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Demographics of Iran

Iran's population increased dramatically during the later half of the 20th century, reaching about 80 million by 2016.[1][2] As of 2022, Iran's population is around 86.5 million.[3] In recent years, however, Iran's birth rate has dropped significantly. Studies project that Iran's rate of population growth will continue to slow until it stabilises above 100 million by 2050.[4][5] Half of Iran's population was under 35 years old in 2012.[6]

Demographics of Iran
Population pyramid of Iran in 2020
Population87,929,883 (2023 est.)
Growth rate0.98% (2022 est.)
Birth rate15.27 births/1,000 population (2022 est.)
Death rate5.17 deaths/1,000 population (2022 est.)
Life expectancy75.25 years
 • male73.89 years
 • female76.67 years
Fertility rate1.66 children born/woman (2023 official)
Infant mortality rate14.84 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate−0.3 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2022 est.)
Age structure
0–14 years24.11%
65 and over5.87%
Sex ratio
Total1.03 male(s)/female (2022 est.)
At birth1.05 male(s)/female
Under 151.05 male(s)/female
65 and over0.77 male(s)/female
Nationality
NationalityIranian
Language
OfficialPersian (Farsi)
Historical population of Iran
Population of Iranian provinces and counties in 2021.

In 2009, the number of households stood at 15.3 million (4.8 persons per household).[7] Families earn some 11.8 million rials (about $960) per month on average (2012).[8]

According to the OECD/World Bank statistics population growth in Iran from 1990 to 2008 was 17.6 million and 32%.[9] The literacy rate was 80% in 2002,[10][11] and 85% in 2016.[12] The fertility rate has fallen to 1.6, below the natural replacement rate of 2.1.[13]

Population edit

According to the 2016 population census the population of Iran was 79.9 million,[1] a fourfold increase since 1956. Between 1976 and 1986, an average annual population growth of almost 4% was reached, but due to decreasing fertility levels the growth decreased to 1.2% between 2011 and 2016.

Population census results[14]
Census date Population Average annual
growth (%)
Population
density/km2
Proportion
urban (%)
Household size
1956-11-01 18,954,704 12 31.4
1966-11-01 25,785,210 3.13 16 37.5
1976-11-01 33,708,744 2.71 20 47.0 5.02
1986-11-22 49,445,010 3.91 30 54.0 5.11
1996-11-01 60,055,488 2.0 37 61.0 4.84
2006-11-01 70,495,782 1.62 43 68.5 4.03
2011-11-01 75,149,669 1.29 46 71.4 3.55
2016-11-01 79,926,270 1.24 49 74.0 3.3

Vital statistics edit

UN estimates edit

(2022 estimates).[15]

Population
(on 1 July)
Live births per year Deaths per year Natural change per year crude birth rate1 crude death rate1 natural change1 total fertility rate2 infant mortality rate3
1950 16,833,000 844,000 469 000 375,000 50.1 27.9 22.3 6.95 209.0
1951 17,220,000 863,000 481 000 382,000 50.1 27.9 22.2 6.95 207.3
1952 17,614,000 883,000 485 000 398,000 50.1 27.5 22.6 6.96 203.7
1953 18,018,000 904,000 490 000 414,000 50.1 27.2 23.0 6.98 200.5
1954 18,435,000 925,000 490 000 434,000 50.1 26.6 23.6 7.01 197.2
1955 18,874,000 946,000 491 000 455,000 50.1 26.0 24.1 7.04 192.9
1956 19,332,000 968,000 494 000 474,000 50.0 25.5 24.5 7.08 189.5
1957 19,806,000 996,000 497 000 499,000 50.2 25.1 25.2 7.18 185.8
1958 20,295,000 1,022,000 494 000 528,000 50.3 24.3 26.0 7.28 181.6
1959 20,822,000 1,046,000 494 000 551,000 50.2 23.7 26.5 7.38 177.8
1960 21,389,000 1,049,000 493 000 556,000 49.0 23.1 26.0 7.30 174.0
1961 21,984,000 1,053,000 489 000 564,000 48.0 22.3 25.7 7.23 170.2
1962 22,605,000 1,069,000 500 000 569,000 47.4 22.2 25.2 7.22 167.3
1963 23,259,000 1,082,000 485 000 597,000 46.6 20.9 25.7 7.18 162.8
1964 23,949,000 1,098,000 483 000 615,000 45.9 20.2 25.7 7.13 159.1
1965 24,667,000 1,120,000 482 000 637,000 45.5 19.6 25.9 7.11 155.4
1966 25,399,000 1,145,000 480 000 664,000 45.1 18.9 26.2 7.08 151.6
1967 26,133,000 1,174,000 480 000 694,000 44.9 18.4 26.6 7.05 147.6
1968 26,875,000 1,195,000 487 000 708,000 44.5 18.1 26.4 6.97 144.0
1969 27,644,000 1,220,000 474 000 746,000 44.2 17.2 27.0 6.90 138.9
1970 28,450,000 1,229,000 468 000 761,000 43.2 16.5 26.8 6.71 134.1
1971 29,274,000 1,239,000 459 000 780,000 42.4 15.7 26.7 6.51 128.9
1972 30,112,000 1,237,000 456 000 782,000 41.1 15.1 26.0 6.25 123.8
1973 30,982,000 1,258,000 440 000 818,000 40.6 14.2 26.4 6.11 118.2
1974 31,896,000 1,295,000 433 000 862,000 40.6 13.6 27.0 6.04 113.0
1975 32,857,000 1,339,000 428 000 911,000 40.8 13.0 27.8 6.01 107.7
1976 33,841,000 1,416,000 425 000 991,000 41.8 12.5 29.3 6.14 102.3
1977 34,876,000 1,474,000 421 000 1,053,000 42.3 12.1 30.2 6.20 96.6
1978 35,994,000 1,550,000 446 000 1,104,000 43.1 12.4 30.7 6.33 92.4
1979 37,205,000 1,645,000 411 000 1,234,000 44.2 11.0 33.2 6.53 85.1
1980 38,521,000 1,708,000 422 000 1,286,000 44.4 11.0 33.4 6.58 79.5
1981 40,476,000 1,756,000 463 000 1,293,000 44.1 11.6 32.4 6.56 74.3
1982 42,500,000 1,886,000 467 000 1,419,000 44.4 11.0 33.4 6.55 69.3
1983 44,028,000 1,930,000 458 000 1,472,000 43.9 10.4 33.5 6.51 65.1
1984 45,628,000 1,966,000 420 000 1,546,000 43.1 9.2 33.9 6.44 61.5
1985 47,266,000 1,974,000 415 000 1,559,000 41.8 8.8 33.0 6.26 58.2
1986 48,913,000 1,957,000 409 000 1,547,000 40.0 8.4 31.7 6.01 55.3
1987 50,541,000 1,915,000 407 000 1,507,000 37.9 8.1 29.9 5.69 52.6
1988 52,112,000 1,872,000 399 000 1,473,000 36.0 7.7 28.3 5.39 49.8
1989 53,645,000 1,828,000 358 000 1,470,000 34.1 6.7 27.4 5.11 47.4
1990 55,794,000 1,788,000 395 000 1,393,000 32.5 7.2 25.3 4.86 46.5
1991 57,991,000 1,790,000 359 000 1,431,000 30.9 6.2 24.7 4.51 43.1
1992 59,372,000 1,697,000 358 000 1,340,000 28.5 6.0 22.5 4.08 41.3
1993 59,755,000 1,579,000 352 000 1,227,000 26.1 5.8 20.3 3.68 39.8
1994 59,986,000 1,367,000 340 000 1,027,000 22.8 5.7 17.1 3.27 38.2
1995 60,795,000 1,244,000 335 000 908,000 20.4 5.5 14.9 2.89 36.8
1996 61,598,000 1,145,000 333 000 811,000 18.6 5.4 13.2 2.57 35.4
1997 62,481,000 1,081,000 334 000 747,000 17.3 5.4 12.0 2.33 34.0
1998 63,461,000 1,064,000 336 000 727,000 16.8 5.3 11.5 2.20 32.5
1999 64,475,000 1,065,000 333 000 732,000 16.6 5.2 11.4 2.10 31.0
2000 65,544,000 1,071,000 337 000 735,000 16.4 5.2 11.2 2.02 29.5
2001 66,675,000 1,082,000 344 000 738,000 16.3 5.2 11.1 1.94 28.1
2002 67,327,000 1,086,000 345 000 742,000 16.1 5.1 11.0 1.87 26.4
2003 67,955,000 1,081,000 370 000 712,000 16.0 5.5 10.5 1.82 25.6
2004 69,062,000 1,107,000 345 000 762,000 16.1 5.0 11.1 1.80 23.4
2005 70,183,000 1,134,000 348 000 786,000 16.2 5.0 11.2 1.78 21.9
2006 71,276,000 1,173,000 349 000 824,000 16.5 4.9 11.6 1.77 20.6
2007 72,319,000 1,221,000 350 000 872,000 16.9 4.8 12.1 1.77 19.4
2008 73,318,000 1,265,000 369 000 896,000 17.3 5.0 12.2 1.77 18.2
2009 74,323,000 1,304,000 381 000 923,000 17.5 5.1 12.4 1.77 17.2
2010 75,374,000 1,337,000 385 000 953,000 17.8 5.1 12.6 1.77 16.3
2011 76,343,000 1,388,000 381 000 1,008,000 18.2 5.0 13.2 1.80 15.5
2012 77,324,000 1,464,000 378 000 1,085,000 18.9 4.9 14.0 1.89 14.8
2013 78,459,000 1,526,000 385 000 1,141,000 19.4 4.9 14.5 1.96 14.2
2014 79,962,000 1,579,000 391 000 1,188,000 19.8 4.9 14.9 2.04 13.6
2015 81,791,000 1,583,000 395 000 1,188,000 19.4 4.8 14.6 2.05 13.1
2016 83,306,000 1,584,000 394 000 1,190,000 19.0 4.7 14.3 2.07 12.6
2017 84,505,000 1,572,000 396 000 1,176,000 18.6 4.7 13.9 2.07 12.2
2018 85,618,000 1,475,000 404 000 1,071,000 17.2 4.7 12.5 1.97 11.8
2019 86,564,000 1,308,000 421 000 886,000 15.1 4.9 10.2 1.77 11.4
2020 87,290,000 1,243,000 486 000 757,000 14.2 5.6 8.7 1.71 11.0
2021 87,923,000 1,204,000 566 000 638,000 13.7 6.4 7.3 1.69 10.7

1per 1000; 2 TFR = number of children per woman; 3per 1000 births

Registered births and deaths edit

(2001 statistics)[16][17][18]

Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total Fertility Rate
1959 864,846 176,268 688,578
1960 876,206 171,040 705,166
1961 902,260 159,371 742,889
1962 957,500 165,488 792,012
1963 920,967 135,912 785,055
1964 1,118,911 145,174 973,737
1965 1,139,663 171,940 967,723
1966 1,101,606 178,991 922,615
1967 1,019,373 179,159 840,214
1968 1,037,022 174,201 862,821
1969 1,091,513 167,660 923,853
1970 1,189,203 163,430 1,025,773
1971 1,231,227 149,325 1,081,902
1972 1,138,843 153,568 985,275
1973 1,199,777 155,081 1,044,696
1974 1,248,256 149,785 1,098,471
1975 1,339,267 148,543 1,190,724
1976 1,401,426 155,981 1,245,445
1977 1,399,977 146,369 1,253,608
1978 1,369,597 127,587 1,242,010
1979 1,689,908 142,402 1,547,506
1980 2,450,308 162,176 2,288,132
1981 2,421,611 178,099 2,243,512
1982 2,101,894 200,614 1,901,280
1983 2,203,448 207,228 1,996,220
1984 2,067,803 186,440 1,881,363
1985 2,033,285 190,061 1,843,224
1986 2,259,055 199,511 2,059,544
1987 1,832,089 204,230 1,627,859
1988 1,944,149 238,390 1,705,759
1989 1,784,811 199,645 1,585,166
1990 1,722,977 217,597 1,505,380
1991 1,582,931 217,637 1,365,294
1992 1,433,243 188,647 1,244,596
1993 1,388,017 208,161 1,179,856
1994 1,426,784 3.50
1995 1,205,372 3.22
1996 1,187,903 2.95
1997 1,179,260 2.73
1998 1,185,639 551,345 634,294 2.53
1999 62,738,000 1,177,557 374,838 802,719 18.8 6.0 12.8 2.36
2000 63,658,000 1,095,165 382,674 712,491 17.2 6.0 11.2 2.19
2001 64,592,000 1,110,836 421,525 689,311 17.2 6.5 10.7 2.09
2002 65,540,000 1,122,104 337,237 784,867 17.1 5.1 12.0 2.01
2003 66,480,000 1,171,573 368,518 803,055 17.6 5.5 12.1 1.92
2004 67,477,000 1,154,368 355,213 799,155 17.1 5.3 11.8 1.87
2005 69,672,000 1,239,408 363,723 875,685 18.1 5.3 12.8 1.82
2006 70,554,000 1,253,912 408,566 845,346 17.8 5.8 12.0 1.79
2007 71,336,000 1,286,716 412,736 873,980 18.0 5.8 12.2 1.81
2008 72,120,000 1,300,166 417,798 882,368 17.9 5.8 12.2 1.80
2009 72,924,000 1,348,546 393,514 955,032 18.3 5.3 13.0 1.78
2010 73,762,000 1,363,542 441,042 922,500 18.3 5.9 12.4 1.77
2011 74,634,000 1,382,229 422,133 960,096 18.3 5.6 12.7 1.74
2012 75,539,000 1,421,689 367,512 1,054,177 18.7 4.8 13.9 1.73
2013 76,481,000 1,471,834 372,279 1,099,555 19.1 4.8 14.3 1.70
2014 77,465,000 1,534,362 446,333 1,088,029 19.8 5.8 14.0 1.68
2015 78,492,000 1,570,219 374,827 1,195,392 20.0 4.8 15.2 2.16
2016 79,926,000 1,528,054 388,792 1,139,262 19.2 4.9 14.3 2.11
2017 80,960,000 1,540,570 374,630 1,165,940 19.0 4.6 14.4 2.07
2018 81,865,000 1,388,249 376,839 1,011,410 16.9 4.6 12.3 1.97
2019 82,585,000 1,196,132 395,392 800,743 14.4 4.8 9.6 1.77
2020 83,220,000 1,110,374 493,735 616,639 13.3 5.9 7.5 1.71
2021 83,935,000 1,106,072 536,109 569,963 13.2 6.4 6.8 1.74
2022 1,075,381

Current vital statistics edit

[19]

Period Live births Deaths Natural increase
March 21 2021 – December 21 2021 844,723 428,549 +416,174
March 21 2022 – December 21 2022 810,877 313,545 +497,332
Difference   -33,846 (-4.0%)   -115,004 (-26.8%)   +81,158
Age group Number(2006) Percentage(2006) Number(2011) Percentage(2011)
Total 70,495,782 100 75,149,669 100
0–4 5,463,978 7.75 6,232,552 8.29
5–9 5,509,057 7.81 5,657,791 7.53
10–14 6,708,591 9.52 5,671,435 7.55
15–19 8,726,761 12.38 6,607,043 8.79
20–24 9,011,422 12.78 8,414,497 11.20
25–29 7,224,952 10.25 8,672,654 11.54
30–34 5,553,531 7.88 6,971,924 9.28
35–39 4,921,124 6.98 5,571,018 7.41
40–44 4,089,158 5.80 4,906,749 6.53
45–49 3,522,761 5.00 4,030,481 5.36
50–54 2,755,420 3.91 3,527,408 4.69
55–59 1,887,981 2.68 2,680,119 3.57
60–64 1,464,452 2.08 1,862,907 2.48
65–69 1,197,550 1.70 1,343,731 1.79
70–74 1,119,318 1.59 1,119,968 1.49
75–79 694,122 0.98 913,531 1.22
80+ 645,601 0.92 919,539 1.22
Unclear 46,322 0.06
Number of children 0–14 Number of people 15–49 Proportion Number of women 15–49 Proportion
17,681,629 (2006) 43,049,709 (2006) 0.4107 (2006) ~21,524,855 (2006) 0.8215 (2006)
17,561,778 (2011) 45,174,366 (2011) 0.3888 (2011) ~22,587,183 (2011) 0.7775 (2011)

Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group (01.VII.2020) (Data refer to the Iranian Year which begins on 21 March and ends on 20 March of the following year.):[20]

Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 42,484,186 41,553,414 84,037,600 100
0–4 3,751,160 3,584,640 7,335,800 8.73
5–9 3,644,823 3,453,109 7,097,932 8.45
10–14 3,195,837 3,043,160 6,238,997 7.42
15–19 2,850,201 2,723,069 5,573,270 6.63
20–24 2,817,236 2,715,743 5,532,979 6.58
25–29 3,398,106 3,322,934 6,721,040 8.00
30–34 4,246,233 4,166,179 8,412,412 10.01
35–39 4,226,366 4,147,771 8,374,137 9.96
40–44 3,375,662 3,271,031 6,646,693 7.91
45–49 2,687,892 2,591,386 5,279,278 6.28
50–54 2,321,552 2,270,429 4,591,981 5.46
55–59 1,841,337 1,847,872 3,689,209 4.39
60–64 1,510,299 1,557,919 3,068,218 3.65
65–69 1,058,091 1,138,129 2,196,220 2.61
70–74 640 098 748 890 1,388,988 1.65
75–79 415 623 459 393 875 016 1.04
80+ 503 670 511 760 1,015,430 1.21
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 10,591,820 10,080,909 20,672,729 24.60
15–64 29,274,884 28,614,333 57,889,217 68.88
65+ 2,617,482 2,858,172 5,475,654 6.52
Year 0–14 15–64 65+
1976 44.5 52 3.5
1985 45.5 51.5 3
1996 39.5 56.1 4.3
2006 25.1 (17,681,629) 69.7 (49,157,562) 5.2 (3,656,591)
2011 23.4 (17,561,778) 70.9 (53,297,122) 5.7 (4,290,769)
2016 24.0 (19,192,665) 69.9 (55,862,087) 6.1 (4,871,518)

Table 9 – Population and Average Annual Growth by Provinces: 2006 and 2011

Province 2006 2011 Average annual growth
Alborz 2,076,991 2,412,513 3.04
Ardabil 1,228,155 1,248,488 0.33
Bushehr 886,267 1,032,949 3.11
Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari 857,910 895,263 0.86
East Azerbaijan 3,603,456 3,724,620 0.66
Fars 4,336,878 4,596,658 1.17
Gilan 2,404,861 2,480,874 0.62
Golestan 1,617,087 1,777,014 1.90
Hamadan 1,703,267 1,758,268 0.64
Hormozgan 1,403,674 1,578,183 2.37
Ilam 545,787 557,599 0.43
Isfahan 4,559,256 4,879,312 1.37
Kerman 2,652,413 2,938,988 2.07
Kermanshah 1,879,385 1,945,227 0.69
Khuzestan 4,274,979 4,531,720 1.17
Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad 634,299 658,629 0.76
Kurdistan 1,440,156 1,493,645 0.73
Lorestan 1,716,527 1,754,243 0.44
Markazi 1,351,257 1,413,959 0.91
Mazandaran 2,922,432 3,073,943 1.02
North Khorasan 811,572 867,727 1.35
Qazvin 1,143,200 1,201,565 1.00
Qom 1,046,737 1,151,672 1.93
Razavi Khorasan 5,593,079 5,994,402 1.40
Semnan 589,742 631,218 1.37
Sistan and Baluchestan 2,405,742 2,534,327 1.05
South Khorasan 636,420 662,534 0.81
Tehran 11,345,375 12,183,391 1.44
West Azerbaijan 2,873,459 3,080,576 1.40
Yazd 990,818 1,074,428 1.63
Zanjan 964,601 1,015,734 1.04
Total 70,495,782 75,149,669 1.29

1 The population of the provinces of Alborz and Tehran for 2006 and their average annual growth have been calculated based on the data of 2011.

Unofficial Translation 17

Table 10 – Population Percentages by Province: 2006 and 2011 (Percentage)

Province 2006 2011
Alborz 2.95 3.21
Ardabil 1.74 1.66
Bushehr 1.26 1.37
Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari 1.22 1.19
East Azerbaijan 5.11 4.96
Fars 6.15 6.12
Gilan 3.41 3.30
Golestan 2.29 2.36
Hamadan 2.42 2.34
Hormozgan 1.99 2.10
Ilam 0.77 0.74
Isfahan 6.47 6.49
Kerman 3.76 3.91
Kermanshah 2.67 2.59
Khuzestan 6.06 6.03
Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad 0.90 0.88
Kurdistan 2.04 1.99
Lorestan 2.43 2.33
Markazi 1.92 1.88
Mazandaran 4.15 4.09
North Khorasan 1.15 1.15
Qazvin 1.62 1.60
Qom 1.48 1.53
Razavi Khorasan 7.93 7.98
Semnan 0.84 0.84
Sistan and Baluchestan 3.41 3.37
South Khorasan 0.90 0.88
Tehran 16.09 16.21
West Azerbaijan 4.08 4.10
Yazd 1.41 1.43
Zanjan 1.37 1.35
Total 100 100

1 The population of the provinces of Alborz and Tehran for 2006 and their average annual growth have been calculated based on the data of 2011.

Languages and ethnic groups edit

 
Colour-coded map of Iran's ethnic groups. The centre of the country is mostly Persians; Azerbaijanis, Gilaks, Kurds, and Talysh are in the northwest; Lurs, Qashqai and Arabs in the southwest; Turkmens and more Kurds in the northeast; Balochis in the southeast.

The largest linguistic group comprises speakers of Iranian languages, like modern Persian, Kurdish, Gilaki, Mazandarani, Luri, Talysh, and Balochi. Speakers of Turkic languages, most notably Azerbaijanis, which is by far the second-most spoken language in the country, but also the Turkmen, and the Qashqai peoples, comprise a substantial minority. The remainder are primarily speakers of Semitic languages such as Arabic and Assyrian. A small number of Mandaeans in Khuzestan speak Mandaic. There are small groups using other Indo-European languages such as Armenian and Russian; also, Georgian (a member of the Kartvelian language family) is spoken in a large pocket only by those Iranian Georgians that live in Fereydan, Fereydunshahr. Most of those Georgians who live in the north Iranian provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran, Isfahan, Tehran Province and the rest of Iran no longer speak the language. The Circassians in Iran, a very large minority in the past and speakers of the Circassian language, have been strongly assimilated and absorbed within the population in the past few centuries. However, significant pockets do exist spread over the country, and they are the second-largest Caucasus-derived group in the nation after the Georgians.[21][22]

Jews have had a continuous presence in Iran since the time of Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid Empire. In 1948, there were approximately 140,000–150,000 Jews living in Iran. According to the Tehran Jewish Committee, the Jewish population of Iran was (more recently) estimated at 25,000 to 35,000, of which approximately 15,000 are in Tehran with the rest residing in Hamadan, Shiraz, Isfahan, Kermanshah, Yazd, Kerman, Rafsanjan, Borujerd, Sanandaj, Tabriz and Urmia. However, the official 2011 state census recorded only 8,756 Jews in Iran.[23]

The CIA World Factbook (which is based on 2013 statistics) gives the following numbers for the languages spoken in Iran today: Persian, Luri, Gilaki and Mazandarani 66%; Azerbaijani and other Turkic languages 18%; Kurdish 10%; Arabic 2%; Balochi 2%; others 2% (Armenian, Georgian, Circassian, Assyrian, etc.).[24]

According to anthropologist Brian Spooner, around half of Iran's population uses a language other than Persian at home and in informal public situations.[25]

Other sources, such as the Library of Congress, and the Encyclopedia of Islam (Leiden)[26] give Iran's ethnic groups as following: Persians 65%, Azerbaijanis 16%, Kurds 7%, Lurs 6%, Arabs 2%, Baloch 2%, Turkmens 1%, Turkic tribal groups (e.g. Qashqai) 1%, and non-Persian, non-Turkic groups (e.g. Armenians, Georgians, Assyrians, Circassians) less than 1%.[27] For sources prior to and after 2000, see Languages and ethnicities in Iran.

Urban population edit

 
Evolution of Iran population divided into urban and rural population
 
Provinces of Iran by population density in 2013

In addition to its international migration pattern, Iran also exhibits one of the steepest urban growth rates in the world according to the UN humanitarian information unit. According to 2015 population estimates, approximately 73.4 per cent of Iran's population lives in urban areas, up from 27 per cent in 1950.[28]

The following is a list of the eight most populous cities in the country:

Rank City Province population
City[29] Metro[30]
1 Tehran Tehran 8,693,706 14,700,000
2 Mashhad Razavi Khorasan 3,001,184 3,100,000
3 Isfahan Isfahan 1,961,260 3,100,000
4 Karaj Alborz 1,592,492 2,500,000
5 Shiraz Fars 1,565,572 1,700,000
6 Tabriz East Azarbaijan 1,588,693 1,760,000
7 Qom Qom 1,201,158 1,240,000
8 Ahvaz Khuzestan 1,184,788 1,320,000

Religious affiliations edit

Religion in Iran by CIA

  Shia Islam (94.1%)
  Sunni Islam (5.3%)
  Other/Unspecifed (0.6%)
 
The entrance to Shah Mosque (aka Imam Mosque or Shah Jame' Mosque) in Isfahan. This mosque is a prominent example of Persian architecture during the Safavid dynasty.
Population of Iran according to religion 1956–2011 per the UN[14][16]
Religion census 1956 census 1966 census 1976 census 2006 census 2011
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Muslims 18,654,127 98.4 24,771,922 98.8 33,396,908 99.1 70,097,741 99.4 74,682,938 99.4
Christians 114,528 0.6 149,427 0.6 168,593 0.5 109,415 0.2 117,704 0.2
Zoroastrians 15,723 0.1 19,816 0.1 21,400 0.1 19,823 0.0 25,271 0.0
Jews 65,232 0.3 60,683 0.2 62,258 0.2 9,252 0.0 8,756 0.0
Other 59,256 0.3 77,075 0.3 54,234 0.1 49,101 0.1
Unknown 45,838 0.2 59,583 0.2 205,317 0.3 265,899 0.4

About 99% of the Iranians are Muslims; 90% belong to the Shi'a branch of Islam, the official state religion, and about 9% belong to the Sunni branch, which predominates in neighbouring Muslim countries.[11] Less than 1% non-Muslim minorities include Christians, Zoroastrians, Jews, Baháʼís, Mandaeans, and Yarsan. By far the largest group of Christians in Iran are Armenians under the Armenian Apostolic Church which has between 110,000,[31] 250,000,[32] and 300,000,[33] adherents. There are hundreds of Christian churches in Iran.[citation needed] The Baháʼí Faith, Iran's largest non-Muslim religious minority with a population around 300,000, is not officially recognised (and therefore not included in the census results), and has been persecuted since its inception in Iran. Since the 1979 revolution the persecution of Baháʼís has increased with executions, the denial of civil rights and liberties, and the denial of access to higher education and employment.[34][35] Unofficial estimates for the Assyrian Christian population range between 20,000,[36][37] and 70,000.[38][39] The number of Iranian Mandaeans is a matter of dispute. In 2009, there were an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 Mandaeans in Iran, according to the Associated Press.[40] Whereas Alarabiya has put the number of Iranian Mandaeans as high as 60,000 in 2011.[41]

Iranian citizens abroad edit

The term "Iranian citizens abroad" or " Iranian/Persian diaspora" refers to the Iranian people and their children born in Iran but living outside of Iran. Migrant Iranian workers abroad remitted less than two billion dollars home in 2006.[42]

As of 2010, there are about four to five million Iranians living abroad, mostly in the United States, Canada, Europe, Persian Gulf States, Turkey, Australia and the broader Middle East.[28][43] According to the 2000 Census and other independent surveys, there are an estimated 1 million Iranian-Americans living in the U.S., in particular, the Los Angeles area is estimated to be host to approximately 72,000 Iranians, earning the Westwood area of LA the nickname Tehrangeles.[44] Other metropolises that have large Iranian populations include Dubai with 300,000 Iranians, Vancouver, London, Toronto, San Francisco Bay Area, Washington D.C., Buenos Aires, Mexico City, Stockholm, Berlin, Hamburg and Frankfurt. Their combined net worth is estimated to be $1.3 trillion.[45]

Note that this differs from the other Iranian peoples living in other areas of Greater Iran, who are of related ethnolinguistical family, speaking languages belonging to the Iranian languages which is a branch of Indo-European languages.

Refugee population edit

Iran hosts one of the largest refugee population in the world, with more than one million refugees, mostly from Afghanistan (80%) and Iraq (10%). Since 2006, Iranian officials have been working with the UNHCR and Afghan officials for their repatriation.[46][47] Between 1979 and 1997, UNHCR spent more than US$1 billion on Afghan refugees in Pakistan but only $150 million on those in Iran. In 1999, the Iranian government estimated the cost of maintaining its refugee population at US$10 million per day, compared with the US$18 million UNHCR allocated for all of its operations in Iran in 1999.[47] As of 2016, some 300,000 work permits have been issued for foreign nationals in Iran.[48]

CIA World Factbook demographic statistics edit

 
Net Iranian migration (1979–2008). A positive value represents more people entering Iran than leaving it

The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.[49]

Age structure[50]

0–14 years: 24.11% (male 10,472,844/female 10,000,028)
15–24 years: 13.36% (male 5,806,034/female 5,537,561)
25–54 years: 48.94% (male 21,235,038/female 20,327,384)
55–64 years: 7.72% (male 3,220,074/female 3,337,420)
65 years and over: 5.87% (male 2,316,677/female 2,670,254) (2020 est.)

Median age

total: 31.7 years
male: 31.5 years
female: 32 years (2020 est.)

Population growth rate

1.03% (2021 est.)

Birth rate

15.78 births/1,000 population (2021 est.)

Death rate

5.14 deaths/1,000 population (2021 est.)

Urbanization

urban population: 76.3% of total population (2021)
rate of urbanisation: 1.32% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
 
Life expectancy in Iran since 1950
 
Life expectancy in Iran since 1960 by gender

Sex ratio

at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
0-14 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
15-24 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
25-54 years: 1.04 male(s)/female
55-64 years: 0.96 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.87 male(s)/female
total population: 1.03 male(s)/female (2020 est.)

Life expectancy at birth

total population: 75.06 years
male: 73.71 years
female: 76.48 years (2021 est.)

Total fertility rate

1.93 children born/woman (2021 est.)

Literacy

definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 85.5%
male: 90.4%
female: 80.8% (2016)

Genetics edit

Haplogroups edit

Y-chromosome DNA edit

Y-Chromosome DNA Y-DNA represents the male lineage, the Iranian Y-chromosome pool is as follows where haplogroups, R1 (25%), J2 (23%) G (14%), J1 (8%) E1b1b (5%), L (4%), Q (4%), comprise more than 85% of the total chromosomes.[51]

Haplogroup[52] n B C E1b1a E1b1b1a2 E1b1b1a3 E1b1b1c F G H I J1 J2 K L N O P,R Q R1a R1b R1b1a R1b1b R2 T
Marker M2 V13 V22 M34 M343 V88 M269 M70
Iran 566 0.53 0.18 1.41 1.77 1.8 0.88 0.35 14.00 2.65 0.8 8.13 23.86 0.71 4.00 2.12 1.41 0.71 4.01 17.49 1.24 0.35 6.18 1.41 2.12

Mitochondrial DNA edit

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) represents the female lineage. West Eurasian mtDNA makes up over 90% of the Iranian population on average. (2013).[53]

Among them, U3b3 lineages appear to be restricted to populations of Iran and the Caucasus, while the sub-cluster U3b1a is common in the whole Near East region.[53]

In Iran outliers in the Y-chromosomes and Mitochondrial DNA gene pool are consisted of the north Iranian ethnicities, such as the Gilaks and Mazandarani's, whose genetic build up including chromosomal DNA are nearly identical to the major South Caucasian ethnicities, namely the Georgians, Armenians and Azerbaijani's. Other outliers are made by the Baloch people, representing a mere 1–2% of the total Iranian population, who have more patrilinial and mitochondrial DNA lines leaning towards northwest South Asian ethnic groups.

Levels of genetic variation in Iranian populations are comparable to the other groups from the Caucasus, Anatolia and Europe.[53]

Autosomal DNA edit

A large-scale genetic analyses on various ethnic groups of Iran, published in 2019, found that genetically speaking different Iranian ethnic groups, such as Persians, Kurds, Azeris, Lurs, Mazanderanis, Gilaks and Arabs, cluster tightly together, forming a single cluster known as the "CIC" (Central Iranian cluster). Compared with worldwide populations, Iranians (CIC) cluster in the center of the wider West Eurasian cluster, close to Europeans, Middle Easterners, and South-Central Asians. Iranian Arabs and Turkic-speaking Azeris genetically overlap with Iranian-speaking peoples such as Persians. The genetic substructure of Iranians was found to be low, compared with other "1000G" populations. Iranians display their highest genetic affinity with other Southwest and West Asian populations, followed by Europeans and Central Asian groups. Certain South Asians (specifically the Parsi minority) showed the highest affinity with Iranians, inline with their ethnic history. Overall, the study results suggest that the genetic makeup of the Iranian gene pool formed already about 5,000 years ago and shows high continuity since then, suggesting that they were largely unaffected by migration events from outside groups. On a global scale, Iranians display their highest affinity with other "West Eurasian" populations (such as Europeans or South Asians, but also Latin Americans), while Sub-Saharan Africans and East Asians showed large degrees of differentiation with Iranians.[54]

People of Iranian ancestry edit

Tats (Caucasus) edit

The "Tats" are an Iranian people, presently living within Azerbaijan and Russia (mainly Southern Dagestan). The Tats are part of the indigenous peoples of Iranian origin in the Caucasus.[55][56][57]

Tats use the Tat language, a southwestern Iranian language and a variety of Persian[58][59][60][61][62] Azerbaijani and Russian are also spoken. Tats are mainly Shia Muslims, with a significant Sunni Muslim minority. Likely the ancestors of modern Tats settled in South Caucasus when the Sassanid Empire from the 3rd to 7th centuries built cities and founded military garrisons to strengthen their positions in this region.[63]

Parsis edit

The Parsis are the close-knit Zoroastrian community based primarily in India but also found in Pakistan. Parsis are descended from Persian Zoroastrians who emigrated to the Indian subcontinent over 1,000 years ago. Indian census data (2001) records 69,601 Parsis in India, with a concentration in and around the city of Mumbai (previously known as Bombay). There are approximately 8,000 Parsis elsewhere on the subcontinent, with an estimated 2,500 Parsis in the city of Karachi and approximately 50 Parsi families in Sri Lanka. The number of Parsis worldwide is estimated to be fewer than 100,000 (Eliade, 1991:254).

Iranis edit

In Pakistan and India, the term "Irani" has come to denote Iranian Zoroastrians who have migrated to Pakistan and India within the last two centuries, as opposed to most Parsis who arrived in India over 1000 years ago. Many of them moved during the Qajar era, when persecution of Iranian Zoroastrians was rampant. They are culturally and linguistically closer to the Zoroastrians of Iran. Unlike the Parsis, they speak a Dari dialect, the language spoken by the Iranian Zoroastrians in Yazd and Kerman. Their last names often resemble modern Iranian names, however Irani is a common surname among them. In India they are mostly located in modern-day Mumbai while in Pakistan they are mostly located in modern-day Karachi. In both Pakistan and India, they are famous for their restaurants and tea-houses.[64] Some, such as Ardeshir Irani, have also become very famous in cinema.

Ajam (Bahrain) edit

The "Ajam" are an ethnic community of Bahrain, of Iranian origin. They have traditionally been merchants living in specific quarters of Manama and Muharraq. The Iranians who adhere to Shiite sect of Islam are Ajam, and they are different from the Huwala. Ajams are also a large percentage of the populace in UAE, Kuwait, Qatar and Oman.

In addition to this, many names of ancient villages in Bahrain are of Persian origin. It is believed that these names were given during the Safavid rule of Bahrain (1501–1722). i.e. Karbabad, Salmabad, Karzakan, Duraz, Barbar, which indicates that the history of Ajams is much older.

Huwala edit

Huwala are the descendants of Persians and Arab-Persians who belong to the Sunni sect of Islam.[65] Huwala migrated from Ahvaz in Iran to the Persian Gulf in the seventeenth and eighteenth century.[65][66]

Recent immigration edit

Most of the large Circassian migrational waves towards mainland Iran stem from the Safavid and Qajar era, however a certain amount also stem from the relatively recent arrivals that migrated as the Circassians were displaced from the Caucasus in the 19th century. A Black African population exists due to historical slavery. A substantial number of Russians arrived in the early 20th century as refugees from the Russian Revolution, but their number has dwindled following the Iran crisis of 1946 and the Iranian Revolution. In the 20th to 21st centuries, there has been limited immigration to Iran from Turkey, Iraq (especially huge numbers during the 1970s known as Moaveds), Afghanistan (mostly arriving as refugees in 1978), Lebanon (especially in Qom, though a Lebanese community has been present in the nation for centuries), India (mostly arriving temporarily during the 1950s to 1970s, typically working as doctors, engineers, and teachers), Korea (mostly in the 1970s as labour migrants), China (mostly since the 2000s working in engineering or business projects), and Pakistan, partly due to labour migrants and partly to Balochi ties across the Iranian-Pakistani border. About 200,000 Iraqis arrived as refugees in 2003,[citation needed] mostly living in refugee camps near the border; an unknown number of these has since returned to Iraq.

Over the same period, there has also been substantial emigration from Iran, especially since the Iranian revolution (see Iranian diaspora, Human capital flight from Iran, Jewish exodus from Iran), especially to the United States, Canada, Germany, Israel, and Sweden.

See also edit

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External links edit

  • BBC – Iran in Maps – Map of Iranian ethnic groups & population density
  • Iran: A Vast Diaspora Abroad and Millions of Refugees at Home – Migration Information Institute (2006)
  • (UNDP Iran's entry)

demographics, iran, iran, population, increased, dramatically, during, later, half, 20th, century, reaching, about, million, 2016, 2022, update, iran, population, around, million, recent, years, however, iran, birth, rate, dropped, significantly, studies, proj. Iran s population increased dramatically during the later half of the 20th century reaching about 80 million by 2016 1 2 As of 2022 update Iran s population is around 86 5 million 3 In recent years however Iran s birth rate has dropped significantly Studies project that Iran s rate of population growth will continue to slow until it stabilises above 100 million by 2050 4 5 Half of Iran s population was under 35 years old in 2012 6 Demographics of IranPopulation pyramid of Iran in 2020Population87 929 883 2023 est Growth rate0 98 2022 est Birth rate15 27 births 1 000 population 2022 est Death rate5 17 deaths 1 000 population 2022 est Life expectancy75 25 years male73 89 years female76 67 yearsFertility rate1 66 children born woman 2023 official Infant mortality rate14 84 deaths 1 000 live birthsNet migration rate 0 3 migrant s 1 000 population 2022 est Age structure0 14 years24 11 65 and over5 87 Sex ratioTotal1 03 male s female 2022 est At birth1 05 male s femaleUnder 151 05 male s female65 and over0 77 male s femaleNationalityNationalityIranianLanguageOfficialPersian Farsi Historical population of IranPopulation of Iranian provinces and counties in 2021 In 2009 the number of households stood at 15 3 million 4 8 persons per household 7 Families earn some 11 8 million rials about 960 per month on average 2012 8 According to the OECD World Bank statistics population growth in Iran from 1990 to 2008 was 17 6 million and 32 9 The literacy rate was 80 in 2002 10 11 and 85 in 2016 12 The fertility rate has fallen to 1 6 below the natural replacement rate of 2 1 13 Contents 1 Population 2 Vital statistics 2 1 UN estimates 2 2 Registered births and deaths 2 3 Current vital statistics 3 Languages and ethnic groups 4 Urban population 5 Religious affiliations 6 Iranian citizens abroad 7 Refugee population 8 CIA World Factbook demographic statistics 9 Genetics 9 1 Haplogroups 9 1 1 Y chromosome DNA 9 1 2 Mitochondrial DNA 9 2 Autosomal DNA 10 People of Iranian ancestry 10 1 Tats Caucasus 10 2 Parsis 10 3 Iranis 10 4 Ajam Bahrain 10 5 Huwala 11 Recent immigration 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksPopulation editAccording to the 2016 population census the population of Iran was 79 9 million 1 a fourfold increase since 1956 Between 1976 and 1986 an average annual population growth of almost 4 was reached but due to decreasing fertility levels the growth decreased to 1 2 between 2011 and 2016 Population census results 14 Census date Population Average annual growth Populationdensity km2 Proportionurban Household size1956 11 01 18 954 704 12 31 41966 11 01 25 785 210 3 13 16 37 51976 11 01 33 708 744 2 71 20 47 0 5 021986 11 22 49 445 010 3 91 30 54 0 5 111996 11 01 60 055 488 2 0 37 61 0 4 842006 11 01 70 495 782 1 62 43 68 5 4 032011 11 01 75 149 669 1 29 46 71 4 3 552016 11 01 79 926 270 1 24 49 74 0 3 3Vital statistics editSee also Provinces of Iran UN estimates edit 2022 estimates 15 Population on 1 July Live births per year Deaths per year Natural change per year crude birth rate1 crude death rate1 natural change1 total fertility rate2 infant mortality rate31950 16 833 000 844 000 469 000 375 000 50 1 27 9 22 3 6 95 209 01951 17 220 000 863 000 481 000 382 000 50 1 27 9 22 2 6 95 207 31952 17 614 000 883 000 485 000 398 000 50 1 27 5 22 6 6 96 203 71953 18 018 000 904 000 490 000 414 000 50 1 27 2 23 0 6 98 200 51954 18 435 000 925 000 490 000 434 000 50 1 26 6 23 6 7 01 197 21955 18 874 000 946 000 491 000 455 000 50 1 26 0 24 1 7 04 192 91956 19 332 000 968 000 494 000 474 000 50 0 25 5 24 5 7 08 189 51957 19 806 000 996 000 497 000 499 000 50 2 25 1 25 2 7 18 185 81958 20 295 000 1 022 000 494 000 528 000 50 3 24 3 26 0 7 28 181 61959 20 822 000 1 046 000 494 000 551 000 50 2 23 7 26 5 7 38 177 81960 21 389 000 1 049 000 493 000 556 000 49 0 23 1 26 0 7 30 174 01961 21 984 000 1 053 000 489 000 564 000 48 0 22 3 25 7 7 23 170 21962 22 605 000 1 069 000 500 000 569 000 47 4 22 2 25 2 7 22 167 31963 23 259 000 1 082 000 485 000 597 000 46 6 20 9 25 7 7 18 162 81964 23 949 000 1 098 000 483 000 615 000 45 9 20 2 25 7 7 13 159 11965 24 667 000 1 120 000 482 000 637 000 45 5 19 6 25 9 7 11 155 41966 25 399 000 1 145 000 480 000 664 000 45 1 18 9 26 2 7 08 151 61967 26 133 000 1 174 000 480 000 694 000 44 9 18 4 26 6 7 05 147 61968 26 875 000 1 195 000 487 000 708 000 44 5 18 1 26 4 6 97 144 01969 27 644 000 1 220 000 474 000 746 000 44 2 17 2 27 0 6 90 138 91970 28 450 000 1 229 000 468 000 761 000 43 2 16 5 26 8 6 71 134 11971 29 274 000 1 239 000 459 000 780 000 42 4 15 7 26 7 6 51 128 91972 30 112 000 1 237 000 456 000 782 000 41 1 15 1 26 0 6 25 123 81973 30 982 000 1 258 000 440 000 818 000 40 6 14 2 26 4 6 11 118 21974 31 896 000 1 295 000 433 000 862 000 40 6 13 6 27 0 6 04 113 01975 32 857 000 1 339 000 428 000 911 000 40 8 13 0 27 8 6 01 107 71976 33 841 000 1 416 000 425 000 991 000 41 8 12 5 29 3 6 14 102 31977 34 876 000 1 474 000 421 000 1 053 000 42 3 12 1 30 2 6 20 96 61978 35 994 000 1 550 000 446 000 1 104 000 43 1 12 4 30 7 6 33 92 41979 37 205 000 1 645 000 411 000 1 234 000 44 2 11 0 33 2 6 53 85 11980 38 521 000 1 708 000 422 000 1 286 000 44 4 11 0 33 4 6 58 79 51981 40 476 000 1 756 000 463 000 1 293 000 44 1 11 6 32 4 6 56 74 31982 42 500 000 1 886 000 467 000 1 419 000 44 4 11 0 33 4 6 55 69 31983 44 028 000 1 930 000 458 000 1 472 000 43 9 10 4 33 5 6 51 65 11984 45 628 000 1 966 000 420 000 1 546 000 43 1 9 2 33 9 6 44 61 51985 47 266 000 1 974 000 415 000 1 559 000 41 8 8 8 33 0 6 26 58 21986 48 913 000 1 957 000 409 000 1 547 000 40 0 8 4 31 7 6 01 55 31987 50 541 000 1 915 000 407 000 1 507 000 37 9 8 1 29 9 5 69 52 61988 52 112 000 1 872 000 399 000 1 473 000 36 0 7 7 28 3 5 39 49 81989 53 645 000 1 828 000 358 000 1 470 000 34 1 6 7 27 4 5 11 47 41990 55 794 000 1 788 000 395 000 1 393 000 32 5 7 2 25 3 4 86 46 51991 57 991 000 1 790 000 359 000 1 431 000 30 9 6 2 24 7 4 51 43 11992 59 372 000 1 697 000 358 000 1 340 000 28 5 6 0 22 5 4 08 41 31993 59 755 000 1 579 000 352 000 1 227 000 26 1 5 8 20 3 3 68 39 81994 59 986 000 1 367 000 340 000 1 027 000 22 8 5 7 17 1 3 27 38 21995 60 795 000 1 244 000 335 000 908 000 20 4 5 5 14 9 2 89 36 81996 61 598 000 1 145 000 333 000 811 000 18 6 5 4 13 2 2 57 35 41997 62 481 000 1 081 000 334 000 747 000 17 3 5 4 12 0 2 33 34 01998 63 461 000 1 064 000 336 000 727 000 16 8 5 3 11 5 2 20 32 51999 64 475 000 1 065 000 333 000 732 000 16 6 5 2 11 4 2 10 31 02000 65 544 000 1 071 000 337 000 735 000 16 4 5 2 11 2 2 02 29 52001 66 675 000 1 082 000 344 000 738 000 16 3 5 2 11 1 1 94 28 12002 67 327 000 1 086 000 345 000 742 000 16 1 5 1 11 0 1 87 26 42003 67 955 000 1 081 000 370 000 712 000 16 0 5 5 10 5 1 82 25 62004 69 062 000 1 107 000 345 000 762 000 16 1 5 0 11 1 1 80 23 42005 70 183 000 1 134 000 348 000 786 000 16 2 5 0 11 2 1 78 21 92006 71 276 000 1 173 000 349 000 824 000 16 5 4 9 11 6 1 77 20 62007 72 319 000 1 221 000 350 000 872 000 16 9 4 8 12 1 1 77 19 42008 73 318 000 1 265 000 369 000 896 000 17 3 5 0 12 2 1 77 18 22009 74 323 000 1 304 000 381 000 923 000 17 5 5 1 12 4 1 77 17 22010 75 374 000 1 337 000 385 000 953 000 17 8 5 1 12 6 1 77 16 32011 76 343 000 1 388 000 381 000 1 008 000 18 2 5 0 13 2 1 80 15 52012 77 324 000 1 464 000 378 000 1 085 000 18 9 4 9 14 0 1 89 14 82013 78 459 000 1 526 000 385 000 1 141 000 19 4 4 9 14 5 1 96 14 22014 79 962 000 1 579 000 391 000 1 188 000 19 8 4 9 14 9 2 04 13 62015 81 791 000 1 583 000 395 000 1 188 000 19 4 4 8 14 6 2 05 13 12016 83 306 000 1 584 000 394 000 1 190 000 19 0 4 7 14 3 2 07 12 62017 84 505 000 1 572 000 396 000 1 176 000 18 6 4 7 13 9 2 07 12 22018 85 618 000 1 475 000 404 000 1 071 000 17 2 4 7 12 5 1 97 11 82019 86 564 000 1 308 000 421 000 886 000 15 1 4 9 10 2 1 77 11 42020 87 290 000 1 243 000 486 000 757 000 14 2 5 6 8 7 1 71 11 02021 87 923 000 1 204 000 566 000 638 000 13 7 6 4 7 3 1 69 10 71per 1000 2 TFR number of children per woman 3per 1000 births Registered births and deaths edit 2001 statistics 16 17 18 Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Total Fertility Rate1959 864 846 176 268 688 5781960 876 206 171 040 705 1661961 902 260 159 371 742 8891962 957 500 165 488 792 0121963 920 967 135 912 785 0551964 1 118 911 145 174 973 7371965 1 139 663 171 940 967 7231966 1 101 606 178 991 922 6151967 1 019 373 179 159 840 2141968 1 037 022 174 201 862 8211969 1 091 513 167 660 923 8531970 1 189 203 163 430 1 025 7731971 1 231 227 149 325 1 081 9021972 1 138 843 153 568 985 2751973 1 199 777 155 081 1 044 6961974 1 248 256 149 785 1 098 4711975 1 339 267 148 543 1 190 7241976 1 401 426 155 981 1 245 4451977 1 399 977 146 369 1 253 6081978 1 369 597 127 587 1 242 0101979 1 689 908 142 402 1 547 5061980 2 450 308 162 176 2 288 1321981 2 421 611 178 099 2 243 5121982 2 101 894 200 614 1 901 2801983 2 203 448 207 228 1 996 2201984 2 067 803 186 440 1 881 3631985 2 033 285 190 061 1 843 2241986 2 259 055 199 511 2 059 5441987 1 832 089 204 230 1 627 8591988 1 944 149 238 390 1 705 7591989 1 784 811 199 645 1 585 1661990 1 722 977 217 597 1 505 3801991 1 582 931 217 637 1 365 2941992 1 433 243 188 647 1 244 5961993 1 388 017 208 161 1 179 8561994 1 426 784 3 501995 1 205 372 3 221996 1 187 903 2 951997 1 179 260 2 731998 1 185 639 551 345 634 294 2 531999 62 738 000 1 177 557 374 838 802 719 18 8 6 0 12 8 2 362000 63 658 000 1 095 165 382 674 712 491 17 2 6 0 11 2 2 192001 64 592 000 1 110 836 421 525 689 311 17 2 6 5 10 7 2 092002 65 540 000 1 122 104 337 237 784 867 17 1 5 1 12 0 2 012003 66 480 000 1 171 573 368 518 803 055 17 6 5 5 12 1 1 922004 67 477 000 1 154 368 355 213 799 155 17 1 5 3 11 8 1 872005 69 672 000 1 239 408 363 723 875 685 18 1 5 3 12 8 1 822006 70 554 000 1 253 912 408 566 845 346 17 8 5 8 12 0 1 792007 71 336 000 1 286 716 412 736 873 980 18 0 5 8 12 2 1 812008 72 120 000 1 300 166 417 798 882 368 17 9 5 8 12 2 1 802009 72 924 000 1 348 546 393 514 955 032 18 3 5 3 13 0 1 782010 73 762 000 1 363 542 441 042 922 500 18 3 5 9 12 4 1 772011 74 634 000 1 382 229 422 133 960 096 18 3 5 6 12 7 1 742012 75 539 000 1 421 689 367 512 1 054 177 18 7 4 8 13 9 1 732013 76 481 000 1 471 834 372 279 1 099 555 19 1 4 8 14 3 1 702014 77 465 000 1 534 362 446 333 1 088 029 19 8 5 8 14 0 1 682015 78 492 000 1 570 219 374 827 1 195 392 20 0 4 8 15 2 2 162016 79 926 000 1 528 054 388 792 1 139 262 19 2 4 9 14 3 2 112017 80 960 000 1 540 570 374 630 1 165 940 19 0 4 6 14 4 2 072018 81 865 000 1 388 249 376 839 1 011 410 16 9 4 6 12 3 1 972019 82 585 000 1 196 132 395 392 800 743 14 4 4 8 9 6 1 772020 83 220 000 1 110 374 493 735 616 639 13 3 5 9 7 5 1 712021 83 935 000 1 106 072 536 109 569 963 13 2 6 4 6 8 1 742022 1 075 381Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki wiki Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki wiki Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki wiki Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki wiki Current vital statistics edit 19 Period Live births Deaths Natural increaseMarch 21 2021 December 21 2021 844 723 428 549 416 174March 21 2022 December 21 2022 810 877 313 545 497 332Difference nbsp 33 846 4 0 nbsp 115 004 26 8 nbsp 81 158Age group Number 2006 Percentage 2006 Number 2011 Percentage 2011 Total 70 495 782 100 75 149 669 1000 4 5 463 978 7 75 6 232 552 8 295 9 5 509 057 7 81 5 657 791 7 5310 14 6 708 591 9 52 5 671 435 7 5515 19 8 726 761 12 38 6 607 043 8 7920 24 9 011 422 12 78 8 414 497 11 2025 29 7 224 952 10 25 8 672 654 11 5430 34 5 553 531 7 88 6 971 924 9 2835 39 4 921 124 6 98 5 571 018 7 4140 44 4 089 158 5 80 4 906 749 6 5345 49 3 522 761 5 00 4 030 481 5 3650 54 2 755 420 3 91 3 527 408 4 6955 59 1 887 981 2 68 2 680 119 3 5760 64 1 464 452 2 08 1 862 907 2 4865 69 1 197 550 1 70 1 343 731 1 7970 74 1 119 318 1 59 1 119 968 1 4975 79 694 122 0 98 913 531 1 2280 645 601 0 92 919 539 1 22Unclear 46 322 0 06Number of children 0 14 Number of people 15 49 Proportion Number of women 15 49 Proportion17 681 629 2006 43 049 709 2006 0 4107 2006 21 524 855 2006 0 8215 2006 17 561 778 2011 45 174 366 2011 0 3888 2011 22 587 183 2011 0 7775 2011 Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group 01 VII 2020 Data refer to the Iranian Year which begins on 21 March and ends on 20 March of the following year 20 Age Group Male Female Total Total 42 484 186 41 553 414 84 037 600 1000 4 3 751 160 3 584 640 7 335 800 8 735 9 3 644 823 3 453 109 7 097 932 8 4510 14 3 195 837 3 043 160 6 238 997 7 4215 19 2 850 201 2 723 069 5 573 270 6 6320 24 2 817 236 2 715 743 5 532 979 6 5825 29 3 398 106 3 322 934 6 721 040 8 0030 34 4 246 233 4 166 179 8 412 412 10 0135 39 4 226 366 4 147 771 8 374 137 9 9640 44 3 375 662 3 271 031 6 646 693 7 9145 49 2 687 892 2 591 386 5 279 278 6 2850 54 2 321 552 2 270 429 4 591 981 5 4655 59 1 841 337 1 847 872 3 689 209 4 3960 64 1 510 299 1 557 919 3 068 218 3 6565 69 1 058 091 1 138 129 2 196 220 2 6170 74 640 098 748 890 1 388 988 1 6575 79 415 623 459 393 875 016 1 0480 503 670 511 760 1 015 430 1 21Age group Male Female Total Percent0 14 10 591 820 10 080 909 20 672 729 24 6015 64 29 274 884 28 614 333 57 889 217 68 8865 2 617 482 2 858 172 5 475 654 6 52Year 0 14 15 64 65 1976 44 5 52 3 51985 45 5 51 5 31996 39 5 56 1 4 32006 25 1 17 681 629 69 7 49 157 562 5 2 3 656 591 2011 23 4 17 561 778 70 9 53 297 122 5 7 4 290 769 2016 24 0 19 192 665 69 9 55 862 087 6 1 4 871 518 Table 9 Population and Average Annual Growth by Provinces 2006 and 2011 Province 2006 2011 Average annual growthAlborz 2 076 991 2 412 513 3 04Ardabil 1 228 155 1 248 488 0 33Bushehr 886 267 1 032 949 3 11Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari 857 910 895 263 0 86East Azerbaijan 3 603 456 3 724 620 0 66Fars 4 336 878 4 596 658 1 17Gilan 2 404 861 2 480 874 0 62Golestan 1 617 087 1 777 014 1 90Hamadan 1 703 267 1 758 268 0 64Hormozgan 1 403 674 1 578 183 2 37Ilam 545 787 557 599 0 43Isfahan 4 559 256 4 879 312 1 37Kerman 2 652 413 2 938 988 2 07Kermanshah 1 879 385 1 945 227 0 69Khuzestan 4 274 979 4 531 720 1 17Kohgiluyeh and Boyer Ahmad 634 299 658 629 0 76Kurdistan 1 440 156 1 493 645 0 73Lorestan 1 716 527 1 754 243 0 44Markazi 1 351 257 1 413 959 0 91Mazandaran 2 922 432 3 073 943 1 02North Khorasan 811 572 867 727 1 35Qazvin 1 143 200 1 201 565 1 00Qom 1 046 737 1 151 672 1 93Razavi Khorasan 5 593 079 5 994 402 1 40Semnan 589 742 631 218 1 37Sistan and Baluchestan 2 405 742 2 534 327 1 05South Khorasan 636 420 662 534 0 81Tehran 11 345 375 12 183 391 1 44West Azerbaijan 2 873 459 3 080 576 1 40Yazd 990 818 1 074 428 1 63Zanjan 964 601 1 015 734 1 04Total 70 495 782 75 149 669 1 291 The population of the provinces of Alborz and Tehran for 2006 and their average annual growth have been calculated based on the data of 2011 Unofficial Translation 17Table 10 Population Percentages by Province 2006 and 2011 Percentage Province 2006 2011Alborz 2 95 3 21Ardabil 1 74 1 66Bushehr 1 26 1 37Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari 1 22 1 19East Azerbaijan 5 11 4 96Fars 6 15 6 12Gilan 3 41 3 30Golestan 2 29 2 36Hamadan 2 42 2 34Hormozgan 1 99 2 10Ilam 0 77 0 74Isfahan 6 47 6 49Kerman 3 76 3 91Kermanshah 2 67 2 59Khuzestan 6 06 6 03Kohgiluyeh and Boyer Ahmad 0 90 0 88Kurdistan 2 04 1 99Lorestan 2 43 2 33Markazi 1 92 1 88Mazandaran 4 15 4 09North Khorasan 1 15 1 15Qazvin 1 62 1 60Qom 1 48 1 53Razavi Khorasan 7 93 7 98Semnan 0 84 0 84Sistan and Baluchestan 3 41 3 37South Khorasan 0 90 0 88Tehran 16 09 16 21West Azerbaijan 4 08 4 10Yazd 1 41 1 43Zanjan 1 37 1 35Total 100 1001 The population of the provinces of Alborz and Tehran for 2006 and their average annual growth have been calculated based on the data of 2011 Languages and ethnic groups edit nbsp Colour coded map of Iran s ethnic groups The centre of the country is mostly Persians Azerbaijanis Gilaks Kurds and Talysh are in the northwest Lurs Qashqai and Arabs in the southwest Turkmens and more Kurds in the northeast Balochis in the southeast Main articles Iranian peoples Turkic people Ethnic minorities in Iran Languages of Iran and Ethnicities in Iran The largest linguistic group comprises speakers of Iranian languages like modern Persian Kurdish Gilaki Mazandarani Luri Talysh and Balochi Speakers of Turkic languages most notably Azerbaijanis which is by far the second most spoken language in the country but also the Turkmen and the Qashqai peoples comprise a substantial minority The remainder are primarily speakers of Semitic languages such as Arabic and Assyrian A small number of Mandaeans in Khuzestan speak Mandaic There are small groups using other Indo European languages such as Armenian and Russian also Georgian a member of the Kartvelian language family is spoken in a large pocket only by those Iranian Georgians that live in Fereydan Fereydunshahr Most of those Georgians who live in the north Iranian provinces of Gilan Mazandaran Isfahan Tehran Province and the rest of Iran no longer speak the language The Circassians in Iran a very large minority in the past and speakers of the Circassian language have been strongly assimilated and absorbed within the population in the past few centuries However significant pockets do exist spread over the country and they are the second largest Caucasus derived group in the nation after the Georgians 21 22 Jews have had a continuous presence in Iran since the time of Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid Empire In 1948 there were approximately 140 000 150 000 Jews living in Iran According to the Tehran Jewish Committee the Jewish population of Iran was more recently estimated at 25 000 to 35 000 of which approximately 15 000 are in Tehran with the rest residing in Hamadan Shiraz Isfahan Kermanshah Yazd Kerman Rafsanjan Borujerd Sanandaj Tabriz and Urmia However the official 2011 state census recorded only 8 756 Jews in Iran 23 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The CIA World Factbook which is based on 2013 statistics gives the following numbers for the languages spoken in Iran today Persian Luri Gilaki and Mazandarani 66 Azerbaijani and other Turkic languages 18 Kurdish 10 Arabic 2 Balochi 2 others 2 Armenian Georgian Circassian Assyrian etc 24 According to anthropologist Brian Spooner around half of Iran s population uses a language other than Persian at home and in informal public situations 25 Other sources such as the Library of Congress and the Encyclopedia of Islam Leiden 26 give Iran s ethnic groups as following Persians 65 Azerbaijanis 16 Kurds 7 Lurs 6 Arabs 2 Baloch 2 Turkmens 1 Turkic tribal groups e g Qashqai 1 and non Persian non Turkic groups e g Armenians Georgians Assyrians Circassians less than 1 27 For sources prior to and after 2000 see Languages and ethnicities in Iran Urban population editSee also List of largest cities of Iran and List of cities in Iran nbsp Evolution of Iran population divided into urban and rural population nbsp Provinces of Iran by population density in 2013In addition to its international migration pattern Iran also exhibits one of the steepest urban growth rates in the world according to the UN humanitarian information unit According to 2015 population estimates approximately 73 4 per cent of Iran s population lives in urban areas up from 27 per cent in 1950 28 The following is a list of the eight most populous cities in the country Rank City Province populationCity 29 Metro 30 1 Tehran Tehran 8 693 706 14 700 0002 Mashhad Razavi Khorasan 3 001 184 3 100 0003 Isfahan Isfahan 1 961 260 3 100 0004 Karaj Alborz 1 592 492 2 500 0005 Shiraz Fars 1 565 572 1 700 0006 Tabriz East Azarbaijan 1 588 693 1 760 0007 Qom Qom 1 201 158 1 240 0008 Ahvaz Khuzestan 1 184 788 1 320 000Religious affiliations editReligion in Iran by CIA Shia Islam 94 1 Sunni Islam 5 3 Other Unspecifed 0 6 Main articles Religion in Iran Islam in Iran Christianity in Iran and Irreligion in Iran See also Roman Catholicism in Iran Persian Jews Bahaʼi Faith in Iran and Mandaeans nbsp The entrance to Shah Mosque aka Imam Mosque or Shah Jame Mosque in Isfahan This mosque is a prominent example of Persian architecture during the Safavid dynasty Population of Iran according to religion 1956 2011 per the UN 14 16 Religion census 1956 census 1966 census 1976 census 2006 census 2011Number Number Number Number Number Muslims 18 654 127 98 4 24 771 922 98 8 33 396 908 99 1 70 097 741 99 4 74 682 938 99 4Christians 114 528 0 6 149 427 0 6 168 593 0 5 109 415 0 2 117 704 0 2Zoroastrians 15 723 0 1 19 816 0 1 21 400 0 1 19 823 0 0 25 271 0 0Jews 65 232 0 3 60 683 0 2 62 258 0 2 9 252 0 0 8 756 0 0Other 59 256 0 3 77 075 0 3 54 234 0 1 49 101 0 1Unknown 45 838 0 2 59 583 0 2 205 317 0 3 265 899 0 4About 99 of the Iranians are Muslims 90 belong to the Shi a branch of Islam the official state religion and about 9 belong to the Sunni branch which predominates in neighbouring Muslim countries 11 Less than 1 non Muslim minorities include Christians Zoroastrians Jews Bahaʼis Mandaeans and Yarsan By far the largest group of Christians in Iran are Armenians under the Armenian Apostolic Church which has between 110 000 31 250 000 32 and 300 000 33 adherents There are hundreds of Christian churches in Iran citation needed The Bahaʼi Faith Iran s largest non Muslim religious minority with a population around 300 000 is not officially recognised and therefore not included in the census results and has been persecuted since its inception in Iran Since the 1979 revolution the persecution of Bahaʼis has increased with executions the denial of civil rights and liberties and the denial of access to higher education and employment 34 35 Unofficial estimates for the Assyrian Christian population range between 20 000 36 37 and 70 000 38 39 The number of Iranian Mandaeans is a matter of dispute In 2009 there were an estimated 5 000 to 10 000 Mandaeans in Iran according to the Associated Press 40 Whereas Alarabiya has put the number of Iranian Mandaeans as high as 60 000 in 2011 41 Iranian citizens abroad editMain article Iranian citizens abroad The term Iranian citizens abroad or Iranian Persian diaspora refers to the Iranian people and their children born in Iran but living outside of Iran Migrant Iranian workers abroad remitted less than two billion dollars home in 2006 42 As of 2010 there are about four to five million Iranians living abroad mostly in the United States Canada Europe Persian Gulf States Turkey Australia and the broader Middle East 28 43 According to the 2000 Census and other independent surveys there are an estimated 1 million Iranian Americans living in the U S in particular the Los Angeles area is estimated to be host to approximately 72 000 Iranians earning the Westwood area of LA the nickname Tehrangeles 44 Other metropolises that have large Iranian populations include Dubai with 300 000 Iranians Vancouver London Toronto San Francisco Bay Area Washington D C Buenos Aires Mexico City Stockholm Berlin Hamburg and Frankfurt Their combined net worth is estimated to be 1 3 trillion 45 Note that this differs from the other Iranian peoples living in other areas of Greater Iran who are of related ethnolinguistical family speaking languages belonging to the Iranian languages which is a branch of Indo European languages Refugee population editSee also Foreign relations of Iran Iran hosts one of the largest refugee population in the world with more than one million refugees mostly from Afghanistan 80 and Iraq 10 Since 2006 Iranian officials have been working with the UNHCR and Afghan officials for their repatriation 46 47 Between 1979 and 1997 UNHCR spent more than US 1 billion on Afghan refugees in Pakistan but only 150 million on those in Iran In 1999 the Iranian government estimated the cost of maintaining its refugee population at US 10 million per day compared with the US 18 million UNHCR allocated for all of its operations in Iran in 1999 47 As of 2016 some 300 000 work permits have been issued for foreign nationals in Iran 48 CIA World Factbook demographic statistics edit nbsp Net Iranian migration 1979 2008 A positive value represents more people entering Iran than leaving itThe following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook unless otherwise indicated 49 Age structure 50 0 14 years 24 11 male 10 472 844 female 10 000 028 15 24 years 13 36 male 5 806 034 female 5 537 561 25 54 years 48 94 male 21 235 038 female 20 327 384 55 64 years 7 72 male 3 220 074 female 3 337 420 65 years and over 5 87 male 2 316 677 female 2 670 254 2020 est Median age total 31 7 years male 31 5 years female 32 years 2020 est Population growth rate 1 03 2021 est Birth rate 15 78 births 1 000 population 2021 est Death rate 5 14 deaths 1 000 population 2021 est Urbanization urban population 76 3 of total population 2021 rate of urbanisation 1 32 annual rate of change 2020 25 est nbsp Life expectancy in Iran since 1950 nbsp Life expectancy in Iran since 1960 by genderSex ratio at birth 1 05 male s female 0 14 years 1 05 male s female 15 24 years 1 05 male s female 25 54 years 1 04 male s female 55 64 years 0 96 male s female 65 years and over 0 87 male s female total population 1 03 male s female 2020 est Life expectancy at birth total population 75 06 years male 73 71 years female 76 48 years 2021 est Total fertility rate 1 93 children born woman 2021 est Literacy definition age 15 and over can read and write total population 85 5 male 90 4 female 80 8 2016 Genetics editSee also Genetic history of the Middle East Haplogroups edit Y chromosome DNA edit Y Chromosome DNA Y DNA represents the male lineage the Iranian Y chromosome pool is as follows where haplogroups R1 25 J2 23 G 14 J1 8 E1b1b 5 L 4 Q 4 comprise more than 85 of the total chromosomes 51 Haplogroup 52 n B C E1b1a E1b1b1a2 E1b1b1a3 E1b1b1c F G H I J1 J2 K L N O P R Q R1a R1b R1b1a R1b1b R2 TMarker M2 V13 V22 M34 M343 V88 M269 M70Iran 566 0 53 0 18 1 41 1 77 1 8 0 88 0 35 14 00 2 65 0 8 8 13 23 86 0 71 4 00 2 12 1 41 0 71 4 01 17 49 1 24 0 35 6 18 1 41 2 12Mitochondrial DNA edit Mitochondrial DNA mtDNA represents the female lineage West Eurasian mtDNA makes up over 90 of the Iranian population on average 2013 53 Among them U3b3 lineages appear to be restricted to populations of Iran and the Caucasus while the sub cluster U3b1a is common in the whole Near East region 53 In Iran outliers in the Y chromosomes and Mitochondrial DNA gene pool are consisted of the north Iranian ethnicities such as the Gilaks and Mazandarani s whose genetic build up including chromosomal DNA are nearly identical to the major South Caucasian ethnicities namely the Georgians Armenians and Azerbaijani s Other outliers are made by the Baloch people representing a mere 1 2 of the total Iranian population who have more patrilinial and mitochondrial DNA lines leaning towards northwest South Asian ethnic groups Levels of genetic variation in Iranian populations are comparable to the other groups from the Caucasus Anatolia and Europe 53 Autosomal DNA edit A large scale genetic analyses on various ethnic groups of Iran published in 2019 found that genetically speaking different Iranian ethnic groups such as Persians Kurds Azeris Lurs Mazanderanis Gilaks and Arabs cluster tightly together forming a single cluster known as the CIC Central Iranian cluster Compared with worldwide populations Iranians CIC cluster in the center of the wider West Eurasian cluster close to Europeans Middle Easterners and South Central Asians Iranian Arabs and Turkic speaking Azeris genetically overlap with Iranian speaking peoples such as Persians The genetic substructure of Iranians was found to be low compared with other 1000G populations Iranians display their highest genetic affinity with other Southwest and West Asian populations followed by Europeans and Central Asian groups Certain South Asians specifically the Parsi minority showed the highest affinity with Iranians inline with their ethnic history Overall the study results suggest that the genetic makeup of the Iranian gene pool formed already about 5 000 years ago and shows high continuity since then suggesting that they were largely unaffected by migration events from outside groups On a global scale Iranians display their highest affinity with other West Eurasian populations such as Europeans or South Asians but also Latin Americans while Sub Saharan Africans and East Asians showed large degrees of differentiation with Iranians 54 People of Iranian ancestry editSee also Greater Iran Tats Caucasus edit Main article Tats Caucasus The Tats are an Iranian people presently living within Azerbaijan and Russia mainly Southern Dagestan The Tats are part of the indigenous peoples of Iranian origin in the Caucasus 55 56 57 Tats use the Tat language a southwestern Iranian language and a variety of Persian 58 59 60 61 62 Azerbaijani and Russian are also spoken Tats are mainly Shia Muslims with a significant Sunni Muslim minority Likely the ancestors of modern Tats settled in South Caucasus when the Sassanid Empire from the 3rd to 7th centuries built cities and founded military garrisons to strengthen their positions in this region 63 Parsis edit Main article Parsis The Parsis are the close knit Zoroastrian community based primarily in India but also found in Pakistan Parsis are descended from Persian Zoroastrians who emigrated to the Indian subcontinent over 1 000 years ago Indian census data 2001 records 69 601 Parsis in India with a concentration in and around the city of Mumbai previously known as Bombay There are approximately 8 000 Parsis elsewhere on the subcontinent with an estimated 2 500 Parsis in the city of Karachi and approximately 50 Parsi families in Sri Lanka The number of Parsis worldwide is estimated to be fewer than 100 000 Eliade 1991 254 Iranis edit Main article Iranian peoples In Pakistan and India the term Irani has come to denote Iranian Zoroastrians who have migrated to Pakistan and India within the last two centuries as opposed to most Parsis who arrived in India over 1000 years ago Many of them moved during the Qajar era when persecution of Iranian Zoroastrians was rampant They are culturally and linguistically closer to the Zoroastrians of Iran Unlike the Parsis they speak a Dari dialect the language spoken by the Iranian Zoroastrians in Yazd and Kerman Their last names often resemble modern Iranian names however Irani is a common surname among them In India they are mostly located in modern day Mumbai while in Pakistan they are mostly located in modern day Karachi In both Pakistan and India they are famous for their restaurants and tea houses 64 Some such as Ardeshir Irani have also become very famous in cinema Ajam Bahrain edit Main article Ajam Bahrain The Ajam are an ethnic community of Bahrain of Iranian origin They have traditionally been merchants living in specific quarters of Manama and Muharraq The Iranians who adhere to Shiite sect of Islam are Ajam and they are different from the Huwala Ajams are also a large percentage of the populace in UAE Kuwait Qatar and Oman In addition to this many names of ancient villages in Bahrain are of Persian origin It is believed that these names were given during the Safavid rule of Bahrain 1501 1722 i e Karbabad Salmabad Karzakan Duraz Barbar which indicates that the history of Ajams is much older Huwala edit Main article Huwala Huwala are the descendants of Persians and Arab Persians who belong to the Sunni sect of Islam 65 Huwala migrated from Ahvaz in Iran to the Persian Gulf in the seventeenth and eighteenth century 65 66 Recent immigration editMost of the large Circassian migrational waves towards mainland Iran stem from the Safavid and Qajar era however a certain amount also stem from the relatively recent arrivals that migrated as the Circassians were displaced from the Caucasus in the 19th century A Black African population exists due to historical slavery A substantial number of Russians arrived in the early 20th century as refugees from the Russian Revolution but their number has dwindled following the Iran crisis of 1946 and the Iranian Revolution In the 20th to 21st centuries there has been limited immigration to Iran from Turkey Iraq especially huge numbers during the 1970s known as Moaveds Afghanistan mostly arriving as refugees in 1978 Lebanon especially in Qom though a Lebanese community has been present in the nation for centuries India mostly arriving temporarily during the 1950s to 1970s typically working as doctors engineers and teachers Korea mostly in the 1970s as labour migrants China mostly since the 2000s working in engineering or business projects and Pakistan partly due to labour migrants and partly to Balochi ties across the Iranian Pakistani border About 200 000 Iraqis arrived as refugees in 2003 citation needed mostly living in refugee camps near the border an unknown number of these has since returned to Iraq Over the same period there has also been substantial emigration from Iran especially since the Iranian revolution see Iranian diaspora Human capital flight from Iran Jewish exodus from Iran especially to the United States Canada Germany Israel and Sweden See also edit nbsp Iran portal nbsp Society portalCulture of Iran Economy of Iran Education in Iran Ethnic groups in West Asia Health care in Iran Family planning in Iran Human rights in Iran Human capital flight from Iran Iranian names Social class in Iran Women in Iran List of IraniansReferences edit a b Iran Census Results 2016 Archived 23 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine United Nations Asia Pacific Population Journal United Nations A New Direction in Population Policy and Family Planning in the Islamic Republic of Iran Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 14 April 2006 Iran Population 2021 Worldometer International Programs census gov Archived from the original on 29 April 2012 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Iran News Payvand com Iran s population growth rate falls to 1 5 percent UNFP Archived from the original on 27 December 2016 Retrieved 18 October 2006 International News ABC News 30 November 2012 Archived from the original on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Iran Iran economy Social indicators amp living standards Economist Intelligence Unit 23 June 2009 Central bank Income equality improved in Iran Tehran Times Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2012 CO2 Emissions from Fuel Combustion Archived 12 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Population 1971 2008 pdf Archived 6 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine pages 83 85 IEA OECD World Bank original population ref e g in IEA Key World Energy Statistics 2010 page 57 UNDP org Archived 22 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Table H a b CIA The World Factbook Cia gov Retrieved 4 December 2012 The World Factbook cia gov 6 May 2019 Iran s fertility rate alarmingly low Tehran Times 2 June 2021 Retrieved 12 July 2021 a b Iran Census Results 2011 Archived 23 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine United Nations United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XLS 91MB United Nations Population Division 27 Online ed New York United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division rows 7709 7780 cols M X AE S AH S AA AV AI Archived from the original on 9 August 2022 a b United Nations Statistics Division Demographic and Social Statistics United Nations Archived from the original on 27 December 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2012 National Organization for Civil Registration Home sabteahval ir Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Retrieved 4 May 2015 Census 2016 دفتر آمار و اطلاعات جمعیتی و مهاجرت Archived from the original on 7 February 2022 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Demographic Yearbook 2020 New York United Nations Statistics Division Retrieved 18 May 2022 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East Archived 14 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Facts On File Incorporated ISBN 143812676X p 141 Circassian people Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 28 April 2014 Jewish woman brutally murdered in Iran over property dispute The Times of Israel 28 November 2012 Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2014 A government census published earlier this year indicated there were a mere 8 756 Jews left in Iran The World Factbook Iran Retrieved 13 May 2013 Brian Spooner 2012 PERSIAN FARSI DARI TAJIKI LANGUAGE NAMES AND LANGUAGE POLICIES In Schiffman Harold ed Language Policy and Language Conflict in Afghanistan and Its Neighbors Brill p 89 See Iran in Encyclopedia of Islam Leiden C E Bosworth editor Curtis Glenn E Hooglund Eric May 2008 Country Profile Iran PDF Library of Congress Federal Research Division p 5 Archived PDF from the 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the original on 31 October 2006 Retrieved 19 March 2007 Iran Human Rights Documentation Center 2007 A Faith Denied The Persecution of the Bahaʼis of Iran PDF Iran Human Rights Documentation Center Archived from the original PDF on 11 June 2007 Retrieved 19 March 2007 انتقال مقر جهاني آشوريان به ايران jamejamonline ir Archived from the original on 23 December 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2015 ASSYRIANS IN IRAN iranicaonline org Archived from the original on 4 February 2015 Retrieved 2 January 2015 Hooglund Eric 2008 The Society and Its Environment PDF In Curtis Glenn E Hooglund Eric eds Iran A Country Study Area Handbook Series United States Library of Congress Federal Research Division 5th ed Washington D C United States Government Printing Office pp 81 142 ISBN 978 0 8444 1187 3 Retrieved 13 October 2013 BetBasoo Peter 1 April 2007 Brief History of Assyrians Assyrian International News Agency Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Contrera Russell Saving the people killing the faith Holland MI The Holland Sentinel Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Iran Mandaeans in exile following persecution Al Arabiya 6 December 2011 Archived from the original on 31 July 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Iran Daily Domestic Economy 10 22 07 Archived 25 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Iran Coping With The World s Highest Rate Of Brain Drain RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty permanent dead link Iranian Americans cast ballots on Iran s future CNN 16 June 2009 Archived from the original on 17 August 2009 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Iran Daily Domestic Economy 02 14 07 Archived 6 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Tripartite meeting on returns to Afghanistan United Nations High Commission for Refugees Archived from the original on 3 October 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2006 a b Migration Information Source Iran A Vast Diaspora Abroad and Millions of Refugees at Home Migrationinformation org Archived from the original on 15 February 2014 Retrieved 4 December 2012 300K Foreigners Have Work Permits 26 December 2016 Archived from the original on 5 January 2017 Retrieved 4 January 2017 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency cia gov Retrieved 30 May 2007 Iran Demographics Profile Regueiro et al 2006 Nasidze et al 2008 Bekada A Fregel R Cabrera VM Larruga JM Pestano J et al 2013 Introducing the Algerian Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosome Profiles into the North African Landscape Archived 22 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine PLoS ONE 8 2 e56775 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0056775 a b c Miroslava Derenko Boris Malyarchuk Ardeshir Bahmanimehr Galina Denisova Maria Perkova Shirin Farjadian Levon Yepiskoposyan November 2013 Complete Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Iranians PLOS ONE 8 11 e80673 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 880673D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0080673 PMC 3828245 PMID 24244704 Mehrjoo Zohreh Fattahi Zohreh Beheshtian Maryam Mohseni Marzieh Poustchi Hossein Ardalani Fariba Jalalvand Khadijeh Arzhangi Sanaz Mohammadi Zahra Khoshbakht Shahrouz Najafi Farid 24 September 2019 Distinct genetic variation and heterogeneity of the Iranian population PLOS Genetics 15 9 e1008385 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1008385 ISSN 1553 7404 PMC 6759149 PMID 31550250 Seven groups Iranian Arabs Azeris Gilaks Kurds Mazanderanis Lurs and Persians strongly overlapped in their overall autosomal diversity in an MDS analysis Fig 1B suggesting the existence of a Central Iranian Cluster CIC notably also including Iranian Arabs and Azeris On a global scale Fig 2 including Old World populations only see S2 Fig for all 1000G populations CIC Iranians closely clustered with Europeans while Iranian Turkmen showed similar yet distinct degrees of admixture compared to other South Asians A local comparison corroborated the distinct genetic diversity of CIC Iranians relative to other geographically close populations 2 6 44 Fig 3 and S3 Fig Still genetic substructure was much smaller among Iranian groups than in relation to any of the 1000G populations supporting the view that the CIC groups form a distinct genetic entity despite internal heterogeneity European FST 0 0105 0 0294 South Asians FST 0 0141 0 0338 but also some Latin American populations Puerto Ricans FST 0 0153 0 0228 Colombians FST 0 0170 0 0261 were closest to Iranians whereas Sub Saharan Africans and admixed Afro Americans FST 0 0764 0 1424 as well as East Asians FST 0 0645 0 1055 showed large degrees of differentiation with Iranians Pilkington H 27 November 2002 Islam in Post Soviet Russia Among other indigenous peoples of Iranian origin were the Tats the Talishes and the Kurds Psychology Press p 27 ISBN 9780203217696 Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 20 June 2015 R Khanam Encyclopaedic Ethnography of Middle East and Central Asia P Z Volume 1 Global Vision Publishing Ho 2005 pg 746 The contemporary Tats are the descendants of an Iranian speaking population sent out of Persia by the dynasty of the Sasanids in the fifth to sixth centuries T M Masti u gina Lev Perepelkin Vitaliĭ Vi a cheslavovich Naumkin 1996 An Ethnic History of Russia Pre Revolutionary Times to the Present The Iranian Peoples Ossetians Tajiks Tats Mountain Judaists Greenwood Publishing Group p 80 ISBN 9780313293153 Archived from the original on 29 July 2016 Retrieved 20 June 2015 Gernot Windfuhr Persian Grammar history and state of its study Walter de Gruyter 1979 pg 4 Tat Persian spoken in the East Caucasus V Minorsky Tat in M Th Houtsma et al eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam A Dictionary of the Geography Ethnography and Biography of the Muhammadan Peoples 4 vols and Suppl Leiden Late E J Brill and London Luzac 1913 38 V Minorsky Tat in M Th Houtsma et al eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam A Dictionary of the Geography Ethnography and Biography of the Muhammadan Peoples 4 vols and Suppl Leiden Late E J Brill and London Luzac 1913 38 Excerpt Like most Persian dialects Tati is not very regular in its characteristic features It is a comparison of the verbal systems of three varieties of Persian standard Persian tat tajik Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 Retrieved 8 May 2016 via Google Scholar Borjian Habib Tabari Language Materials from Il ya Berezin s Recherches sur les dialectes persans Iran and the Caucasus Volume 10 Number 2 2006 pp 243 258 16 Excerpt It embraces Gilani Ta lysh Tabari Kurdish Gabri and the Tati Persian of the Caucasus all but the last belonging to the north western group of Iranian language V Minorsky A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th 11th Centuries What sets Zoroastrian Iranis apart Persian Journal Culture Archaeological History Art Archaeology cultural history news amp Iranian culture newspaper Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Retrieved 27 March 2008 a b Two ethnicities three generations Phonological variation and change in Kuwait PDF Newcastle University 2010 p 11 Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 12 July 2013 Farmanfarmaian Roxane 2008 War and Peace in Qajar Persia Routledge p 128 ISBN 978 0415421195 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demographics of Iran Statistical Center of Iran BBC Iran in Maps Map of Iranian ethnic groups amp population density Iran A Vast Diaspora Abroad and Millions of Refugees at Home Migration Information Institute 2006 Human Development Report 2009 UNDP Iran s entry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Iran amp oldid 1188441426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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