Colombians

Colombians
Colombianos
Map of the Colombian Diaspora in the World
Total population
c. 58 million (2022 estimate)
Diaspora c. 5 million
0.8% of world's population
Regions with significant populations
 Colombia 53,015,094 (2024 estimate)
 United States1,765,862
 Spain856,616
 Venezuela721,791 (2011)
 Chile209,946
 Ecuador203,000
 Argentina111,969
 Brazil108,587
 Canada76,580
 Panama66,689
 Australia63,010
 Peru53,852
 France40,000
 United Kingdom39,000
 Mexico36,234
 Costa Rica28,015
 Germany20,705
 Netherlands20,515
 Italy19,848
 Poland16,389
 Sweden15,128
 Aruba8,067
 Puerto Rico5,266
 Curaçao4,166
 Japan2,701
 Saudi Arabia614
 Iceland344
Languages
Primarily Colombian Spanish and Indigenous Languages, as well as other minority languages
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic;
Protestant minority
See Religion in Colombia
Related ethnic groups
Other Latin Americans

Colombians (Spanish: Colombianos) are people identified with the country of Colombia. This connection may be residential, legal, historical or cultural. For most Colombians, several (or all) of these connections exist and are collectively the source of their being Colombian.

Colombia is considered to be one of the most multiethnic societies in the world, home to people of various ethnic, religious and national origins. Many Colombians have varying degrees of European, Indigenous, African, Arab, Asian and Jew ancestry.

The majority of the Colombian population is Mestizo and Castizo, being descendants of Indigenous peoples and Europeans, especially Iberians. Following the initial period of Spanish conquest and immigration, different waves of immigration and settlement of non-indigenous peoples took place over the course of nearly six centuries and continue today. Elements of Native American and more recent immigrant customs, languages and religions have combined to form the culture of Colombia and thus a modern Colombian identity.