The Countries With The Highest Share Of International Migrants May Surprise You
The number of international migrants worldwide hit 304 million in 2024, a figure that has doubled since 1990.
As people relocate across borders for reasons ranging from work opportunities to conflict and displacement, certain countries have become major destinations for foreign-born populations.
This map, via Visual Capitalist’s Kayla Zhu, visualizes the top 20 countries with the highest proportion of international migrants in their populations as of 2024, based on data from the United Nations.
An international migrant is defined as someone living in a country other than their birth country for at least 12 months, regardless of reasons or status.
Which Country Has the Highest Share of International Migrants?
Below, we show countries by share of international migrants in their population.
1 | Qatar | 76.7 |
2 | United Arab Emirates | 74.0 |
3 | Monaco | 70.2 |
4 | Liechtenstein | 69.4 |
5 | Kuwait | 67.3 |
6 | Andorra | 59.1 |
7 | Bahrain | 52.3 |
8 | Luxembourg | 51.2 |
9 | Singapore | 48.7 |
10 | Jordan | 45.7 |
11 | Oman | 43.2 |
12 | Saudi Arabia | 40.3 |
13 | Malta | 37.0 |
14 | Antigua and Barbuda | 32.5 |
15 | Switzerland | 31.1 |
16 | Australia | 30.4 |
17 | Palau | 29.5 |
18 | New Zealand | 28.2 |
19 | Brunei | 25.9 |
20 | Austria | 25.5 |
21 | Iceland | 25.1 |
22 | Lebanon | 24.5 |
23 | Micronesia | 23.4 |
24 | Ireland | 23.1 |
25 | Israel | 22.3 |
26 | Canada | 22.2 |
27 | Sweden | 21.4 |
28 | Nauru | 21.3 |
29 | Belgium | 20.0 |
30 | Germany | 19.8 |
31 | Spain | 18.5 |
32 | Norway | 18.2 |
33 | Gabon | 17.7 |
34 | San Marino | 17.4 |
35 | United Kingdom | 17.1 |
36 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | 17.0 |
37 | Bahamas | 16.8 |
38 | Belize | 16.5 |
39 | Netherlands | 16.2 |
40 | United States | 15.2 |
41 | Cyprus | 14.9 |
42 | Estonia | 14.9 |
43 | Slovenia | 14.9 |
44 | Montenegro | 14.4 |
45 | Denmark | 14.2 |
46 | Greece | 14.2 |
47 | Maldives | 14.2 |
48 | France | 13.8 |
49 | Croatia | 13.6 |
50 | Ukraine | 13.4 |
51 | Equatorial Guinea | 13.2 |
52 | Dominica | 12.7 |
53 | Barbados | 12.5 |
54 | Costa Rica | 12.2 |
55 | Libya | 12.2 |
56 | Latvia | 11.8 |
57 | Belarus | 11.6 |
58 | Italy | 11.0 |
59 | Djibouti | 10.8 |
60 | Portugal | 10.8 |
61 | Malaysia | 10.7 |
62 | Panama | 10.6 |
63 | Serbia | 10.6 |
64 | Seychelles | 10.2 |
65 | Kazakhstan | 10.1 |
66 | Czechia | 9.5 |
67 | Saint Helena | 9.4 |
68 | Armenia | 9.2 |
69 | Finland | 9.2 |
70 | Côte d’Ivoire | 9.0 |
71 | Marshall Islands | 8.8 |
72 | Gambia | 8.6 |
73 | North Macedonia | 8.3 |
74 | Suriname | 8.2 |
75 | Türkiye | 8.1 |
76 | Chile | 7.8 |
77 | South Sudan | 7.7 |
78 | Trinidad and Tobago | 7.5 |
79 | Hungary | 7.1 |
80 | Bhutan | 7.0 |
81 | Dominican Republic | 6.5 |
82 | Guyana | 6.5 |
83 | Chad | 6.3 |
84 | Grenada | 6.3 |
85 | Moldova | 6.2 |
86 | Congo | 6.1 |
87 | Lithuania | 6.1 |
88 | Slovakia | 5.9 |
89 | Colombia | 5.8 |
90 | Peru | 5.4 |
91 | Russia | 5.3 |
92 | State of Palestine | 5.0 |
93 | Saint Vincent and Grenadines | 4.8 |
94 | Sudan | 4.8 |
95 | Uruguay | 4.7 |
96 | Botswana | 4.6 |
97 | Poland | 4.5 |
98 | Saint Lucia | 4.5 |
99 | Bulgaria | 4.4 |
100 | Thailand | 4.4 |
101 | Venezuela | 4.4 |
102 | Argentina | 4.3 |
103 | Iran | 4.2 |
104 | Ecuador | 4.1 |
105 | South Africa | 4.1 |
106 | Uganda | 4.1 |
107 | Mauritania | 3.8 |
108 | Namibia | 3.8 |
109 | Rwanda | 3.6 |
110 | Syria | 3.6 |
111 | South Korea | 3.5 |
112 | Romania | 3.4 |
113 | Tonga | 3.4 |
114 | Uzbekistan | 3.2 |
115 | Burkina Faso | 3.1 |
116 | Cabo Verde | 3.1 |
117 | Togo | 3.0 |
118 | Benin | 2.9 |
119 | Burundi | 2.8 |
120 | Japan | 2.8 |
121 | Eswatini | 2.7 |
122 | Kyrgyzstan | 2.7 |
123 | Paraguay | 2.6 |
124 | Tajikistan | 2.6 |
125 | Turkmenistan | 2.6 |
126 | Tuvalu | 2.6 |
127 | Zimbabwe | 2.6 |
128 | Kiribati | 2.5 |
129 | Mauritius | 2.3 |
130 | Cameroon | 2.2 |
131 | Mali | 2.2 |
132 | Azerbaijan | 2.1 |
133 | Georgia | 2.1 |
134 | Angola | 1.8 |
135 | Central African Republic | 1.8 |
136 | Kenya | 1.8 |
137 | Samoa | 1.8 |
138 | Albania | 1.7 |
139 | Bangladesh | 1.7 |
140 | Niger | 1.7 |
141 | Pakistan | 1.7 |
142 | Nepal | 1.6 |
143 | Bolivia | 1.5 |
144 | Fiji | 1.5 |
145 | Ghana | 1.5 |
146 | Senegal | 1.5 |
147 | Comoros | 1.4 |
148 | Liberia | 1.3 |
149 | Mexico | 1.3 |
150 | Zambia | 1.2 |
151 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1.1 |
152 | DR Congo | 1.0 |
153 | Egypt | 1.0 |
154 | Mozambique | 1.0 |
155 | Vanuatu | 1.0 |
156 | Yemen | 1.0 |
157 | Ethiopia | 0.9 |
158 | Malawi | 0.9 |
159 | Guinea | 0.8 |
160 | Iraq | 0.8 |
161 | Jamaica | 0.8 |
162 | Sao Tome and Principe | 0.8 |
163 | Brazil | 0.7 |
164 | El Salvador | 0.7 |
165 | Guinea-Bissau | 0.7 |
166 | Laos | 0.7 |
167 | Tanzania | 0.7 |
168 | Algeria | 0.6 |
169 | Lesotho | 0.6 |
170 | Mongolia | 0.6 |
171 | Nicaragua | 0.6 |
172 | Nigeria | 0.6 |
173 | Sierra Leone | 0.6 |
174 | Timor-Leste | 0.6 |
175 | Cambodia | 0.5 |
176 | Guatemala | 0.5 |
177 | Tunisia | 0.5 |
178 | Eritrea | 0.4 |
179 | Honduras | 0.4 |
180 | Somalia | 0.4 |
181 | India | 0.3 |
182 | Morocco | 0.3 |
183 | Papua New Guinea | 0.3 |
184 | Solomon Islands | 0.3 |
185 | Vietnam | 0.3 |
186 | Afghanistan | 0.2 |
187 | North Korea | 0.2 |
188 | Haiti | 0.2 |
189 | Indonesia | 0.2 |
190 | Sri Lanka | 0.2 |
191 | China | 0.1 |
192 | Madagascar | 0.1 |
193 | Myanmar | 0.1 |
194 | Philippines | 0.1 |
195 | Cuba | 0.0 |
In 2024, Qatar had the world’s highest share of foreign-born residents, with international migrants making up over three-quarters (76.7%) of its population.
Several Gulf states like Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait ranked at the top of the list, as their economies rely heavily on foreign labor, with migrants making up an overwhelming majority of their workforces.
These countries host higher proportions of international migrants largely due to the kafala system—a sponsorship-based labor framework that ties foreign workers to their employers—drawing million of people for low-wage jobs.
Several small European countries such as Monaco, Liechtenstein, and Andorra also have high shares of migrants, largely due to their small populations and roles as financial or tourism hubs.
U.S. is Still Home to the Most Migrants
By total population, the U.S. recorded the highest number of international migrants in 2024 at 52.4 million.
Mexico to the U.S. was the busiest migrant corridor in the world by far in 2024, with over 10 million people born in Mexico now residing in the United States.
Europe hosted more international migrants than any other region with 94 million in 2024, followed by Northern America—which includes the U.S., Bermuda, Canada, Greenland, and St. Pierre and Miquelon—at 61 million.
These two regions have long been top destinations for immigration over the past few decades.
To learn more about international migratoin, check out this graphic that visualized international migration flows to each U.S. state.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 06/19/2025 – 06:15