Number of immigrants in EU reaches record high of 64.2 million in 2025, study shows


People gather on a terrace in front Berlin's television tower, Germany, July 26, 2018. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

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)

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