Total population | |
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2,307,768 (2024)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Over 35% concentrated in Florida; Predominantly in Miami, as well as Tampa area and Orlando area Significant populations in New York City, Boston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Houston, and Washington, D.C. Growing populations in Atlanta, Chicago, Greenville, Jacksonville, Dallas–Fort Worth, San Francisco, Denver, Las Vegas, Bamberg[2] and Philadelphia. | |
Languages | |
Colombian Spanish, American English, Indigenous Languages | |
Religion | |
Predominantly: Minority: Protestantism, Evangelicalism, Baptist, Judaism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Spaniards, White Colombians, Mestizo, Indigenous peoples of Colombia, Native Americans in the United States, Afro-Colombians, German Colombian, Italian Colombian, Lebanese Colombians, Jewish-Colombian, Demographics of Colombia, Spanish Americans, Mexican Americans, Venezuelan Americans, Ecuadorian Americans |
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Hispanic and Latino Americans |
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Colombian Americans (Spanish: colomboamericanos), are Americans who have Colombian ancestry. The word may refer to someone born in the United States of full or partial Colombian descent or to someone who has immigrated to the United States from Colombia. Colombian Americans are the largest South Americans Hispanic group in the United States.[3]
Many communities throughout the United States have significant Colombian American populations. Florida (826,391) has the highest concentration and population of Colombian Americans in the United States, followed by New York (311,685), New Jersey (300,637), Texas (134,865), and California (120,873).[4]