From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Iranian diaspora
People of Iranian ancestry outside Iran
People of Iranian ancestry outside Iran
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| group | Iranian diaspora |
| image | Map of the Iranian Diaspora in the World.svg |
| caption | Map of the Iranian diaspora as of 2021 |
| population | ~4,037,258 (official estimate, 2021) |
| ~1.6 million (asylum seekers, 2025) | |
| region2 | Americas |
| pop2 | 1,905,813 (47.20%) |
| region3 | Europe |
| pop3 | 1,184,552 (29.34%) |
| region4 | Other (Asia and Oceania) |
| pop4 | 1,115,572 (23.46%) |
| languages | Persian and Languages of Iran |
| religions |
~1.6 million (asylum seekers, 2025)
The Iranian diaspora (collectively known as Iranian expats or expatriates) is the global population of Iranian citizens or people of Iranian descent living outside Iran.
While Iranian migration has occurred historically, a significant wave of Iranians fled Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution due to political persecution under the new government. This trend has continued and intensified in the 2020s due to economic instability and political unrest.
In 2021, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran published statistics showing that 4,037,258 Iranians were living abroad. This figure includes people of Iranian ancestry in the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Israel, Turkey, and Bahrain whose families may have left Iran decades prior to the 1979 revolution, as well as those with partial ancestry. By December 2025, United Nations data indicated that there were 1.6 million Iranian asylum seekers worldwide, suggesting that approximately 1 in every 15 Iranians has left the country.
Over one million people of Iranian descent live in the United States, with significant populations (between 100,000 and 500,000) in Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, Sweden, Turkey, and the United Kingdom. In early 2026, the Iranian diaspora began holding rallies around the world in support of the 2025–2026 Iranian protests.
Migration waves
Iran has experienced since 1979. The government has proposed the creation of a ministry of immigration following reports indicating critical emigration statistics, largely driven by political instability and economic sanctions.
Statistics by country
]]
_change_according_to_Ministry_of_Foreign_affairs_Iran_.png)
| Country | Iranian diaspora (est.) | Article | Total: | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 568,564 (2021) | Iranian Americans | |||||
| Kuwait | author=Moojan Momen | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VB29DwAAQBAJ&dq=ajam+kuwait&pg=PT169 | title=Shi'i Islam: A Beginner's Guide | date=5 November 2015 | publisher=Simon and Schuster | isbn = 9781780747880}} | |
| 38,000 (non-Kuwaiti, 2021) | 'Ajam of Kuwait | ||||||
| United Arab Emirates | 357,000 (2021) | Iranians in the United Arab Emirates | |||||
| Germany | 336,000 (2023) | Iranians in Germany | |||||
| Canada | 280,805 (2021) | Iranian Canadian | |||||
| Israel | 250,000 | Iranian Jews in Israel | |||||
| Bahrain | 225,000 (Estimated) | Ajam of Bahrain | |||||
| Sweden | 126,700 (2023) | Swedish Iranians | |||||
| Turkey | 126,640 (2021) | Immigration to Turkey | |||||
| France | 118,300 (2023) | Iranians in France | |||||
| United Kingdom | 114,432 (2021) | Iranians in the United Kingdom | |||||
| Iraq | 110,920 (2021) | Iranians in Iraq | |||||
| Australia | 70,899 (2021) | Iranian Australians | |||||
| Netherlands | 52,000 (2021) | Iranians in the Netherlands | |||||
| Austria | 40,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Denmark | 32,700 (2021) | Iranians in Denmark | |||||
| Italy | 30,532(2024) | Only including Iran-born people | |||||
| Malaysia | 30,000 (2021) | Iranians in Malaysia | |||||
| Norway | 20,000 (2021) | Norwegian Iranians | |||||
| Switzerland | 20,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Belgium | 20,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Qatar | 20,000 (2021) | Iranians in Qatar | |||||
| Georgia | 16,000 (2021) | ||||||
| India | 12,760 (2021) | Demographics of India | |||||
| New Zealand | 12,000 (2021) | Iranian New Zealander | |||||
| Spain | 12,000 (2021) | Iranians in Spain | |||||
| Finland | 10,129 (2021) | ||||||
| Azerbaijan | 10,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Armenia | 10,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Syria | 10,000 (2021) | Iranians in Syria | |||||
| Oman | 9,500 (2021) | ||||||
| Tajikistan | 8,000 (2019) | ||||||
| China | 7,780 (2021) | Iranians in China | |||||
| Lebanon | 5,000 (2021) | Iranians in Lebanon | |||||
| Thailand | 5,000 (2021) | Iranians in Thailand | |||||
| Cyprus | 5,000 (2021) | ||||||
| South Africa | 5,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Japan | 4,237 (2022) | Iranians in Japan | |||||
| Ukraine | 4,200 (2021) | ||||||
| Hungary | 4,111 (2021) | ||||||
| Pakistan | 3,950 (2021) | Iranian Pakistanis | |||||
| Afghanistan | 3,800 (2021) | ||||||
| Romania | 3,500 (2021) | Iranians in Romania | |||||
| Kazakhstan | 3,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Portugal | 2,934 (2024) | Only including foreign citizens, thus excluding, for instance, the 545 Iranians that have acquired Portuguese citizenship since 2008. | |||||
| Brazil | 2,525 (2024) | Only including Iran-born people | |||||
| Greece | 2,500 (2021) | ||||||
| Russia | 2,434 (2021) | Iranians in Russia | |||||
| Argentina | 2,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Poland | 2,000 (2021) | Iranians in Poland | |||||
| Republic of Korea | 1,770 (2021) | ||||||
| Philippines | 1,500 (2021) | Iranians in the Philippines | |||||
| Slovak Republic | 1,140 (2021) | ||||||
| Tajikistan | 1,000 (2021) | ||||||
| Tanzania | 1,000 (2021) | ||||||
| 1,000 (2021) | |||||||
| Czech Republic | 1,000 (2021) | ||||||
| 500 (2021) | |||||||
| Bulgaria | 500 (2021) | ||||||
| Egypt | 500 (2021) | ||||||
| Kyrgyzstan | 500 (2021) | ||||||
| Estonia | 426 (2021) | ||||||
| Hong Kong | 410 (2021) | ||||||
| Venezuela | 400 (2021) | ||||||
| Indonesia | 400 (2021) | ||||||
| 350 (2021) | Iranian Colombians | ||||||
| 300 (2021) | |||||||
| 227 (2021) | |||||||
| 225 (2021) | |||||||
| 200 (2021) | |||||||
| 171 (2021) | |||||||
| 150 (2021) | |||||||
| 125 (2021) | |||||||
| 110 (2021) | |||||||
| 100 (2021) | |||||||
| 70 (2021) | |||||||
| 70 (2021) | |||||||
| 70 (2021) | |||||||
| Ivory Coast | 65 (2021) | ||||||
| 60 (2021) | |||||||
| 54 (2021) | |||||||
| 50 (2021) | |||||||
| 47 (2021) | |||||||
| 47 (2021) | |||||||
| 44 (2021) | |||||||
| 41 (2021) | |||||||
| 40 (2021) | |||||||
| 40 (2021) | |||||||
| 23 (2021) | |||||||
| 21 (2021) | |||||||
| 20 (2021) | |||||||
| 17 (2021) | |||||||
| 15 (2021) | |||||||
| 15 (2021) | |||||||
| 12 (2021) | |||||||
| 12 (2021) | |||||||
| 12 (2021) | |||||||
| 11 (2021) | |||||||
| 10 (2021) | |||||||
| 10 (2021) | |||||||
| 10 (2021) | |||||||
| 6 (2021) | |||||||
| 3 (2021) | |||||||
| 2 (2021) | |||||||
| 1 (2021) | |||||||
| 1 (2023) | |||||||
| West Asia and Other | 2,433,000 (60.26%) (2021) | Anglosphere | |||||
| North, Central and South America | 1,905,813 (47.20%) (2021) | Americas | |||||
| Europe | 1,184,552 (29.34%) (2021) | Europe | |||||
| title=Iranians abroad per country | url=https://www.statistikdatabasen.scb.se/pxweb/sv/ssd/START__BE__BE0101__BE0101E/FodelselandArK/table/tableViewLayout1/ | access-date=2021-08-27 | website=iranian.mfa.ir | publisher=Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran}} | List of sovereign states and dependent territories by immigrant population |
Socioeconomic status
Nearly 60 percent of Iranians abroad have earned at least an undergraduate degree. They have some of the highest rates of self-employment among immigrant groups. Many have founded their own companies, including Isaac Larian, the founder of MGA Entertainment, and Pierre Omidyar, who founded eBay in 1995 in San Jose, California. Iranian households in the United States earned on average $87,288 annually as of 2018, and are ranked ninth by income.
Students abroad
According to the Iranian government, 55,686 Iranian students were studying abroad in 2013: 8,883 studied in Malaysia, 7,341 in the United States, 5,638 in Canada, 3,504 in Germany, 3,364 in Turkey, 3,228 in Britain, and the rest in other countries. The Iranian Ministry of Education estimated that between 350,000 and 500,000 Iranians were studying outside Iran as of 2014.
Politics
- Armenia: Hrant Markarian, Chairman of Armenian Revolutionary Federation
- Australia: Sam Dastyari, Former Senator
- Britain: Seema Kennedy, Former Member of the House of Commons
- Britain: Haleh Afshar, Member of the House of Lords
- Britain: David Alliance, Member of the House of Lords
- Canada, Quebec: Amir Khadir, Former Member of the National Assembly of Quebec
- Canada, Ontario: Reza Moridi, Former Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
- Canada: Majid Jowhari, Member of the Parliament of Canada
- Canada: Ali Ehsassi, Member of the Parliament of Canada
- France: Pouria Amirshahi, Former Member of the French National Assembly
- France: Mahmoud Khayami, founder of Iran Khodro
- France: Pierre Omidyar, investigative journalist for Honolulu Civil Beat and First Look Media, also founder of eBay
- France: Patrick Ali Pahlavi, member of the Pahlavi dynasty
- Germany: Yasmin Fahimi, Head of the German Trade Union Confederation
- Germany: Sahra Wagenknecht, Member of the Bundestag and founder of BSW
- Germany: Omid Nouripour, Member of the Bundestag, (Alliance '90/The Greens)
- Israel: Moshe Katsav, Former President of Israel
- Israel: Dan Halutz, Former Chief of General Staff
- Israel: Shaul Mofaz, Former Minister of Defense
- Kuwait: Ahmed Lari, Member of National Assembly of Kuwait
- Kuwait: Hassan Jawhar, Member of National Assembly of Kuwait
- Kuwait: Jenan Boushehri, Member of National Assembly of Kuwait
- New Zealand: Golriz Ghahraman, Former Member of New Zealand Parliament
- Netherlands: Farah Karimi, Member of the Senate, Former Member of the House of Representatives
- Norway: Masud Gharahkhani, President of the Storting
- Norway: Mazyar Keshvari, Former Member of the Storting
- Sweden: Ardalan Shekarabi, Member of the Riksdag
- Sweden: Maryam Yazdanfar, Former Member of the Riksdag
- Sweden: Reza Khelili Dylami, Former Member of the Riksdag
- Sweden: Alireza Akhondi, Member of the Riksdag
- United States: Goli Ameri, Former Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs
- United States: Cyrus Amir-Mokri, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Institutions
- United States, Washington: Cyrus Habib, Former Member of the Washington House of Representatives
- United States: Azita Raji, Former United States Ambassador to Sweden
- United States: Bob Yousefian, Former Mayor of Glendale
- United States: Jimmy Delshad, Former Mayor of Beverly Hills, California
Economics
In 2000, the Iran Press Service reported that Iranian expatriates had invested between $200 and $400 billion in the United States, Europe, and China, but almost nothing in Iran. In Dubai, Iranian expatriates have invested an estimated $200 billion (2006). Migrant Iranian workers abroad remitted less than two billion dollars home in 2006.
High net-worth individuals
| Rank | Name | Citizenship | Net worth (USD) | Source(s) of wealth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pierre Omidyar | Iran USA France | 12.9 billion | eBay | |
| Ghermezian family | Iran CAN | 4.0 billion | Triple Five Group | |
| Farhad Moshiri | Iran UK | 2.8 billion | Metalloinvest, Everton | |
| Nazarian family | Iran USA | 2.0 billion | Qualcomm | |
| Vincent & Robert Tchenguiz | Iran UK | 1.4 billion | Real Estate | |
| Manny Mashouf | Iran USA | 1.3 billion | Bebe stores | |
| Merage family | Iran USA | 1.1 billion | Hot Pockets | |
| Nasser David Khalili | Iran UK | 1.0 billion | Real Estate | |
| Hassan Khosrowshahi | Iran CAN | 950 million | Future Shop | |
| Omid Kordestani | Iran USA | 900 million | ||
| Anousheh Ansari | Iran USA | 750 million | Sonus Networks | |
| Isaac Larian | Iran USA | 723 million | MGA Entertainment | |
| Arash Ferdowsi | Iran USA | 400 million | Dropbox |
Expatriate fund
The fund's stated goal is to attract investment from Iranian expatriates and to use their experience in stimulating foreign investments.
Religious affiliation
Members of the Iranian diaspora are considered to be mostly secular. The majority of them do not take fundamental Islamic rituals, such as daily prayers or fasting, and have largely embraced Western secularism. According to a 2008 survey by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans (PAAIA), 42% of Iranian Americans identified as Muslim, 9% as Christian, 6% as Jewish, 5% as Zoroastrian, 7% as Baháʼí, and 31% as other or non-religious. A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian-Americans, commissioned by the PAAIA and conducted by Zogby Research Services, asked the respondents what their religions were. The responses broke down as follows: Muslim 31%, atheist/realist/humanist 11%, agnostic 8%, Baháʼí 7%, Jewish 5%, Protestant 5%, Roman Catholic 2%, Zoroastrian 2%, "Other" 15%, and "No response" 15%. The survey had a cooperation rate of 31.2%. The margin of error for the results was ± 5 percentage points, with higher margins of error for sub-groups. Notably, the number of Muslims decreased from 42% in 2008 to 31% in 2012.
Notes
In the period between 1961 and 2005, the United States became the main destination of Iranian emigrants. An estimated 378,995 Iranians immigrated to the United States in that period, with California being the most common destination (158,613 Iran-born in 2000), New York (17,323), Texas (15,581), Virginia (10,889), and Maryland (9,733). The Los Angeles Metropolitan Area was estimated to be home to approximately 114,712 Iranian immigrants, earning the Westwood area of Los Angeles the nickname Tehrangeles.
The U.S. Census Bureau's decennial census form does not offer a designation for individuals of Iranian descent, and therefore it is estimated that only a fraction of the total number of Iranians are writing in their ancestry. The 2000 census estimated that the Iranian American community (including the US-born children of the Iranian foreign-born) numbers around 330,000. Studies using alternative statistical methods have estimated the actual number of Iranian Americans in the range of 691,000 to 1.2 million.
References
Sources
References
- "Archived copy".
- (27 February 2021). "آمار پراکندگی ایرانیان مقیم خارج از کشور + نمودار". Gostaresh.news.
- (December 15, 1995). "Diaspora". [[Encyclopædia Iranica]].
- Mahmoudi, Hassan. (2021-04-21). "Iran Loses Highly Educated and Skilled Citizens during Long-Running “Brain Drain”".
- "کارنامه ۴۵ سال حکومت جمهوری اسلامی: از هر ۱۵ ایرانی، یک نفر کشور را ترک کرده است".
- Esfandiari, Golnaz. (2004-03-08). "Iran: Coping With The World's Highest Rate Of Brain Drain".
- "Migration Information Source - Iran: A Vast Diaspora Abroad and Millions of Refugees at Home".
- Anvari, Amirhadi. (January 21, 2026). "168 protests, 73 cities: Iranian diaspora takes uprising message worldwide". [[Iran International]].
- اقتصاد24, پایگاه خبری، تحلیلی. "افزایش بی سابقه موج مهاجرت ایرانیان در سال ۱۴۰۲ {{!}} اقتصاد24".
- "خبر آنلاین: موج مهاجرت در ایران به طبقه متوسط رسید".
- (2024-04-11). "بیسابقهترین موج مهاجرت از ایران/ وزارتخانه مهاجرت تشکیل میشود؟".
- McKeever, Amy. (2022-11-29). "Why Iran's flag is at the center of controversy at the World Cup".
- [[Moojan Momen]]. (5 November 2015). "Shi'i Islam: A Beginner's Guide". Simon and Schuster.
- "Bevölkerung in Privathaushalten nach Migrationshintergrund im weiteren Sinn nach ausgewählten Geburtsstaaten".
- (26 October 2022). "Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Ethnic or cultural origin by gender and age: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2024-09-28.".
- "Persian of Bahrain (PGID: PG011304)".
- Project, Joshua. "Persian in France".
- "Iranians abroad per country". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- (16 February 2024). "2021 United Kingdom census, United Kingdom by Country of Birth".
- (26 April 2022). "Australia's Population by Country of Birth, 2021 | Australian Bureau of Statistics".
- "Popolazione residente per cittadinanza o paese di nascita".
- "Population 31.12. By Origin, Background country, Language, Year, Age, Sex and Information".
- "【在留外国人統計(旧登録外国人統計)統計表】 | 出入国在留管理庁".
- "AIMA 2024 Report".
- "População estrangeira que adquiriu nacionalidade portuguesa (N.º) por Sexo, Nacionalidade anterior e Tipo de aquisição de nacionalidade; Anual".
- [https://www.nepo.unicamp.br/observatorio/bancointerativo/numeros-imigracao-internacional/sincre-sismigra/ Immigrants in Brazil (2024, in Portuguese)]
- "Национальный состав населения Российской Федерации согласно переписи населения 2021 года".
- "Iranians abroad per country". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- (20 July 2018). "Iranian Americans free to thrive in the U.S.".
- "12,000 foreign students studying at Iranian universities".
- "14,000 foreign students studying in Iran".
- Coughlan, Sean. (2015-06-23). "US universities on symbolic visit to Iran - BBC News".
- "Over 350,000 Iranians studying abroad: Education Minister".
- [http://iran-daily.com/1385/2528/html/economy.htm Iran Daily - Domestic Economy - 04/04/06] {{webarchive. link. (February 19, 2008)
- [http://www.iran-daily.com/1386/2971/html/economy.htm Iran Daily - Domestic Economy - 10/22/07] {{webarchive. link. (October 25, 2007)
- "Forbes 400: Pierre Omidyar". Forbes.
- Avissar, Irit. (October 27, 2010). "Canadian Jewish family in talks to buy Clal Insurance". The Jerusalem Post.
- [https://www.forbes.com/profile/farhad-moshiri/ Farhad Moshiri] {{Webarchive. link. (2019-07-14 Forbes.com. Retrieved 26 April 2013.)
- (29 September 2009). "Izak Nazarian: From Tehran Rags to LA Riches". vosizneias.com.
- "Vincent and Robert Tchenguiz". The Times.
- (9 March 2011). "Tchenguiz brothers held in Kaupthing raid: source". Reuters.
- (2007-03-08). "#754 Manny Mashouf & family". Forbes.
- (30 September 2002). "The Forbes 400". Forbes.
- (2009-03-11). "#701 Nasser Khalili - The World's Billionaires 2009". Forbes.
- (May 14, 2012). "No. 10: Hassan Khosrowshahi of Inwest Investments Ltd., DRI Capital Inc. has an estimated net worth of $0.94 billion.". Vancouver Sun.
- Wells, Jane. (20 Aug 2008). "Barbie v. Bratz: How Much $$$ For Mattel?". CNBC.
- Kurata, Phillip. (2012-02-24). "Iranian-American Woman Follows Dream to Wealth and Success". Payvan News.
- (15 August 2012). "Arash Ferdowsi - The 25 Richest Tech Entrepreneurs Under 30". Complex.
- "Iran Daily - Domestic Economy - 04/19/09".
- Gholami, Reza. (2016). "Secularism and Identity: Non-Islamiosity in the Iranian Diaspora". Routledge.
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20081221105629/http://paaia.org/galleries/new-gallery/Survey_of_Iranian_Americans_Final_Report_Dec_10%202008.pdf Public Opinion Survey of Iranian Americans]. Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans (PAAIA)/Zogby, December 2008. Retrieved April 11, 2014.
- "Persian NYers Show Their Pride at Murray Hill Parade". [[Time Warner Cable News]].
- (21 September 2009). "Disparaging Islam and the Iranian-American Identity: To Snuggle or to Struggle".
- (2012). "2012 NATIONAL PUBLIC OPINION SURVEY of IRANIAN AMERICANS regarding Potential Military Strike Against Iran". paaia.org.
- (December 2008). "Public Opinion Survey of Iranian Americans". PAAIA.
- "Migration Information Source - Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born".
- Mostashari, Ali. (October 2003). "Factsheet on the Iranian-American Community". Iranian Studies Group Research.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Iranian diaspora — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report