Demographics of the United Kingdom | |
---|---|
![]() Population pyramid in 2021 | |
Population | ![]() |
Density | 279/km2 (720/sq mi) (2022)[1] |
Growth rate | ![]() |
Birth rate | ![]() |
Death rate | ![]() |
Life expectancy | |
• male | ![]() |
• female | ![]() |
Fertility rate | ![]() |
Infant mortality rate | ![]() |
Net migration rate | ![]() |
Age structure | |
0–14 years | 17.2% (2022)[2] |
15–64 years | 64.0% (2022)[2] |
65 and over | 18.8% (2022)[2] |
Sex ratio | |
Total | 0.99 male(s)/female (2024 est.)[5] |
At birth | 1.05 male(s)/female (2024 est.)[5] |
Under 15 | 1.05 male(s)/female (2024 est.)[5] |
65 and over | 0.85 male(s)/female (2024 est.)[5] |
Nationality | |
Nationality | British citizen |
Major ethnic | |
Minor ethnic |
|
Language | |
Official | English |
Spoken | Scots · Irish · Scottish Gaelic · Welsh · Cornish · Manx |
The population of the United Kingdom was estimated at 68,300,000 in 2023.[9] It is the 21st most populated country in the world and has a population density of 279 people per square kilometre (720 people/sq mi), with England having significantly greater density than Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.[1] Almost a third of the population lives in south east England, which is predominantly urban and suburban, with 8,866,180 people in the capital city, London, whose population density was 5,640 inhabitants per square kilometre (14,600/sq mi) in 2022.[1]
The population of the UK has undergone demographic transition—that is, the transition from a (typically) pre-industrial population, with high birth and mortality rates and slow population growth, through a stage of falling mortality and faster rates of population growth, to a stage of low birth and mortality rates with, again, lower rates of growth. This growth through 'natural change' has been accompanied in the past two decades by growth through net immigration into the United Kingdom, which since 1999 has exceeded natural change.[10]
The United Kingdom's high literacy rate (99% at age 15 and above)[11] is attributable to universal state education, introduced at the primary level in 1870 (Scotland 1872, free 1890[12]) and at the secondary level in 1900. Parents are obliged to have their children educated from the ages of 5 to 16 years. In England, 16–17-year olds should remain in education, employment or training (for example, in the form of A-Levels, vocational training, and apprenticeships), until the age of 18.[13]
The United Kingdom's population is predominantly White British (75.98% at the 2021 Census), but due to migration from Commonwealth nations, Britain has become ethnically diverse. The second and third largest non-white racial groups are Asian British at 8.6% of the population, followed by Black British people at 3.71%.
The main language of the United Kingdom is British English. Scots, a Germanic sister language of English, is widely spoken in many parts of Scotland, as is Scottish Gaelic a Celtic language. Cornish and Irish have been revived to a limited degree in Cornwall and Northern Ireland; but the predominant language in all these areas is English. Welsh is widely spoken as a first language in parts of North and West Wales, and to lesser extent in South East Wales, where English is the dominant first language.[citation needed]
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