Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Key facts about Asians in the U.S.

The Asian population in the United States is diverse and growing quickly. It includes more than two dozen origin groups with roots in Central, East, South and Southeast Asia, each with unique history, cultures, languages and other characteristics. In 2023, the number of Asian Americans reached a new high of nearly 25 million, or 7% of the U.S. population.

How we did this

Pew Research Center conducted this analysis to describe the Asian population in the United States overall and 22 Asian origin groups: Bangladeshis, Bhutanese, Burmese, Cambodians, Chinese, Filipinos, Hmong, Indians, Indonesians, Japanese, Koreans, Laotians, Malaysians, Mien, Mongolians, Nepalese, Pakistanis, Sri Lankans, Taiwanese, Thai, Uzbeks and Vietnamese.

Asians are defined as people who say their race is Asian or any specific Asian group, such as Hmong, Pakistani or Vietnamese. This may not necessarily match their country of birth or their parents’ country of birth. Individuals who say they are Asian may also identify as Hispanic and/or as one or more non-Asian races, such as White or Black. The terms Asians in the U.S., U.S. Asians and Asian Americans are used interchangeably in this analysis.

In this analysis, Chinese does not include those who identify as Taiwanese alone.

For the entire analysis, all displayed numbers are rounded. Shares and percent changes are calculated using unrounded numbers. Figures may not add to subtotals or 100% due to rounding.

This analysis is based on three main data sources:

1. Pew Research Center tabulations of a three-year dataset constructed from public-use files of the 2021, 2022 and 2023 American Community Survey (ACS). We obtained these files through IPUMS from the University of Minnesota. To provide trends to previous years, this analysis also uses the 2000 decennial census (5% sample) from IPUMS.

For analysis of IPUMS data, Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Japanese, Korean, Taiwanese and Vietnamese include those who identify with each origin alone or in combination with another Asian origin or a non-Asian race or ethnicity. Due to data limitations, all other origin groups only include those who identify with one Asian origin and identify their race as Asian alone.

To determine English proficiency, the ACS asks respondents two questions. First, it asks if they speak a language other than English at home. If they say yes, they are asked how well they speak English. Those who say they speak only English at home or speak English “very well” are considered proficient in English. Those who speak a language other than English at home and say they speak English less than “very well” are considered less than proficient.

Identified languages spoken at home are based on self-reports. Language names used are as reported by IPUMS and may not necessarily reflect recognized language names.

2. Tabulations published by the U.S. Census Bureau of the 2023 and 2010 ACS and the 2000 decennial census. The tabulations use the full datasets rather than the subsamples IPUMS provides, so they are assumed to be the most accurate population estimates for the given year.

For Census Bureau tabulations, all Asian origin groups include those who identify with an Asian origin alone or in combination with another Asian origin or a non-Asian race or ethnicity.

3. Pew Research Center’s nationally representative survey of 7,006 Asian American adults conducted July 5, 2022, through Jan. 27, 2023. We offered the survey in six languages: Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), English, Hindi, Korean, Tagalog and Vietnamese. For this analysis, this survey provides data on the religious affiliation of Asian Americans and Asian origin groups.

These findings for Asian origin groups include those who identify with one Asian origin alone or in combination with a non-Asian race or ethnicity.

For more information, refer to the methodology for our fact sheets about Asian Americans overall and 22 Asian origin groups.

A double-panel chart showing how the Asian population in the U.S. has grown from 2000 to 2023. The top line chart shows that the population grew from 11.9 million to 24.8 million. The bottom bar chart shows the Asian share of the overall U.S. population grew from 4.2% to 7.4%.

Here are some key facts about Asian Americans, based on tabulations of U.S. Census Bureau data and Pew Research Center data. In this analysis, the overall Asian population includes all those who identify as Asian, including those who also identify as one or more non-Asian races or as Hispanic.

Related: Read our updated fact sheets about Asian Americans overall and 22 Asian origin groups.

The U.S. Asian population has more than doubled since 2000. The number of Asian Americans grew from 11.9 million in 2000 to 24.8 million in 2023. Both the U.S.-born and immigrant populations increased significantly over this period.

The Asian share of the U.S. population overall increased from 4% to 7% during this time.

Chinese Americans are the largest Asian origin group in the U.S. At 5.5 million people, they make up 22% of the Asian population. The next-largest origin groups are:

6 origin groups account for 86% of the U.S. Asian population

Combined, these six groups make up 86% of the U.S. Asian population.

Immigrants are a declining share of the U.S. Asian population, though they remain a majority. In 2000, immigrants accounted for 63% of Asians overall, compared with 54% in 2023.

Most Asian origin groups have also seen declines in their shares of immigrants. Hmong had the sharpest drop, from 55% in 2000 to 31% in 2023. By contrast, the share of Thai who were immigrants had the smallest decrease, going from 78% to 74%.

A panel line chart showing the share of Asian Americans by origin group that are immigrants in 2000 and 2023. It shows that the share of immigrants in many U.S. Asian origin groups fell during that time period.

Four-in-five U.S. Asians identify their race as Asian alone and do not identify as Hispanic. Another 16% of Asians are multiracial and not Hispanic. Among the six largest Asian origin groups, Japanese (38%), Filipinos (21%) and Koreans (17%) are the most likely to identify as multiracial.

In addition, 4% of Asian Americans identify as Hispanic, including 7% of Filipinos and 6% of Japanese.

A pie chart showing the racial and ethnic identities of Asian Americans in 2023. It shows that 80% of U.S. Asians are single race and non-Hispanic, 16% are multiracial and non-Hispanic and 4% are Asian and Hispanic.

California had the largest Asian population of any state in 2023, at around 7.1 million people. It was followed by New York and Texas (both 2 million), New Jersey (1 million), and Washington (990,000). More than half (54%) of the U.S. Asian population resides in these five states.

A map showing the Asian population in each U.S. state in 2023. It shows that California, Texas and New York had the largest Asian populations.

Hawaii is the only state where the majority of the population is Asian. In 2023, 57% of Hawaii’s population was Asian. The states with the next-largest shares of Asians were California (18%), Washington (13%), Nevada (12%) and New Jersey (11%).

The median age of Asian Americans was 34.7 years in 2023. That means that half of Asian Americans were younger than 34.7 and half were older. The median age for Americans overall was somewhat higher, at 38.0. 

There are larger differences in age based on nativity. Asian immigrants had a median age of 46.1 years, far older than the median of 19.0 years for U.S.-born Asians.

Overall, 74% of U.S. Asians ages 5 and older spoke English proficiently as of 2023, meaning they either spoke only English at home or said they spoke it “very well.” Nearly all U.S.-born Asians (95%) were proficient in English, compared with 59% of Asian immigrants.

It’s common for U.S. Asians to speak a language other than English at home: 37% of those ages 5 and older say they speak only English, while 63% say they speak a language other than English at home. The most common languages Asians speak other than English are Chinese (9%), Filipino or Tagalog (8%), Vietnamese (7%), Korean (5%) and Hindi (4%).

A double-panel chart showing Asian Americans' English proficiency and languages spoken at home by nativity in 2023. The top pie chart shows that 74% of Asians ages 5 and older are proficient in English. The bottom bar chart shows that 63% of Asians 5 and older speak a language other than English at home.

Roughly two-thirds of U.S.-born Asians (68%) speak only English at home, while only 14% of Asian immigrants do. Other common languages Asian immigrants speak at home include Chinese (13%) and Filipino or Tagalog (12%).

More than half of Asians ages 25 and older (56%) have a bachelor’s degree or more education. However, this varies widely by origin group. For example, 83% of Taiwanese have a bachelor’s degree or higher, whereas 18% of Laotians do.

Similar shares of U.S.-born and immigrant Asians ages 25 and older have at least a college degree (57% and 56%, respectively). Both figures are substantially higher than among all U.S.-born people and all U.S. immigrants with a college degree (36% and 35%, respectively).

A dot plot showing the share of U.S. Asians ages 25 and older who have a bachelor's degree or higher by origin group in 2023. It shows that 56% of Asians had at least a bachelor's, but the shares vary widely across origin groups.

In 2023, households headed by an Asian person had a median income of $105,600. This is higher than the median income for U.S. households overall ($75,500), but there were large differences across Asian origin groups. Indian- ($151,200) and Taiwanese-headed ($133,300) households had higher median annual incomes than Asian-headed households overall.

By contrast, most other Asian origin groups had lower median annual household incomes than Asians overall. Among the lowest were Mongolians ($54,300) and Burmese ($67,600).

A dot plot showing the median annual household income of U.S. Asians by origin group in 2023. It shows that the median annual income of Asian-headed households was $105,600, but income varies widely across origin groups.

The most common religion among Asian American adults is Christianity (34%). Another 11% are Buddhist, 11% are Hindu, 6% are Muslim and 4% identify with another faith. The remaining 32% are not affiliated with any religion, according to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2022 and 2023.

Religious affiliation varies across the six largest Asian origin groups:

  • 74% of Filipino Americans are Christian, mostly Catholic.
  • 59% of Korean Americans are Christian, mostly Protestant.
  • 57% of Chinese Americans and 47% of Japanese Americans are not affiliated with any religion.
  • 48% of Indian Americans are Hindu – a much higher share than for the other origin groups.
  • 37% of Vietnamese Americans are Buddhist – the largest share across origin groups.

Note: This is an update of a post originally published Sept. 8, 2017.