2026-02-13 05:36:02
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The U.S. is often described as highly dependent on foreign sources for critical minerals. Yet every year, vast quantities of these same materials are sent to mine tailings as waste.
This visualization ranks critical minerals by the amount discarded into U.S. mining waste in 2023, highlighting where the largest volumes of potential supply remain unrecovered.
The data for this visualization comes from analysis by Professor Elizabeth Holley of the Colorado School of Mines and includes main-product output from U.S. hard-rock metals mines operating on federal land.
Aluminum stands out by a wide margin, with an estimated 229 million tonnes sent to tailings in 2023. That is more than 40 times the volume imported that year.
Lead follows with more than 81 million tonnes unrecovered, despite its importance for batteries and radiation shielding.
| Element | Unrecovered 2023 (kt) | U.S. Imports 2023 (kt) | Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aluminum | 229,430 | 5,540 | Construction, Transportation |
| Lead | 81,910 | 570 | Batteries, Radiation shielding |
| Chromium | 5,310 | 440 | Stainless steel, Plating |
| Copper | 3,400 | 890 | Wiring, Plumbing |
| Manganese | 2,430 | 690 | Steel alloys, Batteries |
| Nickel | 1,020 | 160 | Stainless steel, Batteries |
| Rare Earth Oxides | 560 | 10 | Magnets, Wind turbines |
| Antimony | 380 | 20 | Flame retardants, Alloys |
| Cobalt | 280 | 10 | Lithium-ion batteries, Superalloys |
| Lithium | 90 | 3 | Batteries, Glass/ceramics |
Several minerals essential to clean energy technologies also appear prominently. Copper, nickel, lithium, cobalt, and rare earth oxides are all present in mining waste at volumes far exceeding current import levels. These materials are critical for electric vehicles, grid infrastructure, wind turbines, and battery storage.
Recovering even a fraction of what is discarded could ease supply constraints and reduce exposure to geopolitical risks.
“The challenge lies in recovery,” Professor Holley told the Colorado School of Mines’ Mines Newsroom.
“It’s like getting salt out of bread dough—we need much more research, development, and policy support to make the recovery of these critical minerals economically feasible.”
Reprocessing tailings could offer a dual benefit. Economically, it could strengthen domestic supply chains and reduce reliance on imports from a small number of foreign producers, particularly China.
Environmentally, it could lower the need for new mines, which often face long permitting timelines and local opposition.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Every Mineral Deemed Critical to U.S. Security in 2025 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-02-13 01:39:48

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Property risk in the U.S. is being reshaped by a perfect storm of rising replacement costs, aging buildings, and a rapidly changing climate. At the same time, growth, strained infrastructure, and new technologies are introducing fresh vulnerabilities that traditional models weren’t built to capture.
Together, these forces are setting a new baseline for insured losses and raising the stakes for resilience and smarter risk management. This visualization, created in partnership with Inigo, outlines the major trends set to shape property risk in years to come.
Material inflation, skilled labor shortages, and ongoing supply chain fragility are keeping construction costs elevated across the United States. As a result, insured values continue to rise, increasing claim severity even for moderate loss events.
Wildfires, severe convective storms, inland flooding, and other secondary perils are spreading beyond historical risk zones. This shift is redrawing catastrophe maps and challenging models that rely on past loss patterns.
Population growth in wildfire prone regions and coastal flood zones is driving higher concentrations of property and infrastructure at risk. This expansion often outpaces local mitigation efforts, amplifying potential losses when disasters strike.
More than half of U.S. commercial properties are over 40 years old, many built to outdated codes and standards. Combined with aging power, water, and transportation systems, deferred maintenance on infrastructure increases the likelihood that localized damage escalates into broader systemic losses.
Rooftop solar panels, lithium ion batteries, and increasingly complex electrical systems are altering building risk profiles. While these technologies improve efficiency and resilience, they also introduce new ignition, fire, and loss pathways that are not fully reflected in historical data.
Higher interest rates and persistent remote work trends are pushing vacancy rates higher, particularly in office markets. Empty or underutilized properties face greater risks from neglect, vandalism, and deterioration, compounding both physical and financial losses.
Climate volatility, rising replacement costs, aging assets, technological change, and economic pressure are redefining property risk in the United States. Understanding how these forces interact is essential for anticipating future losses, as is identifying where resilience and smarter risk management can make the biggest impact.

Explore the data behind emerging global property risks.

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2026-02-13 00:21:05
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Since 1997, U.S. defense spending has moved through multiple cycles, but the long-term trajectory is upward. This chart tracks National Defense (Function 050) budget authority in constant 2025 dollars and shows how totals changed under each president and party, culminating in a proposed record $1.5 trillion budget for 2027P.
Data is sourced from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Historical Tables, Table 5.1 (National Defense budget authority), supplemented by Reuters reporting for the 2027 proposal. It also leverages analysis from the Council on Foreign Relations.
In the late 1990s, under President Clinton, U.S. defense spending sat around the mid-$500 billion level in real terms.
Spending rose significantly in the 2000s during the Bush years amid the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, reaching levels above $900 billion before 2010.
Continued high budgets carried throughout the Obama administration, driven by ongoing post-9/11 commitments and modernization efforts.
| Fiscal Year | Real Budget (2025$) | President |
|---|---|---|
| 1997 | $542B | Clinton |
| 1998 | $535B | Clinton |
| 1999 | $564B | Clinton |
| 2000 | $569B | Clinton |
| 2001 | $609B | Bush |
| 2002 | $648B | Bush |
| 2003 | $798B | Bush |
| 2004 | $837B | Bush |
| 2005 | $834B | Bush |
| 2006 | $888B | Bush |
| 2007 | $971B | Bush |
| 2008 | $1.04T | Bush |
| 2009 | $1.05T | Obama |
| 2010 | $1.06T | Obama |
| 2011 | $1.03T | Obama |
| 2012 | $955B | Obama |
| 2013 | $843B | Obama |
| 2014 | $846B | Obama |
| 2015 | $813B | Obama |
| 2016 | $837B | Obama |
| 2017 | $862B | Trump |
| 2018 | $931B | Trump |
| 2019 | $938B | Trump |
| 2020 | $963B | Trump |
| 2021 | $902B | Biden |
| 2022 | $922B | Biden |
| 2023 | $908B | Biden |
| 2024 | $905B | Biden |
| 2025 | $962B | Trump |
| 2026 | $962B | Trump |
| 2027 (proposed) | $1.5T | Trump |
In the early 2020s, spending remained high under Presidents Trump and Biden, with budgets around $900 billion to over $1 trillion in real terms. The 2026 defense budget approved by Congress reached $901 billion, while proposals for 2027 have pushed that figure even higher.
Recently, President Donald Trump announced a proposal for a $1.5 trillion military budget in 2027, representing roughly a 50% increase over current levels, aimed at expanding capabilities and accelerating modernization.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out America’s $38 Trillion Mountain of Debt on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-02-12 21:07:15
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Birth rates are falling across much of the world—but not everywhere.
According to the UN World Population Prospects 2024, the global birth rate in 2025 was projected at 16.1 births per 1,000 people. Yet this average masks a stark demographic divide: while much of Europe and East Asia faces record-low fertility, parts of Sub-Saharan Africa continue to record some of the highest birth rates globally.
This widening gap is reshaping economies, labor markets, and long-term growth prospects. Countries with persistently low birth rates are grappling with aging populations and rising dependency ratios, while higher-growth regions face different pressures tied to rapid population expansion.
Countries with the highest birth rates are overwhelmingly concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa, alongside a few countries in the Middle East and Asia.
The table below shows the projected crude birth rates by country:
| Rank | Country | Crude birth rate (births per 1,000 people) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Central African Republic |
46.9 |
| 2 |
Chad |
44.7 |
| 3 |
Somalia |
43.3 |
| 4 |
Niger |
42.1 |
| 5 |
Democratic Republic of Congo |
41.7 |
| 6 |
Mali |
40.3 |
| 7 |
Angola |
37.7 |
| 8 |
Mozambique |
37.7 |
| 9 |
Afghanistan |
35.4 |
| 10 |
Tanzania |
35.3 |
| 11 |
Uganda |
34.7 |
| 12 |
Mauritania |
34.6 |
| 13 |
Yemen |
34.5 |
| 14 |
Benin |
33.9 |
| 15 |
Cameroon |
33.7 |
| 16 |
Guinea |
33.5 |
| 17 |
Burundi |
33.4 |
| 18 |
Zambia |
33.3 |
| 19 |
Nigeria |
32.8 |
| 20 |
Sudan |
32.8 |
| 21 |
Madagascar |
32.0 |
| 22 |
Côte d’Ivoire |
31.9 |
| 23 |
Malawi |
31.6 |
| 24 |
Ethiopia |
31.6 |
| 25 |
Burkina Faso |
31.5 |
| 26 |
Togo |
31.1 |
| 27 |
Liberia |
30.9 |
| 28 |
Congo |
30.9 |
| 29 |
Equatorial Guinea |
30.3 |
| 30 |
Sierra Leone |
30.1 |
| 31 |
Zimbabwe |
30.1 |
| 32 |
South Sudan |
30.0 |
| 33 |
Gambia |
29.9 |
| 34 |
Guinea-Bissau |
29.7 |
| 35 |
Senegal |
29.6 |
| 36 |
Eritrea |
29.2 |
| 37 |
São Tomé and Príncipe |
28.4 |
| 38 |
Rwanda |
28.3 |
| 39 |
Comoros |
28.3 |
| 40 |
Vanuatu |
27.8 |
| 41 |
Pakistan |
27.5 |
| 42 |
Palestine |
27.4 |
| 43 |
Kenya |
27.3 |
| 44 |
Gabon |
27.2 |
| 45 |
Solomon Islands |
27.1 |
| 46 |
Ghana |
26.1 |
| 47 |
Namibia |
26.0 |
| 48 |
Iraq |
25.8 |
| 49 |
Kiribati |
25.2 |
| 50 |
Uzbekistan |
25.1 |
| 51 |
Tajikistan |
25.0 |
| 52 |
Samoa |
24.8 |
| 53 |
Syria |
24.4 |
| 54 |
Papua New Guinea |
24.3 |
| 55 |
Botswana |
24.3 |
| 56 |
Nauru |
24.2 |
| 57 |
Lesotho |
23.7 |
| 58 |
Eswatini |
23.5 |
| 59 |
Tonga |
22.7 |
| 60 |
Micronesia |
22.2 |
| 61 |
Timor-Leste |
21.9 |
| 62 |
Haiti |
21.9 |
| 63 |
Honduras |
21.7 |
| 64 |
Bolivia |
21.1 |
| 65 |
Egypt |
21.0 |
| 66 |
Djibouti |
20.9 |
| 67 |
Tuvalu |
20.8 |
| 68 |
Laos |
20.8 |
| 69 |
Kyrgyzstan |
20.7 |
| 70 |
Guatemala |
20.7 |
| 71 |
Turkmenistan |
20.4 |
| 72 |
Cambodia |
20.1 |
| 73 |
Jordan |
20.1 |
| 74 |
Bangladesh |
19.8 |
| 75 |
Guyana |
19.6 |
| 76 |
Paraguay |
19.6 |
| 77 |
Kazakhstan |
19.2 |
| 78 |
Nicaragua |
19.1 |
| 79 |
Marshall Islands |
19.0 |
| 80 |
Nepal |
18.6 |
| 81 |
South Africa |
18.4 |
| 82 |
Algeria |
18.3 |
| 83 |
Belize |
18.0 |
| 84 |
Fiji |
17.7 |
| 85 |
Mongolia |
17.4 |
| 86 |
Dominican Republic |
17.4 |
| 87 |
Israel |
17.2 |
| 88 |
Suriname |
17.1 |
| 89 |
Oman |
17.1 |
| 90 |
Myanmar |
16.3 |
| 91 |
Libya |
16.3 |
| 92 |
Morocco |
16.3 |
| 93 |
Saudi Arabia |
16.0 |
| 94 |
Lebanon |
15.9 |
| 95 |
Philippines |
15.9 |
| 96 |
India |
15.9 |
| 97 |
Panama |
15.9 |
| 98 |
Indonesia |
15.7 |
| 99 |
Peru |
15.7 |
| 100 |
El Salvador |
15.4 |
| 101 |
Venezuela |
15.4 |
| 102 |
Mexico |
15.3 |
| 103 |
Ecuador |
14.8 |
| 104 |
Seychelles |
14.6 |
| 105 |
Sri Lanka |
14.5 |
| 106 |
Western Sahara |
14.0 |
| 107 |
New Caledonia |
13.9 |
| 108 |
Vietnam |
13.2 |
| 109 |
Brunei |
13.1 |
| 110 |
Colombia |
13.1 |
| 111 |
Tunisia |
13.1 |
| 112 |
Greenland |
13.0 |
| 113 |
Moldova |
13.0 |
| 114 |
Kosovo |
12.8 |
| 115 |
North Korea |
12.6 |
| 116 |
Bhutan |
12.4 |
| 117 |
Malaysia |
12.4 |
| 118 |
Bahrain |
12.3 |
| 119 |
Turkey |
12.3 |
| 120 |
Iran |
12.3 |
| 121 |
Cape Verde |
12.1 |
| 122 |
Brazil |
11.9 |
| 123 |
Azerbaijan |
11.8 |
| 124 |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines |
11.7 |
| 125 |
Antigua and Barbuda |
11.6 |
| 126 |
Armenia |
11.5 |
| 127 |
Saint Kitts and Nevis |
11.5 |
| 128 |
Georgia |
11.5 |
| 129 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
11.4 |
| 130 |
Grenada |
11.3 |
| 131 |
Jamaica |
11.2 |
| 132 |
Australia |
11.2 |
| 133 |
Montenegro |
11.2 |
| 134 |
Argentina |
11.1 |
| 135 |
Barbados |
11.0 |
| 136 |
Saint Lucia |
11.0 |
| 137 |
New Zealand |
11.0 |
| 138 |
Iceland |
10.8 |
| 139 |
United States |
10.8 |
| 140 |
Dominica |
10.8 |
| 141 |
Bahamas |
10.7 |
| 142 |
Palau |
10.5 |
| 143 |
United Arab Emirates |
10.5 |
| 144 |
Qatar |
10.5 |
| 145 |
Cyprus |
10.3 |
| 146 |
Luxembourg |
10.3 |
| 147 |
Maldives |
10.2 |
| 148 |
Albania |
10.1 |
| 149 |
Denmark |
9.9 |
| 150 |
Costa Rica |
9.9 |
| 151 |
United Kingdom |
9.8 |
| 152 |
Kuwait |
9.8 |
| 153 |
Ireland |
9.8 |
| 154 |
Uruguay |
9.7 |
| 155 |
Netherlands |
9.7 |
| 156 |
Monaco |
9.6 |
| 157 |
Norway |
9.5 |
| 158 |
Bulgaria |
9.4 |
| 159 |
Romania |
9.4 |
| 160 |
France |
9.3 |
| 161 |
Liechtenstein |
9.2 |
| 162 |
Sweden |
9.2 |
| 163 |
Slovakia |
9.2 |
| 164 |
North Macedonia |
9.1 |
| 165 |
Mauritius |
9.1 |
| 166 |
Switzerland |
9.1 |
| 167 |
Serbia |
8.8 |
| 168 |
Hungary |
8.8 |
| 169 |
Canada |
8.7 |
| 170 |
Russia |
8.7 |
| 171 |
Chile |
8.6 |
| 172 |
Belgium |
8.5 |
| 173 |
Cuba |
8.5 |
| 174 |
Germany |
8.5 |
| 175 |
Singapore |
8.3 |
| 176 |
Austria |
8.2 |
| 177 |
Poland |
8.1 |
| 178 |
Slovenia |
8.1 |
| 179 |
Croatia |
8.0 |
| 180 |
Portugal |
8.0 |
| 181 |
Czechia |
8.0 |
| 182 |
Thailand |
8.0 |
| 183 |
Finland |
7.8 |
| 184 |
Estonia |
7.7 |
| 185 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
7.7 |
| 186 |
Lithuania |
7.7 |
| 187 |
Malta |
7.4 |
| 188 |
Latvia |
7.4 |
| 189 |
Andorra |
6.9 |
| 190 |
Belarus |
6.8 |
| 191 |
Spain |
6.8 |
| 192 |
Greece |
6.6 |
| 193 |
Italy |
6.5 |
| 194 |
China |
6.2 |
| 195 |
Japan |
6.0 |
| 196 |
Puerto Rico |
6.0 |
| 197 |
Ukraine |
5.8 |
| 198 |
San Marino |
5.7 |
| 199 |
Taiwan |
5.4 |
| 200 |
South Korea |
4.8 |
World |
16.1 |
The gap between the highest- and lowest-birth-rate countries exceeds 40 births per 1,000 people.
The Central African Republic leads birth rates globally, with nearly 47 births per 1,000 people, followed closely by Chad, Somalia, Niger, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In these countries, large family sizes are common, and populations tend to be younger, with a high share of women in childbearing age.
High birth rates are also prevalent in parts of the Middle East and South Asia, including Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan, where fertility remains elevated despite gradual declines over time.
Meanwhile, India and China continue to lead in the total number of births worldwide, although their birth rates are relatively lower.
At the other end of the spectrum, many developed economies now have birth rates well below the global average.
Countries such as South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, Italy, and Spain record fewer than 7 births per 1,000 people, reflecting delayed family formation, high housing costs, and changing social norms. Several European countries, including Italy, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, also fall into this low-birth-rate group.
Some of these countries are also among the world’s super-aged societies, where more than 20% of the population are aged over 65 years.
When birth rates remain below the replacement level (2.1 births per woman) for extended periods, countries face shrinking workforces, rising dependency ratios, and mounting pressure on social security and healthcare systems. Over time, populations begin to shrink and age, creating long-term economic challenges.
In contrast, very high birth rates can strain education, infrastructure, and job creation if economic growth does not keep pace.
As a result, governments across the world are increasingly focused on addressing population challenges and demographic policy, whether through family incentives, childcare support, or immigration.
If you found this infographic interesting, explore more population and demographic insights on Voronoi, including The World’s Population as 1000 People.
2026-02-11 23:38:06
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As gold prices surged more than 230% since 2020, central banks around the world launched one of the largest gold-buying waves in modern history.
For many countries, bullion became more than just a hedge—it became a strategic reserve asset amid rising geopolitical tensions, currency volatility, and growing efforts to diversify away from the U.S. dollar.
Yet not every nation followed the same playbook: some were accumulating gold aggressively, while others were trimming reserves.
This chart ranks the countries that made the biggest net additions and the largest reductions in gold reserves over the past five years. The data comes from the World Gold Council.
Together, the top 15 buyers added nearly 2,000 net tonnes of gold to their reserves over the period, underscoring a broad shift in official sector strategy.
China recorded the largest increase in gold reserves over the period, adding more than 350 tonnes. This move aligns with Beijing’s long-running push to diversify reserves away from the U.S. dollar and reduce exposure to Western financial systems, reinforcing gold’s role as a politically neutral anchor within global reserves.
| Rank | Country | Net change in tonnes (2020-2025) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
China |
357.1 |
| 2 |
Poland |
314.6 |
| 3 |
Türkiye |
251.8 |
| 4 |
India |
245.3 |
| 5 |
Brazil |
105.1 |
| 6 |
Azerbaijan |
83.6 |
| 7 |
Japan |
80.8 |
| 8 |
Thailand |
80.6 |
| 9 |
Hungary |
78.5 |
| 10 |
Singapore |
77.3 |
| 11 |
Iraq |
74.6 |
| 12 |
Qatar |
73.0 |
| 13 |
Czech Rep. |
62.8 |
| 14 |
Russia |
55.4 |
| 15 |
United Arab Emirates |
51.7 |
Poland followed China closely in the ranking, increasing its gold holdings by over 300 tonnes as part of a long-term push to bolster monetary security.
Türkiye and India also ranked among the top buyers. Both countries face persistent inflation pressures and currency volatility, making gold an attractive hedge within official reserves.
Beyond the largest buyers, several emerging markets made notable additions. Brazil added more than 100 tonnes, while Azerbaijan’s increase came through its sovereign wealth fund, the State Oil Fund of the Republic of Azerbaijan.
Japan, Thailand, Hungary, and Singapore also expanded reserves, signaling broader global interest in gold as a stabilizing asset during periods of economic uncertainty.
While many central banks were building gold stockpiles, a smaller group reduced exposure, highlighting sharply different reserve priorities.
The Philippines recorded the largest reduction, cutting reserves by more than 65 tonnes. Kazakhstan and Sri Lanka also posted significant declines, often reflecting domestic liquidity pressures or active reserve rebalancing during periods of economic stress.
| Rank | Country | Net change in tonnes (2020-2025) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Philippines |
-65.2 |
| 2 |
Kazakhstan |
-52.4 |
| 3 |
Sri Lanka |
-19.1 |
| 4 |
Germany |
-16.3 |
| 5 |
Mongolia |
-15.9 |
| 6 |
Tajikistan |
-11.9 |
| 7 |
Euro Area (average) |
-10.8 |
| 8 |
Colombia |
-9.2 |
| 9 |
Finland |
-5.4 |
| 10 |
Curaçao & St. Maarten |
-3.9 |
| 11 |
Solomon Islands |
-0.6 |
| 12 |
Suriname |
-0.4 |
| 13 |
Malta |
-0.3 |
| 14 |
Ethiopia |
-0.2 |
| 15 |
Switzerland |
-0.1 |
Several European countries, including Germany and Finland, posted modest reductions. Switzerland’s change was minimal, underscoring its generally stable approach to gold management compared with more active buyers elsewhere.
Taken together, the data shows how gold has reasserted itself as a cornerstone of global reserves, even as countries take sharply different paths in preparing for an uncertain monetary future.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The Rise of Major Currencies Against the USD in 2025 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-02-11 21:04:57
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Immigration is highly concentrated in a small number of U.S. states. In several large coastal economies, foreign-born residents make up nearly a quarter of the population. In much of the Midwest and Appalachia, the share is closer to 2–5%.
The map above shows how the foreign-born share varies across all 50 states and D.C., based on the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Below, we show the foreign-born population by state:
| State | Foreign-Born Share of the Population 2024 | Number of Foreign-Born Residents |
|---|---|---|
| California | 27.7% | 10,922,460 |
| New Jersey | 25.0% | 2,375,213 |
| New York | 23.3% | 4,629,069 |
| Florida | 23.1% | 5,398,982 |
| Nevada | 19.9% | 650,226 |
| Massachusetts | 18.8% | 1,341,600 |
| Hawaii | 18.6% | 268,983 |
| Texas | 18.4% | 5,757,513 |
| Maryland | 17.1% | 1,071,011 |
| Washington | 16.1% | 1,281,267 |
| Connecticut | 15.9% | 584,336 |
| Rhode Island | 15.7% | 174,632 |
| District of Columbia | 15.5% | 108,849 |
| Illinois | 15.4% | 1,957,364 |
| Virginia | 13.6% | 1,198,323 |
| Arizona | 13.4% | 1,016,039 |
| Georgia | 11.9% | 1,330,524 |
| Delaware | 11.6% | 122,022 |
| Colorado | 10.5% | 625,537 |
| New Mexico | 10.0% | 427,237 |
| Oregon | 10.0% | 213,026 |
| North Carolina | 9.9% | 1,093,556 |
| Utah | 9.8% | 343,354 |
| Minnesota | 9.0% | 521,384 |
| Nebraska | 9.0% | 180,492 |
| Pennsylvania | 8.3% | 1,085,536 |
| Kansas | 7.8% | 231,707 |
| Alaska | 7.7% | 780,815 |
| Michigan | 7.7% | 56,990 |
| Indiana | 7.0% | 484,699 |
| Oklahoma | 6.6% | 270,296 |
| Tennessee | 6.5% | 469,804 |
| South Carolina | 6.4% | 350,645 |
| Idaho | 6.3% | 204,214 |
| Iowa | 6.3% | 126,102 |
| New Hampshire | 5.9% | 83,133 |
| Arkansas | 5.8% | 179,125 |
| Ohio | 5.5% | 653,582 |
| Wisconsin | 5.5% | 327,854 |
| North Dakota | 5.3% | 42,218 |
| Kentucky | 5.2% | 239,082 |
| Louisiana | 5.2% | 238,595 |
| Missouri | 4.9% | 306,028 |
| Maine | 4.7% | 66,036 |
| Alabama | 4.5% | 232,096 |
| Vermont | 4.5% | 29,182 |
| South Dakota | 4.2% | 38,836 |
| Wyoming | 3.5% | 20,567 |
| Mississippi | 2.7% | 79,462 |
| Montana | 2.1% | 37,170 |
| West Virginia | 2.1% | 23,882 |
California leads the nation, with 27.7% of its residents born outside the United States—nearly 11 million people.
New Jersey ranks second at 25%, followed by New York (23.3%) and Florida (23.1%). In each of these states, immigrants account for roughly one in four residents.
Within New York state, immigration is even more concentrated in New York City, where foreign-born residents make up roughly 38% of the population. On average, immigrants in the city have lived there for about 24 years, underscoring its long-standing identity as a global gateway.
At the other end of the spectrum are Montana and West Virginia, where foreign-born residents account for just 2.1% of the population.
Several other states across Appalachia and the Midwest also report foreign-born shares below 5%, underscoring how concentrated immigration remains in a relatively small number of states.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on America’s 10 richest immigrant billionaires.