Demography of Northern Ireland


is the smallest of the four components
of the United Kingdom in terms of both area and population, containing 2.9% of the total population and 5.7% of the total area of the United Kingdom. It is the smaller of the two political entities on the island of Ireland by area and population, the other being the Republic of Ireland, a sovereign state which gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1921. Northern Ireland contains 28.3% of the total population and 16.75% of the total area of the island of Ireland.
Northern Ireland, as recorded by the 2011 United Kingdom census, has a population of 1,810,863, an increase of 125,800 over the ten-year period since the last census. The population density is 133 people per km2, about half that of the United Kingdom as a whole but about twice that of the Republic. The Belfast Metropolitan Area dominates in population terms, with over a third of the inhabitants of Northern Ireland.
Like Great Britain, Northern Ireland has a plurality of Protestants and its people speak both Irish and dialects of English heavily influenced by the Scots language. This is both because of historic links with Scotland going back centuries, and because of settlements of lowland Scots Protestants in Ulster in the 17th century, such as the Plantation of Ulster. Also unlike the Republic, a large proportion of people in Northern Ireland have a British national identity. Many people in Northern Ireland have a Northern Irish identity, whether in addition to a British or Irish identity or by itself.

Historic population trends

Place of birth

In 2001, 91.0% of the population were born in Northern Ireland, 7.2% were born in other parts of the UK and Ireland, and 1.8% were born elsewhere. By 2011, the proportion of immigrants from outside the UK and Ireland had risen to 4.3%, while the proportion born within them had fallen to 6.7%. The highest number of non-British/Irish immigrants are in Belfast, followed by Craigavon Urban Area and Dungannon. Dungannon has a bigger share of immigrants than any town in Northern Ireland, while Strabane has the smallest share of these immigrants.
Place of Birth2001 population2001%2011 population2011%
1,534,26891.041,608,85388.84
61,6093.6664,7173.57
16,7721.0015,4550.85
3,0080.182,5520.14
39,0512.3237,8332.09
Other member countries10,3550.61
— Member countries prior to 2004 expansion9,7030.54
— Accession countries 2004 onwards35,7041.97
Other outside the EU20,2041.2036,0461.99
Total1,685,267100.001,810,863100.00

Age bands broken down by place of birth in the 2011 census.
Place of birthAll ages0 to 1516 to 3435 to 6465 and over
Northern Ireland88.8%93.7%86.3%87.4%90.2%
England3.6%2.0%3.4%4.7%3.1%
Scotland0.9%0.4%0.7%1.1%1.1%
Wales0.1%0.1%0.1%0.2%0.2%
Republic of Ireland2.1%0.6%1.6%2.4%4.3%
EU member countries prior to 2004 expansion0.5%0.3%0.8%0.6%0.2%
EU accession countries 2004 onwards2.0%1.5%4.3%1.4%0.1%
Other2.0%1.4%2.7%2.3%0.8%

Below are the 5 largest foreign-born groups in Northern Ireland according to 2014 ONS estimates.
Country of birthEstimated population, 2013Estimated population, 2014Estimated population, 2015

Ethnicity

The following table shows the ethnic group of respondents in the 2001 and 2011 censuses.
Ethnic group2001 population2001%2011 population2011%
White:1,670,98899.151,778,44998.21
White: Irish Traveller/White Gypsy1,7100.101,3010.07
White: Total1,672,69899.251,779,750
98.28
Asian or Asian British: Indian1,5670.096,1980.34
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani6680.041,0910.06
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi2520.015400.03
Asian or Asian British: Chinese4,1450.256,3030.35
Asian or Asian British: Asian Other1940.014,9980.28
Asian or Asian British: Total6,8240.4019,1301.06
Black or Black British: Caribbean2550.023720.02
Black or Black British: African4940.032,3450.13
Black or Black British: Other3870.028990.05
Black or Black British: Total1,1360.073,616
0.20
Mixed: Total3,3190.206,0140.33
Other: Any other ethnic group:Total1,2900.082,353
0.13
Total1,685,2671001,810,863100

See also Ethnic minorities in Northern Ireland

Languages spoken

is by far the most commonly spoken language in Northern Ireland. Two regional languages of Northern Ireland, Irish and Ulster Scots, are protected under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. Several other languages are spoken by immigrants to Northern Ireland, the most common of which is Polish.
Main language of all usual residents aged 3 and over in the 2011 Census
Main LanguageUsual residents aged 3+Proportion
English1,681,17196.86%
Polish17,7311.02%
Lithuanian6,2500.36%
Irish 4,1640.24%
Portuguese2,2930.13%
Slovak2,2570.13%
Chinese2,2140.13%
Tagalog/Filipino1,8950.11%
Latvian1,2730.07%
Russian1,1910.07%
Hungarian1,0080.06%
Other13,0900.75%

Ability in Irish of all usual residents aged 3 and over in the Census
Ability in Ulster Scots of all usual residents aged 3 and over in the Census

Religion

See also Religion in Northern Ireland and List of districts in Northern Ireland by religion or religion brought up in
The following table shows the religion stated by respondents to the 2001 and 2011 censuses.
The religious affiliations in the districts of Northern Ireland at the time of the 2011 census were as follows. Note that these boundaries changed in 2015.
Religions broken down by place of birth in the 2011 census.
Place of birthCatholicProtestant and other ChristianOther ReligionNone or not statedPopulation
Northern Ireland40.7%43.5%0.5%15.4%1,608,853
England30.1%36.7%1.6%31.6%64,717
Scotland25.0%41.9%1.1%32.0%15,455
Wales17.6%42.0%2.1%38.2%2,552
Republic of Ireland63.8%22.6%0.7%12.9%37,833
Other EU: Member countries prior to 2004 expansion28.8%26.1%1.6%43.5%9,703
Other EU: Accession countries 2004 onwards63.1%6.2%0.8%29.9%35,720
Other28.2%23.9%15.4%32.5%36,030

The religious affiliations in the different age bands in the 2011 census were as follows:
Ages attained CatholicProtestant and other ChristianOther ReligionNone or not stated
0 to 444.3%31.7%0.9%23.2%
5 to 945.5%36.1%0.7%17.7%
10 to 1445.9%37.9%0.6%15.6%
15 to 1944.8%37.6%0.6%17.0%
20 to 2443.4%35.2%0.7%20.7%
25 to 2944.8%33.1%1.1%21.0%
30 to 3444.0%34.3%1.4%20.3%
35 to 3941.5%37.8%1.2%19.5%
40 to 4440.4%41.1%0.9%17.7%
45 to 4940.0%42.8%0.8%16.3%
50 to 5439.2%44.9%0.7%15.1%
55 to 5938.1%46.5%0.8%14.6%
60 to 6435.8%50.0%0.7%13.4%
65 to 6933.7%54.4%0.7%11.2%
70 to 7432.9%56.4%0.7%10.1%
75 to 7932.0%58.1%0.6%9.3%
80 to 8430.0%60.0%0.6%9.3%
85 to 8928.1%61.8%0.5%9.6%
90 and over25.8%64.0%0.5%9.6%

National identity

In Northern Ireland national identity is complex. Many in Northern Ireland have a British national identity and view the English, Scots and Welsh as fellow members of their common nation while regarding people from the Republic of Ireland as foreigners. Many others in Northern Ireland view people from the Republic of Ireland as being members of their common nation encompassing the island of Ireland and regard the English, Scots and Welsh as foreigners. Co-existing with this dichotomy is a Northern Irish identity, which can be held alone or, as is also the case with Englishness, Scottishness and Welshness, alongside a British identity, or alongside an Irish identity. A small number of people see themselves as being both British and Irish.
Although there is a strong correlation between religion and national identity, Catholics tending to identify as Irish and Protestants tending to identify as British, this is not an absolute relationship, and the correlation is much weaker amongst Catholics than it is amongst Protestants. Amongst Catholics, geography also plays an important role, with Catholics in heavily Protestant parts of Northern Ireland being more likely to call themselves British and less likely to call themselves Irish than Catholics in more Catholic areas of Northern Ireland. In the 2011 census there were four of the twenty-six districts of Northern Ireland, all on the east coast, where more Catholics considered themselves British than considered themselves Irish.
While in the 2011 census Protestants outnumbered Catholics in only half of the districts in Northern Ireland, those who considered themselves British outnumbered those who considered themselves Irish in twenty of the twenty-six districts in Northern Ireland. This is partly because Catholics were more likely to see themselves as British than Protestants were to see themselves as Irish, but is also partly because those of no religion were substantially more likely to see themselves as British as see themselves as Irish. The irreligious tend to live in Protestant areas, suggesting that they are mostly of Protestant descent. Members of the immigrant population, which includes many Poles, are also more likely to consider themselves Catholic.
Northern Irish identity was almost equally held amongst Protestants as amongst Catholics, and it varied little according to geography.
In the 2011 census respondents gave their national identity as follows.
National identity by religion
National identityAllCatholicProtestant and
other Christian
Other religionsNo religion
British48.4%12.9%81.6%50.1%55.9%
Irish28.4%57.2%3.9%12.4%14.0%
Northern Irish29.4%30.7%26.9%18.0%35.2%
English, Scottish or Welsh1.6%0.8%1.5%2.9%5.2%
All other3.4%4.4%1.0%29.1%7.1%

Detail by religion
National identityAllCatholicProtestant and
other Christian
Other religionsNo religion
British only39.9%10.3%68.3%42.4%42.9%
Irish only25.3%53.2%2.1%8.1%9.4%
Northern Irish only20.9%26.9%14.5%12.0%23.7%
British and Northern Irish only6.2%0.9%11.1%3.3%7.9%
Irish and Northern Irish only1.1%2.0%0.2%0.5%0.8%
British, Irish and Northern Irish only1.0%0.8%1.0%1.0%2.1%
British and Irish only0.7%0.8%0.5%0.7%1.0%
English, Scottish or Welsh only1.0%0.6%0.8%2.1%3.5%
Other4.0%4.7%1.6%29.9%8.7%
Total100.0%100.0%100.0%100.0%100.0%

National identity by age
Ages attained BritishIrishNorthern IrishEnglish, Scottish or WelshAll other
0 to 1545.1%31.4%30.5%0.9%3.6%
16 to 2444.2%32.3%29.6%1.5%3.3%
25 to 3440.5%31.0%30.0%1.7%8.6%
35 to 4447.3%28.7%29.3%2.1%4.5%
45 to 5450.8%28.3%28.0%1.9%2.2%
55 to 6454.5%24.9%28.8%1.9%1.1%
65 to 7457.5%21.3%29.8%1.7%0.4%
75 to 8458.6%19.6%29.1%1.6%0.3%
85 and over61.7%18.0%26.5%2.0%0.2%

National identity by district
DistrictBritishIrishNorthern IrishEnglish, Scottish or WelshAll Other
Antrim55.2%20.1%30.4%2.3%3.9%
Ards73.6%7.5%31.9%1.9%1.5%
Armagh44.4%32.4%27.1%1.1%3.9%
Ballymena69.0%11.1%27.9%1.4%3.8%
Ballymoney60.6%16.4%30.9%1.7%1.7%
Banbridge61.1%16.2%31.8%1.5%1.8%
Belfast43.2%34.8%26.8%1.5%5.1%
Carrickfergus76.5%5.3%30.3%2.1%1.8%
Castlereagh66.2%14.7%31.3%1.5%2.6%
Coleraine62.4%14.5%31.6%2.0%3.2%
Cookstown37.3%33.5%32.1%1.2%3.7%
Craigavon48.3%25.6%28.7%1.4%6.4%
Derry23.7%55.0%24.6%1.4%2.0%
Down40.2%32.2%34.1%1.9%2.0%
Dungannon30.9%38.8%27.1%0.9%9.6%
Fermanagh37.2%36.1%29.5%1.7%3.1%
Larne69.8%10.1%31.4%2.1%1.2%
Limavady42.2%32.0%30.7%1.5%1.4%
Lisburn55.6%24.7%28.7%2.0%2.4%
Magherafelt31.4%42.7%29.8%1.0%2.8%
Moyle38.6%34.1%32.1%2.2%1.4%
Newry and Mourne20.2%53.0%27.6%1.2%4.3%
Newtownabbey66.5%13.4%31.2%1.3%2.4%
North Down71.1%9.1%33.0%3.0%2.4%
Omagh28.6%40.9%32.7%1.1%3.4%
Strabane33.0%39.2%31.8%1.4%1.3%

National identity by religion or religion brought up in for each district
National identity by place of birth
Place of birthBritishIrishNorthern IrishEnglish, Scottish or WelshAll Other
Northern Ireland49.8%28.8%31.9%0.3%0.4%
Republic of Ireland15.9%77.6%10.9%0.2%0.5%
Channel Islands and Isle of Man58.4%19.9%12.6%2.5%17.2%
Great Britain60.7%13.5%10.7%29.0%0.7%
England64.4%14.8%11.2%22.8%0.8%
Scotland46.6%8.7%9.0%51.3%0.4%
Wales50.2%7.5%7.8%51.4%0.7%
EU countries excluding the UK and Ireland12.4%7.4%6.4%1.1%80.4%
EU member countries prior to 2004 expansion excluding the UK and Ireland35.5%10.1%12.1%2.8%52.7%
Germany62.4%8.0%17.3%5.3%21.9%
Portugal8.2%9.6%5.2%0.6%85.8%
EU accession countries 2004 onwards6.2%6.6%4.8%0.6%88.0%
Poland5.1%6.0%4.6%0.6%89.9%
Lithuania5.2%7.7%4.5%0.5%87.7%
Slovakia6.0%5.1%4.3%0.2%89.0%
Latvia7.8%7.7%4.9%0.7%84.9%
Romania12.3%9.1%6.8%0.5%79.5%
Other Europe: Non EU countries34.2%11.3%10.5%1.7%30.3%
Africa44.6%17.1%13.6%1.9%41.7%
South Africa51.5%14.6%15.4%2.1%35.4%
Middle East and Asia42.3%7.4%6.4%0.9%53.6%
China30.5%6.3%4.8%0.9%65.2%
Hong Kong76.1%3.5%6.9%1.3%21.4%
India38.5%5.3%4.8%0.8%57.8%
Pakistan46.1%7.7%7.7%0.6%47.9%
Bangladesh52.8%9.4%3.9%0.6%42.8%
Philippines46.8%5.1%4.0%0.2%56.9%
North America and Caribbean29.2%32.1%18.2%1.0%45.3%
United States of America18.3%39.1%17.1%0.7%52.4%
Canada46.7%21.5%20.7%1.2%34.6%
Central America35.6%11.3%16.0%2.1%62.9%
South America33.7%15.7%9.0%1.3%62.1%
Antarctica and Oceania36.1%23.2%18.5%1.6%42.8%
Australia36.3%26.5%20.7%0.9%38.2%
New Zealand40.1%15.8%14.2%3.9%48.1%
All outside Northern Ireland37.6%24.5%9.8%12.4%27.3%
All outside the UK and Ireland24.3%11.0%8.5%1.1%66.6%

National identity by ethnic group
Ethnic groupBritishIrishNorthern IrishEnglish, Scottish or WelshAll Other
White:48.5%28.6%29.8%1.6%2.7%
White: Irish Traveller/White Gypsy12.2%68.0%22.3%2.8%0.3%
White: Total48.5%28.6%29.8%1.6%3.4%
Asian or Asian British: Indian41.1%7.6%5.3%0.7%53.5%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani58.9%8.5%10.7%0.9%32.0%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi63.5%8.3%4.4%0.4%31.3%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese52.6%7.0%7.3%1.0%41.5%
Asian or Asian British: Asian Other42.2%7.7%4.8%0.3%59.6%
Asian or Asian British: Total46.8%7.5%6.1%0.7%49.3%
Black or Black British: Caribbean44.4%9.9%7.8%6.7%43.5%
Black or Black British: African25.8%15.5%7.7%1.1%69.1%
Black or Black British: Other29.1%20.5%12.6%2.3%54.2%
Black or Black British: Total28.6%16.2%8.9%2.0%62.7%
Mixed: Total47.3%24.6%26.6%3.0%18.7%
Other: Any other ethnic group:Total29.8%22.8%13.9%3.4%48.4%

Passports held

Those born in Northern Ireland have automatic British citizenship on the same basis and with the same provisos as those born elsewhere in the United Kingdom. As well as this, and despite the withdrawal of its constitutional claim to Northern Ireland in 1999, the Irish Government also grants the right to Irish citizenship to those born in Northern Ireland on the same basis and with the same provisos as those born within the Republic of Ireland. This means that most people in Northern Ireland are entitled to a British passport, an Irish passport, or both, as they so choose. By agreement between the Irish Government and Post Office Ltd, post offices in Northern Ireland provide a service whereby customers can apply for an Irish passport, operating alongside their service whereby customers can apply for a British passport. In the 2011 census, respondents stated that they held the following passports.

Age

According to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Authority the average age increased from 34 years to 37 years between the 2001 and 2011 censuses. Over the same period, the share of the population represented by children aged under 16 years fell from 24 per cent to 21 per cent, while the proportion of people aged 65 years and over rose from 13 per cent to 15 per cent.
Ages attained
Population% of total
population
0–4124,3826.9
5–9111,2876.1
10–14119,0346.6
15–19126,2417.0
20–24126,0137.0
25–29124,0996.9
30–34119,8396.6
35–39122,2606.8
40–44131,8487.3
45–49131,6457.3
50–54116,9336.5
55–5999,2725.5
60–6494,2905.2
65–6982,1214.5
70–7463,4793.5
75–7950,3582.8
80–8436,3662.0
85–8921,1651.2
90+10,2310.6

Summary of vital statistics since 1900

Current vital statistics

* * * During the months from March to June 2020 the registration of births was affected by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Other statistics

Life expectancy at birth:

Men: 77.2 years

Women: 80.8 years
Infant mortality rate:

6.4 deaths/1,000 live births
Total Period Fertility Rate :

2.06 children born/woman
HIV/AIDS prevalence rate:

0.024%
People living with HIV/AIDS:

408