rankings Queens The Bronx and then Staten Island though the White population increased marginally in Brooklyn and then Manhattan The Black population experienced declines by these following rankings in these NYC Boroughs Brooklyn Queens and then Manhattan though the Black population increased marginally in The Bronx and then Staten Island The Hispanic population increased in these NYC Boroughs by these following rankings The Bronx Queens Brooklyn and then Staten Island but experienced decline in Manhattan The Asian population increased in these NYC Boroughs by these following rankings Queens Brooklyn Manhattan The Bronx and then Staten Island 73 According to the 2019 20 demographic data from Mayor s Office of Immigrant Affairs there were 3 030 397 foreign born residents in the city Each the foreign born White and Black populations made up 19 of the foreign born residents Hispanics made up 31 of the foreign born residents and the Asians made 28 of the foreign born residents For a long time since the mid to late 20th century the Hispanic residents made up the vast majority of the foreign born population in the city but since the 2010s the growing foreign born Asian residents have been catching up and now starting to challenge the Hispanic residents as the largest foreign born population 74 Households Edit The 2000 census counted 2 021 588 households with a median income of 38 293 30 of households had children under the age of 18 and 37 were married couples living together 19 had a single female householder and 39 were non families 32 of all households were made up of individuals and 10 were single residents 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 59 persons and the average family size was 3 32 population by age range Age range 2000 CensusUnder the age of 18 24 Between 18 and 24 10 Between 25 and 44 33 Between 45 and 64 21 Aged 65 or older 12 The median age in New York City in 2000 was 34 years For every 100 females there were 90 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 86 males During the 2000s Manhattan experienced a baby boom unique among U S cities Between 2000 and 2007 the number of children under age 5 living in Manhattan grew by more than 32 75 The increase is driven mostly by affluent white families with median household incomes over 300 000 Income Edit Overall nominal household income in New York City is characterized by large variations This phenomenon is especially true of Manhattan which in 2005 was home to the highest incomes U S census tract with a household income of 188 697 as well as the lowest where household income was 9 320 76 The disparity is driven in part by wage growth in high income brackets In 2006 the average weekly wage in Manhattan was 1 453 the highest among the largest counties in the United States 38 Wages in Manhattan were the fastest growing among the nation s 10 largest counties 38 Among young adults in New York who work full time women now earn more money than men approximately 5 000 more in 2005 77 New York City s borough of Manhattan is the highest nominal income county in the United States In particular ZIP code 10021 on Manhattan s Upper East Side with more than 100 000 inhabitants and a per capita income of over 90 000 has one of the largest concentrations of income in the United States The other boroughs especially Queens and Staten Island have large middle class populations New York City s per capita income in 2000 was 22 402 men and women had a median income of 37 435 and 32 949 respectively 21 2 of the population and 18 5 of families had incomes below the federal poverty line 30 0 of this group were under the age of 18 and 17 8 were 65 and older Of Forbes Magazine s 400 richest American billionaires 70 live in New York City 78 Former mayor and Presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg is one of the nation s richest men As of 2009 New York has regained the number one spot as the city with most billionaires 55 after losing out to Moscow in 2008 Area MedianHouse holdIncome MeanHouse holdIncome Percent age in PovertyThe Bronx 34 156 46 298 27 1 Brooklyn 41 406 60 020 21 9 Manhattan 64 217 121 549 17 6 Queens 53 171 67 027 12 0 Staten Island 66 985 81 498 9 8 New York City 48 631 75 809 18 5 New York State 53 514 77 865 13 7 United States 50 140 69 193 13 0 Projections EditNeighborhood Tabulation Areas NTAs are a geographic unit created to help project populations at a small area level as part of the long term sustainability plan for the city known as PlaNYC covering the years 2000 2030 The minimum population for an NTA is 15 000 people a level seen as a useful summary level which can be used both with the 2010 Census and the American Community Survey 79 New York has ranked first in population among American cities since the first census in 1790 New York will maintain this position for the foreseeable future although there are varying forecasts on how much the population will increase The most realistic population projections from the Department of City Planning anticipate a 1 1 million increase by 2030 bringing the city s population total to 9 1 million citation needed While the city s projected 2030 population will be a new high only two boroughs Staten Island and Queens have reached their population peak every year for the last 5 years The study projects that by 2030 Queens will have 2 57 million people and Staten Island 552 000 Manhattan with 1 83 million Bronx with 1 46 million and Brooklyn with 2 72 million will still be below their population peaks 80 Disputed 2010 Census data Edit On March 27 2011 New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that the city would file a formal challenge to the Census results as a result of alleged undercounting in the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn 81 The mayor has asserted that the numbers for Queens and Brooklyn the two most populous boroughs are implausible 82 According to the Census they grew by only 0 1 and 1 6 respectively while the other boroughs grew by between 3 and 5 In addition the Mayor claims the census showed improbably high amounts of vacant housing in vital neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights Queens Historical population data EditChanges in population by race and ethnicity Edit Racial composition 2010 citation needed 1990 83 1970 83 1940 83 White 44 0 52 3 76 6 93 6 Non Hispanic 33 3 43 2 62 9 84 92 0 Black or African American 25 5 28 7 21 1 6 1 Hispanic or Latino of any race 28 6 24 4 16 2 84 1 6 Asian 12 7 7 0 1 2 Changes in population by borough Edit Historical Population of the present area of New York City and its boroughs 18 85 86 87 88 Year Manhattan Brooklyn Queens Bronx Staten Is Total1698 4 937 2 017 n a n a 727 7 6811771 21 863 3 623 n a n a 2 847 28 4231790 33 131 4 549 6 159 1 781 3 827 49 4471800 60 515 5 740 6 642 1 755 4 563 79 2151810 96 373 8 303 7 444 2 267 5 347 119 7341820 123 706 11 187 8 246 2 782 6 135 152 0561830 202 589 20 535 9 049 3 023 7 082 242 2781840 312 710 47 613 14 480 5 346 10 965 391 1141850 515 547 138 882 18 593 8 032 15 061 696 1151860 813 669 279 122 32 903 23 593 25 492 1 174 7791870 942 292 419 921 45 468 37 393 33 029 1 478 1031880 1 164 673 599 495 56 559 51 980 38 991 1 911 6981890 1 441 216 838 547 87 050 88 908 51 693 2 507 414 1900 1 850 093 1 166 582 152 999 200 507 67 021 3 437 2021910 2 331 542 1 634 351 284 041 430 980 85 969 4 766 8831920 2 284 103 2 018 356 469 042 732 016 116 531 5 620 0481930 1 867 312 2 560 401 1 079 129 1 265 258 158 346 6 930 4461940 1 889 924 2 698 285 1 297 634 1 394 711 174 441 7 454 9951950 1 960 101 2 738 175 1 550 849 1 451 277 191 555 7 891 9571960 1 698 281 2 627 319 1 809 578 1 424 815 221 991 7 781 9841970 1 539 233 2 602 012 1 986 473 1 471 701 295 443 7 894 8621980 1 428 285 2 230 936 1 891 325 1 168 972 352 121 7 071 6391990 1 487 536 2 300 664 1 951 598 1 203 789 378 977 7 322 5642000 1 537 195 2 465 326 2 229 379 1 332 650 443 728 8 008 2782010 1 585 873 2 504 700 2 230 722 1 385 108 468 730 8 175 1332020 1 694 251 2 736 074 2 405 464 1 472 654 495 747 8 804 190Year Manhattan Brooklyn Queens Bronx Staten Is Total All population figures are consistent with present day boundaries First census after the consolidation of the five boroughsClick here 89 to view the density of New York City as an interactive map of the 1900 census shortly after municipal consolidation of the five boroughs in 1898 Languages Edit In 1940 a little over half of all White New Yorker s spoke English with large percentages speaking Yiddish Italian and German Languages spoken in NYC among White population 1940 90 English 53 77 Yiddish 13 05 Italian 12 83 German 6 14 Polish 2 34 Others 11 87 Language Speakers 90 Percent all Percent foreign born English 3 755 580 53 77 17 98 Yiddish 911 280 13 05 23 93 Italian 896 160 12 83 19 13 German 429 060 6 14 13 54 Polish 163 500 2 34 4 2 Russian 149 840 2 15 5 17 Swedish 38 240 0 55 1 35 French 37 860 0 54 1 25 Norwegian 35 620 0 51 1 28 Czech 28 700 0 36 0 6 Finnish 13 280 0 19 0 43 Danish 9 140 0 13 0 37 Dutch 6 440 0 09 0 25 Slovenian 4 260 0 06 0 12 Others 330 680 4 73 26 39 Not reported 175 080 2 51 1 99 Total 6 984 720 100 100 Ethnicities and enclaves Edit Main article New York City ethnic enclaves Map of racial distribution in New York 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic or Other yellow African Americans Edit Main article African Americans in New York City 125th Street in Harlem an African and African American cultural center According to the 2010 United States Census New York City had the largest population of self defined black residents of any U S city with over 2 000 000 within the city s boundaries although this number has decreased since 2000 91 New York City had more black people than did the entire state of California until the 1980 United States Census The black population consists of immigrants and their descendants from Africa and the Caribbean as well as native born African Americans Many of the city s black residents live in Brooklyn and The Bronx Several of the city s neighborhoods are historical birthplaces of urban black culture in America among them the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford Stuyvesant and Manhattan s Harlem and various sections of Eastern Queens and The Bronx Bedford Stuyvesant is considered to have the highest concentration of black residents in the United States New York City has the largest population of black immigrants at 686 814 and descendants of immigrants from the Caribbean especially from Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago Barbados Guyana Belize Grenada and Haiti and of sub Saharan Africans In a news item of April 3 2006 however the New York Times noted that for the first time since the American Civil War the recorded African American population was declining because of emigration to other regions a declining African American birthrate in New York and decreased immigration of blacks from the Caribbean and Africa 92 The Bronx Edit Parkchester Baychester Castle Hill Co op City Fordham Morrisania Mott Haven Soundview Wakefield WilliamsbridgeBrooklyn Edit Bedford Stuyvesant Boerum Hill Brownsville Bushwick Canarsie Clinton Hill Cobble Hill Crown Heights East Flatbush East New York Flatbush Gowanus Ocean Hill Red Hook Coney Island Fort GreeneManhattan Edit Hamilton Heights Harlem Marble Hill San Juan Hill The TenderloinQueens Edit Cambria Heights Corona East Elmhurst Far Rockaway Hollis Jamaica Queens Laurelton Queensbridge Rosedale St Albans including Addisleigh Park South Jamaica South Ozone Park Springfield GardensStaten Island Edit Clifton Arlington Sandy Ground Mariners Harbor Port Richmond Stapleton New Brighton TompkinsvilleAsian Edit Main article Asian Americans in New York City Chinese Edit Main articles Chinatown Manhattan Little Fuzhou Chinatown Flushing Chinatown Brooklyn and Chinese Americans in New York City An intersection in Manhattan s Chinatown The New York City Metropolitan Area contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside Asia enumerating an estimated 735 019 individuals as of 2012 93 with the Manhattan Chinatown 紐約華埠 home to the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere 94 95 96 Other Chinatowns are included one in Queens the Flushing Chinatown three in Brooklyn the Sunset Park Chinatown the Avenue U Chinatown and the Bensonhurst Chinatown and one each in Edison New Jersey and Nassau County Long Island 97 as well as fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area 98 Chinese in New York constitute the fastest growing nationality in New York State and on Long Island 99 100 101 Filipino Edit Main article Filipinos in the New York City metropolitan region Spectators at the Philippine Independence Day Parade on Madison Avenue in Midtown Manhattan New York City was home to an estimated 82 313 Filipinos in 2011 representing a 7 7 increase from the estimated 77 191 in 2008 with 56 or about 46 000 in Queens 102 Immigration from the Philippines began mainly after 1965 when immigration quotas that prevented Filipino immigration for many years were abolished While there was earlier immigration from the Philippines it was in low numbers and mainly concentrated in Hawaii and California Since then Filipinos have settled in Northeastern cities with a majority in the New York City metropolitan area Most of these immigrants have been professionals doctors nurses other medical professions accountants and engineers The Filipino median household income in New York City was 81 929 in 2013 and 68 held a bachelor s degree or higher 102 New York City annually hosts the Philippine Independence Day Parade which is traditionally held on the first Sunday of June on Madison Avenue The celebration occupies nearly twenty seven city blocks which includes a 3 5 hour parade and an all day long street fair and cultural performances A Little Manila can be found in Woodside in the borough of Queens 103 Filipinos are also concentrated in Jackson Heights and Elmhurst in Queens 104 There are also smaller Filipino communities in Jamaica Queens and parts of Brooklyn The Benigno Aquino Triangle is located on Hillside Avenue in Hollis Queens to commemorate the slain Filipino political leader and to recognize the large Filipino American population in the area 105 Although not technically part of New York City other large Filipino populations just outside the city s borders can be found in neighboring Northern and Central New Jersey particularly in Bergen Hudson Middlesex 106 and Passaic counties By 2013 Census estimates the New York City metropolitan area was estimated to be home to 224 266 Filipino Americans 88 5 about 200 000 of them single race Filipinos 107 Over 150 000 Filipino born immigrants made their home in the New York City tri state metropolitan region in 2011 108 In 2012 a Census estimated 235 222 single and multi racial Filipino Americans lived in the broader New York Newark Bridgeport NY NJ CT PA Combined Statistical Area 109 Korean Edit Main articles Korean Americans in New York City Koreatown Manhattan and Koreatown Long Island Congregating in Manhattan s Koreatown New York City is home to 100 000 ethnic Koreans with two thirds living in Queens 110 On the other hand the overall Greater New York Combined Statistical Area 111 enumerated 218 764 Korean American residents as of the 2010 United States Census the second largest population of Koreans outside of Korea 112 Indian Subcontinent Edit Further information Asian Indians in the New York City metropolitan region Pakistani American Bangladeshi American and Sri Lankan American According to 2007 American Community Survey estimates New York City is home to approximately 315 000 people from the Indian subcontinent which includes the countries of India 236 117 Pakistan 39 002 Bangladesh 34 332 and Sri Lanka 5 010 South Asians constitute 3 8 of New York City s population 113 The New York City Metropolitan Area is home to approximately 600 000 Indian Americans representing the largest Asian Indian population in the Western Hemisphere A majority of the South Asian residents are concentrated in Queens neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights Flushing City Line Ozone Park Glen Oaks Floral Park Bellerose Jamaica Kew Gardens and Elmhurst In the borough of Queens the South Asian population is approximately near 200 000 and counting where they constitute 8 2 of the population South Asians from the Caribbean majority from Guyana Trinidad and a small number from Jamaica are also large in number According to the 2010 United States Census there are 192 209 Asian Indians 53 174 Bangladeshis 41 887 Pakistanis and 3 696 Sri Lankans in New York City 114 The New York City Metropolitan Area contains the largest Sri Lankan community in the United States second largest in North America after Toronto Ontario Canada receiving the highest legal permanent resident Sri Lankan immigrant population 115 The Little Sri Lanka in the Tompkinsville neighborhood of the borough of Staten Island is one of the largest Sri Lankan communities outside of the country of Sri Lanka itself 116 117 Japanese Edit Main article Japanese in New York City As of the 2000 United States Census about over half of the 37 279 people of Japanese ancestry in New York State lived in New York City 118 Vietnamese Edit The Vietnamese are concentrated in Queens 119 Indonesian Edit Approximately 5 000 Indonesians live in New York City Indonesians are concentrated in Elmhurst Queens 120 Middle Eastern Edit Arab Edit Further information Arab American A Syrian man selling cold drinks in Lower Manhattan circa 1908Arabs first emigrated to New York City in the 1880s the vast majority of them came from modern day Lebanon and Syria Before the advent of modern Lebanon in August 1920 and due to the political and historical nature of Ottoman ruled Syria the majority of Lebanese and Syrians referred to themselves as Syrian upon arrival to Ellis Island 121 Little by little starting in the 1930s immigrants from Lebanon started referring to themselves as Lebanese American and immigrants from Syria retained the designation Syrian American From 1880 to 1960 the overwhelming majority 90 of Lebanese and Syrian immigrants were of the Christian faith 122 After 1960 especially after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 Arab Muslims from other Arab countries such as Jordan and Egypt started arriving in New York The Syrian Lebanese mother colony was located around Washington Street in Lower Manhattan in a neighborhood called Little Syria 123 Syrian immigration to the United States was very small with respect to the other ethnic groups or peoples that arrived in America In 1910 at the peak of Syrian immigration only 60 000 Syrians entered the United States 121 Around the late 1930s Little Syria started to go into decline with the construction of skyscrapers in Lower Manhattan In the name of urban renewal the skyscraper era was ushered in and preceded with the destruction of five storey tenements that Syrians called home The final blow to Little Syria commenced with the construction of the Brooklyn battery tunnel in 1940 A large percentage of the community moved to the area around downtown Brooklyn and set up shops and businesses on Atlantic Avenue St George s Syrian Catholic Church is the last physical reminder of the Syrian and Lebanese American community that once lived in Little Syria 121 In Brooklyn there are two long time established businesses still open on Atlantic Avenue Damascus Bakery is still in business since 1936 and Sahadi s has had a strong loyal customer base since 1948 By the 1960s the community was to move yet again this time to Park Slope and Bay Ridge 124 The New York metro area contains the largest concentration of populations with Arab and Middle Eastern ancestry in the United States with 230 899 residents of the metro area claiming Arab ancestry in the 2000 U S Census 125 An estimated 70 000 lived in New York City as of 2000 126 New York City holds the New York Arab American Comedy Festival founded in 2003 by comedians Dean Obeidallah and Maysoon Zayid There is also a Berber community present in New York 127 European Edit Albanian Edit Further information Albanian American New York City has the largest Albanian population in the United States The first large group of Albanians came in the early 1900s to New York City due to political reasons Albanians are concentrated in the Bronx 128 German Edit Further information German American Carl Schurz a refugee from the unsuccessful first German democratic revolution of 1848 served as United States Secretary of the Interior and as United States Senator from Missouri Carl Schurz Park in Manhattan is named after him The influence of German immigration can still be felt in areas of New York City The Yorkville neighborhood on the Upper East Side of Manhattan was a center of German American culture As of the 2000 census 255 536 New Yorkers reported German ancestry 129 In the middle of the 19th century Little Germany situated in what is now termed Alphabet City was the first non English speaking urban enclave in the United States Greek Edit Greek immigration to New York City began mainly in the 1890s The push factors for immigration were the Balkan Wars and World War I Greek immigration to New York City took place between 1890 and around 1917 In the latter years more women arrived and communities began to grow especially in Astoria Queens Greeks again began to arrive in large numbers after 1945 as they fled the economic devastation caused by World War II and the Greek Civil War In the first immigration wave most of the Greek immigrants were men Many of them worked in industrial labor jobs and others created a niche in the fur business This immigration wave brought 450 000 Greeks to the Northeast largely concentrated in New York City The second immigration wave taking place between 1945 and 1982 was smaller with a total of 211 000 immigrants mostly within the Northeast However new immigrants helped revive assimilating Greek communities and added new energy to a sense of ethnic identity The largest concentration of Greeks can still be found in Astoria The Greek community there was established in the early 20th century during immigration The neighborhood still has many Greek food stores and restaurants Residents of Greek descent make up 1 0 of New York City s population Irish Edit Main article Irish Americans in New York City The Irish community is one of New York s major ethnic groups and has been a significant proportion of the city s population since the waves of immigration in the mid nineteenth century New York City s St Patrick s Day Parade dates to 1762 During the Great Irish Famine 1845 1851 Irish families were forced to emigrate from Ireland by 1854 between 1 500 000 and 2 000 000 people were forced to leave the country about a quarter of the pre famine population In the United States most of the recently arrived Irish became city dwellers as that was where work was In addition arriving with little money many settled in the cities at which their ships made port By 1850 the Irish made up a quarter of the population in Boston New York City Philadelphia and Baltimore Their arrival in the United States before other waves of Catholic immigrants meant that ethnic Irish long dominated the Roman Catholic Church in the United States They created a strong network of churches and parochial schools to support their communities The Irish have long played a significant role in city politics the Roman Catholic Church and the New York City Fire Department and Police Department As of the 2000 census 520 810 New Yorkers reported Irish ancestry 130 According to a 2006 genetic survey by Trinity College in Dublin Ireland about one in fifty New Yorkers of European origin carry a distinctive genetic signature on their Y chromosomes inherited from Niall of the Nine Hostages an Irish high king of the 5th century A D 131 132 Hell s Kitchen Manhattan Woodlawn Bronx Woodside Queens Maspeth Queens Sunnyside Queens North Riverdale Bronx Riverdale Bronx Bay Ridge Brooklyn Marine Park Brooklyn Gerritsen Beach Brooklyn Vinegar Hill Brooklyn Broad Channel Queens Belle Harbor Queens Breezy Point Queens Rockaway Beach Queens Roxbury Queens St George Staten Island West Brighton Staten Island Middle Village Queens Astoria Queens Gerritsen Beach BrooklynItalian Edit Further information Italian Americans in New York City See also List of Italian American neighborhoods Street vendors at the Feast of San Gennaro in Manhattan s Little Italy New York City has the largest population of Italian Americans in the United States of America as well as North America many of whom inhabit ethnic enclaves in Brooklyn the Bronx Manhattan Queens and Staten Island New York City is home to the second largest Italian population outside of Italy behind Buenos Aires Argentina The largest wave of Italian immigration to the United States took place in the late 19th century and early 20th century Between 1870 and 1978 5 3 million Italians immigrated to the United States including over two million between 1900 and 1910 Only the Irish and Germans immigrated in larger numbers Italian families first settled in Little Italy s neighborhoods the first and most famous one being the one around Mulberry Street in Manhattan This settlement however is rapidly becoming part of the adjacent Chinatown as the older Italian residents die and their children move elsewhere As of the 2000 census 692 739 New Yorkers reported Italian ancestry making them the largest European ethnic group in the city 133 In 2011 the American Community Survey found there were 49 075 persons of Italian birth in New York City 134 Arthur Avenue the Bronx s Little Italy Belmont Bronx Bensonhurst Brooklyn Brooklyn s Little Italy Bergen Beach Brooklyn Morris Park Bronx Pelham Bay Bronx Van Nest Bronx Cobble Hill Brooklyn Carroll Gardens Brooklyn Dyker Heights Brooklyn Bay Ridge Brooklyn Williamsburg Brooklyn East Village Manhattan Greenwich Village Manhattan Mulberry Street Manhattan s Little Italy Pleasant Avenue East Harlem Italian Harlem Manhattan Forest Hills Queens Howard Beach Queens Ozone Park Queens Staten Island Mill Basin Brooklyn Middle Village Queens Whitestone QueensMoldovan Edit New York also has a Moldovan American community Most of them live in Brooklyn and they mainly work in construction citation needed Polish Edit Further information Polish American Polish immigration to New York City began at the end of the 19th century In the 1980s as a result of the Polish government s crackdown on the burgeoning Solidarnosc labor and political movement Polish migration to the U S swelled Polish Americans and Polish immigrants in the city generally reside in Brooklyn neighborhoods of Greenpoint and Williamsburg and in Queens neighborhoods of Maspeth and Ridgewood The combined neighborhood of Greenpoint Williamsburg is sometimes referred to as Little Poland because of its large population of primarily working class Polish immigrants reportedly the second largest concentration in the United States after Chicago As of the 2000 census 213 447 New Yorkers reported Polish ancestry 135 New York is home to a number of Polish and Polish American cultural community and scientific institutions including the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America PIASA and the Polish Cultural Institute Polish language publications with circulation reaching outside the city include The Polish Review an English language scholarly journal published since 1956 by PIASA Nowy Dziennik 136 founded in 1971 and Polska Gazeta 1 founded in the year 2000 The Polska Gazeta is the leading Polish language daily newspaper in the tri state area delivering daily news to over 17 000 readers in New York New Jersey Connecticut Pennsylvania Long Island and Delaware The Polish Newspaper SuperExpress 2 covering New York New Jersey amp Connecticut started publication in 1996 The Pulaski Day Parade in New York on Fifth Avenue has been celebrated since 1937 to commemorate Kazimierz Pulaski a Polish hero of the American Revolutionary War It closely coincides with the October 11 General Pulaski Memorial Day a national observance of his death at the Siege of Savannah and his held on the first Sunday of October In these parades march Polish dancers Polish soccer teams and their mascots Polish Scouts ZHP and Polish school ambassadors and representatives such as Mikolaj Pastorino Nicholas Pastorino and Lech Walesa The Pulaski Day Parade is one of the largest parades in New York City Romanian Edit Further information Romanian American The Romanian community of New York City is the largest such community in North America The 2000 Census reported 161 900 Romanians were living in New York City They are mainly concentrated in Queens as well as in parts of Manhattan and Staten Island The Romanian Day Festival for which the City closes a section of Broadway demonstrates the strong sense of community of Romanians living in New York Russian Edit Further information Russian American New York City contains a very large and growing Russian Jewish population estimated at 300 000 There are large numbers of Russian Jews in Brooklyn mostly in neighborhoods of Southern Brooklyn notably Brighton Beach also known as Little Odessa where there are many businesses and billboards with signage entirely in the Russian language There is a significant Russian Orthodox population in New York City as well Ukrainian Edit Further information Ukrainian American New York City contains a large and growing Ukrainian population New York s Ukrainian population was traditionally centered around the East Village in Manhattan as well as Brighton Beach also known as Little Odesa in Brooklyn Urban flight and recent waves of new immigration have spread Ukrainians throughout the boroughs with a heavy concentration in Brooklyn Jewish Edit Main article History of the Jews in New York City Two girls wearing banners with the slogan ABOLISH CHILD SLAVERY in English and Yiddish Probably taken during the May 1 1909 New York labor parade The New York metropolitan area is home to the largest Jewish population in the world outside Israel While most are descendants of Jews who moved from Europe a growing number are of Asian and Middle Eastern origin After dropping from a peak of 2 5 million in the 1950s to a low of 1 4 million in 2002 the population of Jews in the New York metropolitan area grew to 1 54 million in 2011 A study by the UJA Federation of New York released in 2012 137 showed that the proportion of liberal Jews was decreasing while the proportion of generally conservative Orthodox Jews and recent immigrants from Russia was increasing Much of this growth is in Brooklyn which in 2012 was 23 Jewish and where most of the Russian immigrants live and nearly all of the ultra orthodox 138 The study by UJA Federation of New York has been criticized by J J Goldberg an observer at The Jewish Daily Forward as excluding suburban Jews for example in New Jersey that are outside the service area of UJA Federation of New York and also for lack of granularity with respect to the Orthodox of New York City 139 The New York metropolitan area s Jewish population in 2001 was approximately 1 97 million 600 000 fewer than in Israel s largest metropolitan area denoted as Gush Dan In 2012 an estimated 1 086 000 Ashkenazic Jews lived in New York City and constituted about 12 of the city s population while approximately 100 000 Sephardic Jews live in the city too New York City is also home to the world headquarters of the Hasidic Chabad Lubavitch group and the Bobover Pupa Vizhnitz and Satmar branches of Hasidism ultra Orthodox sects of Judaism citation needed Many notable Jews come from New York City The first Jewish presence in New York City dates to the arrival of 23 Jewish refugees in 1654 who fled from Recife Brazil after the Portuguese conquered New Holland and brought the Inquisition with them 140 Major immigration of Jews to New York began in the 1880s with the increase of Anti Semitic actions in Central and Eastern Europe The number of Jews in New York City soared throughout the beginning of the 20th century and reached a peak of 2 million in the 1950s when Jews constituted one quarter of the city s population New York City s Jewish population then began to decline because of low fertility rates and migration to suburbs and other states particularly California and Florida A new wave of Ashkenazi Kavkazi Bukharian and Georgian Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union began arriving in the 1980s and 1990s Sephardic Jews including Syrian Moroccan and other Jews of non European origin have also lived in New York City since the 17th century Many Jews including the newer immigrants have settled in Queens south Brooklyn and the Bronx where at present most live in neighborhoods such as Riverdale citation needed Sephardic Jews estimated at 100 000 strong have settled along Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn creating a unified community consisting of about 75 000 people in this area while the other Sephardic Jews live in the Upper East Side of Manhattan and in Staten Island 19th century Jewish immigrants settled mainly in the tenement houses of the Lower East Side of Manhattan New York City s current Jewish population is dispersed among all the boroughs Brooklyn s Jewish population in 2011 was estimated as 561 000 and Manhattan s was 240 000 141 The Orthodox community is rapidly growing due to higher birthrates among Orthodox especially Hasidic Jews while the numbers of Conservative and Reform Jews are declining 142 60 of the Jewish children in New York are Orthodox 37 Hasidic This accelerating dynamic is accompanied by a substantial rise in the percentage of Jews who live in poverty 138 Romani Edit Further information Romani Americans New York City has one of the largest Romani populations 143 There is a Macedonian Roma community in New York City Macedonian Roma began immigrating to New York City in the late 1960s 144 Many Roma moved to New York City from other parts of the United States after relief programs were put into effect in the 1930s Roma from Hungary went to New York after the revolution in 1956 145 Dutch Edit Main article Dutch Americans in New York City Latin America Edit Puerto Rican Edit Further information Puerto Rican migration to New York The 2005 National Puerto Rican Parade New York City has the largest Puerto Rican population of any city in the United States including Puerto Rico 146 Attributable to the changing citizenship status of the island s residents Puerto Ricans can technically be said to have come to the City first as immigrants and subsequently as migrants The first group of Puerto Ricans moved to New York in the mid 19th century when Puerto Rico was a Spanish colony and its people Spanish subjects The following wave of Puerto Ricans to move to New York did so after the Spanish American War of 1898 made Puerto Rico a U S possession and after the Jones Shafroth Act of 1917 gave Puerto Ricans U S citizenship which allows travel without the need of a passport between the island and the United States mainland The largest wave of migration came in the 1950s in what became known as The Great Migration as a result more than a million Puerto Ricans once called New York City home Presently the Puerto Rican population is around 800 000 147 Puerto Ricans have historically lived in neighborhoods such as the Lower East Side also known in the community as Loisaida Spanish Harlem and Williamsburg Brooklyn since the 1950s However there has been an increase in Puerto Ricans in outlying areas of the city such as the North Shore of Staten Island and the eastern Bronx Dominican Edit Further information Dominican American Immigration records of Dominicans in the United States date from the late 19th century and New York City has had a Dominican community since the 1930s From the 1960s onward after the fall of the Rafael Trujillo military regime large waves of migration have thoroughly transnationalized the Dominican Republic metaphorically blurring its frontier with the United States In 2006 New York City s Dominican population decreased for the first time since the 1980s dropping by 1 3 from 609 885 in 2006 to 602 093 in 2007 They are the city s second largest Hispanic group and in 2009 it was estimated that they composed 24 9 of New York City s Latino population According to Census data analysis by CUNY s Center for Latin American Caribbean amp Latino Studies shows Dominicans as the new largest group of Hispanics in NYC There were about 747 473 Dominicans in the five boroughs in 2013 compared with 719 444 Puerto Ricans 148 Areas with high a concentration of Dominicans are in Washington Heights Corona and certain areas in the Bronx Mexican Edit At the 2010 Census there were 319 263 Mexican Americans living in New York City 149 In 2009 it was estimated that of the city s Hispanic population 13 5 was of Mexican origin 148 Mexicans are the fastest growing group of Hispanic population 91 Some estimates suggest that Mexicans will surpass both Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in 2023 to become the city s largest national Latino sub group 148 As of 2011 the Mexican Consulate estimated about 500 000 Mexicans lived in New York City of whom 35 000 spoke a Mexican indigenous language 150 Colombian Edit Colombians have come in small numbers to New York City since the 1950s The major exodus of Colombians from Colombia came in the 1970s and early 1980s when many of Colombia s cities were facing hardships from drug traffickers crime and lack of employment 55 of Colombians in New York City live in Queens specifically in Jackson Heights Corona Elmhurst and Murray Hill 151 In 2019 it was and estimated that 505 493 Colombians lived in New York City representing 5 6 of the total population 152 Ecuadorian Edit In 2009 it was estimated that 211 378 Ecuadorian Americans lived in New York City representing 8 9 of the city s Hispanic population They are the fifth largest sub group of Hispanics after Puerto Ricans Dominicans Colombians and Mexicans 148 Salvadoran Edit Since 1990 the Salvadoran population has been growing very rapidly in New York City More than 50 of Salvadorans live in Queens and the growth of their population is most notable in South Jamaica and Far Rockaway Many Salvadorans reside in the Bronx as well There are also pockets of Salvadorans in Brooklyn and in East Harlem Manhattan Panamanian Edit Panamanians began migrating to New York City in the 1800s Panamanians are concentrated in Brooklyn s Flatbush and Crown Heights neighborhoods 153 Brazilian Edit Approximately 80 000 to 100 000 Brazilians reside in the New York City area There is a Brazilian community in Little Brazil 154 Argentine Edit Large influx of Argentines migrated to New York City in the 1980s and 1990s There is an Argentine community in Junction Boulevard and Corona Avenue in Elmhurst Queens 155 Oceania Edit Australia Edit Since 2010 Little Australia has emerged and is growing rapidly representing the Australasian presence in Nolita Manhattan 156 157 158 159 In 2011 there were an estimated 20 000 Australian residents of New York City nearly quadruple the 5 537 in 2005 160 161 See also Edit Demographics of the Bronx Demographics of Brooklyn Demographics of Manhattan Demographics of Queens Demographics of Staten Island Undocumented immigrants in New York City New York City ethnic enclavesReferences Edit Ian Gordon Tony Travers Christine Whitehead London School of Economics Political Science July 2007 The Impact of Recent Immigration on the London Economy PDF The City of London Corporation Retrieved September 8 2013 Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50 000 or 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Face of New York Jewry Led by Orthodox Population Grows and Shifts Dramatically The Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved June 14 2012 J J Goldberg June 22 2012 Time To Rethink the New York Jew Study Leaves Out Suburbs and Ignores Splits Among Orthodox Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved June 16 2012 Kritzler Edward Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean Random House Digital Inc p 148 Simone Weichselbaum June 26 2012 Nearly one in four Brooklyn residents are Jews new study finds New York Daily News Retrieved September 5 2013 UJA Federation of New York PDF www ujafedny org Archived from the original PDF on August 2 2020 Retrieved January 17 2022 Why is discrimination against American Roma ignored Silverman Carol May 24 2012 Romani Routes Cultural Politics and Balkan Music in Diaspora ISBN 978 0 19 530094 9 Jackson Kenneth T Keller Lisa Flood Nancy December 2010 The Encyclopedia of New York City Second Edition p 563 ISBN 978 0300114652 The 2020 U S Census counted fewer than 350 000 residents of Puerto Rico s largest city San Juan See Puerto Rico 2020 Census U S Census Bureau retrieved on January 16 2023 Hispanic or Latino by Type 2010 Census Summary File 1 U S Census Bureau 2011 permanent dead link a b c d Bergad Laird W April 2011 The Latino Population of New York City 2009 Latino Data Project Center for Latin American Caribbean amp Latino Studies Retrieved February 10 2013 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 7 2012 Retrieved September 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Claudio Torrens May 28 2011 Some NY immigrants cite lack of Spanish as barrier UTSanDiego com Retrieved February 10 2013 The Colombian Population of New York City 1990 2008 PDF Retrieved August 29 2017 Colombians in New York Panamanians in the New York Metro Area Little Brazil An Ethnography of Brazilian Immigrants in New York City Argentines in the New York Metro Area Busuttil Shaun November 3 2016 G day Welcome to Little Australia in New York City KarryOn Retrieved May 23 2019 In Little Australia Australian owned cafes are popping up all over the place such as Two Hands joining other Australian owned businesses such as nightclubs and art galleries as part of a growing green and gold contingent in NYC Indeed walking in this neighbourhood the odds of your hearing a fellow Aussie ordering a coffee or just kicking back and chatting are high very high so much so that if you re keen to meet other Aussies whilst taking your own bite out of the Big Apple then this is the place to throw that Australian accent around like it s going out of fashion McLogan Elle October 3 2017 Why Are There So Many Australians in New York CBS Television Stations Retrieved November 12 2021 Reynolds Emma July 30 2018 Australia s secret weapon is quietly changing New York news com au Retrieved June 4 2019 THERE S a quiet revolution taking place across the Big Apple and it all stems from Down Under Gunner Siobhan The Australian Cafes Taking Over The NYC Breakfast Scene Just Opened New York Archived from the original on June 3 2019 Retrieved June 4 2019 Baird Saxon June 9 2014 What s The Deal With All These Australians In NYC Gothamist Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 12 2021 Forster Tim September 17 2018 Why Are So Many Australians Working in American Coffee Eater Retrieved November 12 2021 External links Edit New York City Department of City Planning Population Division Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of New York City amp oldid 1165215585, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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