The current birth rate for Puerto Rico in 2020 is 7.048 births per 1000 people, a 2.27% decline from 2019. The population of Puerto Rico stood at 3.2 million in 2018, its lowest point since 1979 and down sharply from 2017, when hurricanes Maria and Irma hit the island, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. Puerto Rico’s population was 3.47 million in 2015 — 9 percent, or 334,000 people, smaller than it was in 2000, according to Pew. In 2018, Puerto Rico had a population of 3.2M people with a median age of 42.9 and a median household income of $20,296.

The previous census, conducted in 2000, showed that at that point, Puerto Rico had 3,808,610 people, so as well as losing just over 100,000 people in a decade, it appears as though the rate of population reduction is actually increasing. Eight states saw a population decline; the largest was 1% in Wyoming. SAN JUAN — Puerto Rico’s population has been projected at 2,980,532 people by 2025, the Statistics Institute (PRSI) said as part of an update to demographic projections by the U.S. Census Bureau on the island. In its previous projection, that would have been the population in 2050, but has now been lowered to 2,089,492 for that year. Now, with one of the strictest lockdown orders in the U.S., Puerto Rico's economy is expected to decline in the following years, according to a forecast by the island's Financial Oversight Management Board. About 133,500 people moved, up 36.9% from 97,500 movers the year before. Loss of both jobs and young workers is creating a vicious cycle of economic decline that is hard to escape. The population of Puerto Rico in 2018 was 3,039,596, a 3.92% decline from 2017. The current population of Puerto Rico in 2020 is 2,860,853, a 2.47% decline from 2019. NBC News: Dramatic decline in young children brings 'demographic winter' to Puerto Rico Primera Hora: Cae en más de 40% la matrícula en escuelas públicas y privadas de la Isla NotiCel: En 12 años ha desaparecido casi la mitad de la población estudiantil de P. R. The full report is available for download here.. See below a list of media coverage, in English and Spanish, of the report. Its population has decreased by 5 percent in the last decade, mainly because of the out-migration, or emigration, of young people. The population of Puerto Rico in 2019 was 2,933,408, a 3.49% decline from 2018. Download. According to the 2018 U.S. Census Bureau’s Population Estimates, Puerto Rico’s population is 3.1 million, having declined 4% since 2017 (3.2 million).1 This is the first official estimate by the U.S. Census Bureau since Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico on September 20th, 2017. The previous census, conducted in 2000, showed that at that point, Puerto Rico had 3,808,610 people, so as well as losing just over 100,000 people in a decade, it appears as though the rate of population reduction is actually increasing. The wave of expatriates keeps swelling. Puerto Rico. Although a slowdown in the island’s birthrate has contributed to this decline, a surge in the out-migration of its citizens has been a more important factor. The last full US census results, from 2010, showed that there were 3,725,789 people in Puerto Rico, so the population decrease was 19,099 in a single year. Puerto Rico’s population has been falling for nearly a decade, and the pace of decline has accelerated in recent years. The last full US census results, from 2010, showed that there were 3,725,789 people in Puerto Rico, so the population decrease was 19,099 in a single year. The birth rate for Puerto Rico in 2018 was 7.377 births per 1000 people, a 8.15% decline from 2017. Between 2017 and 2018 the population of Puerto Rico declined from 3.34M to 3.2M, a -4.26% decrease and its median household income grew from $19,343 to $20,296, a 4.93% increase. Government data from July of 2012 show Puerto Rico’s population to be 3,667,084, a decrease of more than 27,000 from 2011 and a reduction of more than 54,000 since 2010. Puerto Rico’s decline amounts to 3% — three . Puerto Rico’s population stabilizes Puerto Rico gained 340 people from 2018 to 2019, which census officials said was the first year that the commonwealth hadn’t … “Puerto Rico has seen a steady decline in population over the last decade,” said Sandra Johnson, a statistician in the Population Division of the Census Bureau, in a press release. Currently, 100% of the population of Puerto Rico is urban (2,933,408 people in 2019) Population Density The 2019 population density in Puerto Rico is 331 people per Km 2 (857 people per mi 2 ), calculated on a total land area of 8,870 Km2 (3,425 sq. Last month, an analysis from the Census Information Center at the University of Puerto Rico’s Cayey campus showed that the island’s population shrank a 4.3 percent in 2018, the biggest decline in modern history and a reflection -in part- of the massive migration that took place after Maria. The overall U.S. population increased over the same period. With a shrinking population and struggling economy, Puerto Rico is faced with some serious challenges. The number of movers from the territory to the mainland United States increased by more than a third in 2018. Puerto Rico's population peaked in 2005 at 3.91 million and has been steadily declining. miles). Total population loss: -69,343 Natural Increase: -1,065