Germany

1. Official institutions

2. Key datasets

3. Demographics

3.1 Current population composition

Population by migration background (Migrationshintergrund), 2024
74.4%
25.6%
  • Without migration background74.4%
  • With migration background (first and later generations)25.6%
Source: Destatis, press release no. 181, May 14, 2025

3.2 Origin breakdown

📊A detailed breakdown of the population with a Migrationshintergrund by country or region of origin (Destatis Mikrozensus tables by nationality/country of birth) is planned for a future update.

3.3 Immigration waves (1950s – present)

Major immigration waves (approximate scale of people involved)
+14000000Gastarbeiter 1955-1973Guest workers; 11 million returned home after the 1973 recruitment freeze
+3100000Aussiedler/Spätaussiedler 1988-2011Ethnic German resettlers; peak of about 400,000 in 1990 alone
+476649Asylum applications 2015BAMF-registered first plus follow-up applications
+745545Asylum applications 2016BAMF-registered first plus follow-up applications (peak)
Source: bpb (Federal Agency for Civic Education) migration history overview; BAMF asylum statistics
📊The precise cumulative number of Ukrainian refugees received, and a complete year-by-year series of asylum applications for 2017-2024 (BAMF statistics), are planned for a future update.

3.4 Age structure by origin (population pyramid)

📊Age structure data broken down by migration background (population pyramid format) is planned for a future update, pending direct verification of the detailed values in Destatis's age-group table (migrationshintergrund-alter).

3.5 Long-term projection

📊A long-term projection of the share of the population with a Migrationshintergrund (Destatis's 16th coordinated population projection) is planned for a future update — no confirmable figure could be obtained from a primary source during this research.

4. Public finances — net cost

-€2.1bn/yr
DIW Berlin/IAB estimate: average net fiscal balance through 2030 for the 2015 refugee arrival cohort (study commissioned by BMAS)
Three institutes' estimates of the fiscal effect of the 2015 refugee cohort
IW Köln (employer-funded think tank): annual integration cost-28
bn EUR/yr (January 2017 estimate)
DIW Berlin/IAB (public funding, BMAS-commissioned): average net fiscal balance-2.1
bn EUR/yr (average through 2030)
Source: IW Köln press release no. 6/2017; DIW Wochenbericht 3/2017

4.1 Pension system / contributor-to-pensioner ratio

📊A pension system / contributor-to-pensioner ratio broken down by migration background is planned for a future update.

5. Labor market

Employment rate of the 2015 Syrian refugee arrival cohort (2024, nine years after arrival)
Refugee men+76%
National average, men+72%
Refugee women+35%
National average, women+70%
Source: IAB, 10 Jahre Fluchtmigration

6. Security / justice

Number of suspects, by nationality (2024, excluding offenses specific to foreigners' law)
German national suspects+1270858
Non-German national suspects+696873
Source: BKA, Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik (PKS) 2024

7. Education

8. Housing

Living space per person, by tenure status and migration background (2022)
Homeowner, no migration background+56.5 m²
Renter, no migration background+45.5 m²
Homeowner, with migration background+43 m²
Renter, with migration background+31.2 m²
Source: Destatis, Mikrozensus 2022

9. Social cohesion

66.3 / 100
SVR integration climate index (Integrationsklima-Index), 2024 edition, unchanged from 2020, down from 68.5 in 2022

10. Recent political context

11. Data limitations and biases

⚠️ Limits The statistical category “Migrationshintergrund” is very broad (including up to the third generation depending on the survey) — this should be made explicit, as there is a risk of confusion. The three institutes’ (IW Köln, DIW Berlin, ifo) estimates of the fiscal effect of the 2015 refugee cohort use different methodologies and should not be directly compared as if measuring the same thing. Most figures on this page remain marked “figuresVerified: false” pending full cross-checking of source PDFs.