Special Report

Countries Accepting The Most Refugees (And Where They're Coming From)

Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

The worldwide refugee crisis has worsened over the last five years. As of the end of 2018, there was a “total population of concern” of 74.8 million people, comprising refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced persons, returnees and stateless persons, according to the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees), the UN’s refugee agency. That is an increase of more than 74% since 2013. According to the UNHCR, one person becomes displaced every 2 seconds somewhere in the world.

These displaced people have been forced to leave their homes as a result of war, persecution, violence, or human rights violations. Of that number, 20.1 million people were considered refugees

Syria, ravaged by civil war since 2011, holds the dubious distinction of having the most displaced people in the world, with 13 million people forcibly displaced as of the end of 2018, or more than half of that nation’s population. Many of those displaced people have fled to neighboring nations such as Turkey and Lebanon. Thousands, however, have gone to Germany, whose total refugee population has soared more than fivefold since 2013.

In other parts of the world, developing nations with limited resources have become havens for refugees fleeing conflict. Uganda, ranked as the 15th poorest country on Earth in 2018, became home to more than 1 million refugees, many from South Sudan, where civil war has ravaged that country. Uganda has taken in the third most refugees of any country, according to UNHCR data, and its refugee population has soared over 400% since 2013.

In the United States, immigration has become a hot-button issue and one of the biggest news stories of the year. The country has taken in more than 313,000 refugees, placing America 17th in number of total refugees allowed in. The country sending the most refugees to the United States is China, with more than 77,000.

Click here to see the countries accepting the most refugees (and where they’re coming from)

Marco Di Lauro / Getty Images

25. Italy
> Total refugees as of 2018: 189,172
> Total population in 2018: 60,431,283
> Share of total population: 0.3%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 148.0%
> Largest source country: Nigeria

[in-text-ad]

runran / Flickr

24. India
> Total refugees as of 2018: 195,867
> Total population in 2018: 1,352,617,328
> Share of total population: Less than 0.1%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 4.0%
> Largest source country: China

dfid / Flickr

23. Egypt, Arab Rep.
> Total refugees as of 2018: 246,711
> Total population in 2018: 98,423,595
> Share of total population: 0.3%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 7.2%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

David Ramos / Getty Images

22. Sweden
> Total refugees as of 2018: 248,165
> Total population in 2018: 10,183,175
> Share of total population: 2.4%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 117.4%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

[in-text-ad-2]

eu_echo / Flickr

21. Yemen, Rep.
> Total refugees as of 2018: 264,349
> Total population in 2018: 28,498,687
> Share of total population: 0.9%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 9.6%
> Largest source country: Somalia

Natalie Behring / Getty Images

20. Tanzania
> Total refugees as of 2018: 278,322
> Total population in 2018: 56,318,348
> Share of total population: 0.5%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 172.6%
> Largest source country: Burundi

[in-text-ad]

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

19. Iraq
> Total refugees as of 2018: 283,013
> Total population in 2018: 38,433,600
> Share of total population: 0.7%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 14.9%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

18. South Sudan
> Total refugees as of 2018: 291,833
> Total population in 2018: 10,975,920
> Share of total population: 2.7%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 27.1%
> Largest source country: Sudan

John Moore / Getty Images

17. United States
> Total refugees as of 2018: 313,182
> Total population in 2018: 327,167,434
> Share of total population: 0.1%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 18.8%
> Largest source country: China

[in-text-ad-2]

Photo by Betsy Joles / Getty Images

16. China
> Total refugees as of 2018: 321,733
> Total population in 2018: 1,392,730,000
> Share of total population: Less than 0.1%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 6.9%
> Largest source country: Viet Nam

Carl Court / Getty Images

15. France
> Total refugees as of 2018: 368,305
> Total population in 2018: 66,987,244
> Share of total population: 0.5%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 58.4%
> Largest source country: Various/Unknown

[in-text-ad]

Marco Di Lauro / Getty Images

14. Cameroon
> Total refugees as of 2018: 380,307
> Total population in 2018: 25,216,237
> Share of total population: 1.5%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 231.4%
> Largest source country: Central African Rep.

Oli Scarff / Getty Images

13. Kenya
> Total refugees as of 2018: 421,228
> Total population in 2018: 51,393,010
> Share of total population: 0.8%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: -21.3%
> Largest source country: Somalia

Uriel Sinai / Getty Images

12. Chad
> Total refugees as of 2018: 451,198
> Total population in 2018: 15,477,751
> Share of total population: 2.9%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 3.8%
> Largest source country: Sudan

[in-text-ad-2]

Uriel Sinai / Getty Images

11. Congo, Dem. Rep.
> Total refugees as of 2018: 529,045
> Total population in 2018: 84,068,091
> Share of total population: 0.6%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 366.7%
> Largest source country: Rwanda

Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images

10. Jordan
> Total refugees as of 2018: 715,293
> Total population in 2018: 9,956,011
> Share of total population: 7.2%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 11.4%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

[in-text-ad]

Natalie Behring / Getty Images

9. Ethiopia
> Total refugees as of 2018: 903,211
> Total population in 2018: 109,224,559
> Share of total population: 0.8%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 108.1%
> Largest source country: South Sudan

Photo by Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

8. Bangladesh
> Total refugees as of 2018: 906,635
> Total population in 2018: 161,356,039
> Share of total population: 0.6%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 292.2%
> Largest source country: Myanmar

53849189@N03 / Flickr

7. Lebanon
> Total refugees as of 2018: 949,653
> Total population in 2018: 6,848,925
> Share of total population: 13.9%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 10.9%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

[in-text-ad-2]

BornaMir / Getty Images

6. Iran, Islamic Rep.
> Total refugees as of 2018: 979,435
> Total population in 2018: 81,800,269
> Share of total population: 1.2%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 14.2%
> Largest source country: Afghanistan

Sean Gallup / Getty Images

5. Germany
> Total refugees as of 2018: 1,063,765
> Total population in 2018: 82,927,922
> Share of total population: 1.3%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 467.1%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

[in-text-ad]

Scott Nelson / Getty Images

4. Sudan
> Total refugees as of 2018: 1,078,275
> Total population in 2018: 41,801,533
> Share of total population: 2.6%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 574.5%
> Largest source country: South Sudan

Jack Taylor / Getty Images

3. Uganda
> Total refugees as of 2018: 1,165,636
> Total population in 2018: 42,723,139
> Share of total population: 2.7%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 428.5%
> Largest source country: South Sudan

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

2. Pakistan
> Total refugees as of 2018: 1,404,008
> Total population in 2018: 212,215,030
> Share of total population: 0.7%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: -13.1%
> Largest source country: Afghanistan

[in-text-ad-2]

Gokhan Sahin / Getty Images

1. Turkey
> Total refugees as of 2018: 3,681,658
> Total population in 2018: 82,319,724
> Share of total population: 4.5%
> Change in refugee population 2013-2018: 503.6%
> Largest source country: Syrian Arab Rep.

Are You Still Paying With a Debit Card?

The average American spends $17,274 on debit cards a year, and it’s a HUGE mistake. First, debit cards don’t have the same fraud protections as credit cards. Once your money is gone, it’s gone. But more importantly you can actually get something back from this spending every time you swipe.

Issuers are handing out wild bonuses right now. With some you can earn up to 5% back on every purchase. That’s like getting a 5% discount on everything you buy!

Our top pick is kind of hard to imagine. Not only does it pay up to 5% back, it also includes a $200 cash back reward in the first six months, a 0% intro APR, and…. $0 annual fee. It’s quite literally free money for any one that uses a card regularly. Click here to learn more!

 

Flywheel Publishing has partnered with CardRatings to provide coverage of credit card products. Flywheel Publishing and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.