Number of Immigrants in EU Reaches Record High of 64.2 Million in 2025, Study Shows

BERLIN, April 22 (Reuters) – ⁠The ⁠number of immigrants ⁠residing in the European Union climbed ​to a record high of 64.2 million in 2025, ‌up about 2.1 million ‌from a year earlier, according to a ⁠report ⁠published on Wednesday by the Centre for Research ​and Analysis on Migration at RFBerlin.

The figure compares with 40 million in 2010, the report said, citing ​Eurostat and U.N. Refugee Agency data.

Germany remained the bloc’s ⁠biggest ⁠host of foreign-born people ⁠at ​nearly 18 million, 72% of them of working age, ​while Spain ⁠posted the fastest recent growth, adding about 700,000 to bring its foreign-born population to 9.5 million.

“Germany remains the main destination for migrants in ⁠Europe, both in absolute terms and, to a significant extent, ⁠relative to its population,” said Tommaso Frattini, one of the authors of the report.

The study said migration patterns were uneven across the bloc, with Luxembourg, Malta and Cyprus facing higher shares of immigrants relative to their population size.

Asylum claims were also concentrated in ⁠certain countries, with Spain, Italy, France and Germany accounting for nearly three-quarters of all applications. Germany hosted the largest number of refugees ​overall, at 2.7 million.

(Reporting by Maria Martinez, ​Editing by Friederike Heine)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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