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In Numbers: How the populations of European countries have changed

Claudia Delpero, Europe Street
Claudia Delpero, Europe Street - editorial@thelocal.com
In Numbers: How the populations of European countries have changed
Immigration has boosted the European Union's population in the last year. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP)

The population of the European Union has grown by over a million in the last year thanks to immigration. Here's a breakdown of how the population has grown or shrunk in different European countries.

The EU population grew by almost 1.1 million in 2024, reaching an estimated 450.4 million residents on January 1st 2025, according to data published by the European statistical office Eurostat.

The year 2024 was the fourth consecutive year of population growth in the EU, after a drop recorded during the pandemic.

The increase is largely due to net migration (the difference between the number of people arriving and those leaving) rather than natural change (the difference between births and deaths).

Only six EU countries – France and Sweden, together with Ireland, Cyprus, Luxembourg and Malta – recorded more births than deaths, in addition to positive net migration.

Effects of migration

Historically, the difference between births and deaths in the EU was positive – yet slowing – until 2011. Since 2012, more deaths than births were recorded but the total EU population has kept increasing due to positive net migration. Only during the Covid-19 pandemic was the negative natural change not compensated by migration, Eurostat says.

In 2024, deaths (4.82 million) outnumbered births (3.56 million), resulting in a negative natural change of 1.3 million people. On the other hand, positive net migration was 2.3 million, lower than the almost 3 million of 2022. These factors together made up for a population increase of 1,070,702.

On a country level, 19 EU member states saw their population growing while eight saw a decline.

The highest growth rates compared to the total population were recorded in Malta (the smallest EU country by population, at 0.6 million), Portugal and Ireland.

Denmark was the only EU country with zero natural change and its population was stable at around 5.9 million.

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Except for Latvia, where people emigrating keep outnumbering those immigrating, all EU countries had positive net migration in 2024.

In 13 EU countries (Belgium, Czechia, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Spain, Croatia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Austria, Portugal, Slovenia and Finland), this was the reason for population growth.

Largest countries

Germany, France and Italy are the largest EU countries by population (19 percent, 15 percent and 13 percent respectively, and comprise almost half of all EU residents.

In 2024, Germany had 83.5 million inhabitants compared to 83.4 in 2023, France 68.6 million compared to 68.4 the previous year, and Italy 59.7 million people, a slight decrease over 2023.

Spain follows with 49 million people, compared to 48.6 in 2023.

In Sweden, the total population reached 10.5 million, and Austria 9.1 million, both representing a slight increase compared to 2023.

Norway followed a similar trend, at 5.5 million, and Switzerland’s population reached 9 million people, compared to 8.9 in 2023.

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Countries losing population

In 2024, the population declined in eight EU countries (Bulgaria, Estonia, Italy, Latvia, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia), as the negative natural change was not offset by immigration. The largest declines were recorded in Latvia, Hungary, Poland and Estonia.

Latvia was the only country with both negative natural change and negative net migration.

Future trend

The EU population grew by about 0.9 million each year between 2005 and 2024, compared to 3 million per year during the 1960s.

In 1960, the population of the current EU countries was 354.5 million.

In the future, due to the ageing population, the number of deaths is expected to further increase, and if fertility rates remain at current levels, the negative natural change could continue.

This is in line with a global trend with a growing number of older adults and fewer under 25, according to an analysis by the Pew Research Centre. This also shows that Europe’s median age is 43, making it the oldest region in the world.

 

 

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Comments (3)

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Jack (the real jack)
Pedro, You toss around the word racist like its confetti. If the annual migration figure were a one-time event - I'm sure nobody would mind. But concerns arise because migration is cumulative. And the impact on the local cultures is now significant. Note: I have Mexican and Venezuelian friends who are rip-roaring angry because so many Americans have moved to their country, creating inflation while altering the local culture. See the news on this. Are they all racists in your view?
Mylius Skoby
This is all about the EU, but the article is illustrated with a photo showing a British RNLi boat loaded with asylum seekers.
Pedro LM
I'm very disappointed in your choice to illustrate this article with a photo of a refugee boat. By the numbers cited *in this very article* net migration makes up less than 0.5% of Europe's population, and an even smaller fraction of *that* is due to refugees. Are you trying to turn expats into xenophobic racists too?

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