Population; key figures
Periods | Population in institutional households (x 1 000) |
---|---|
2024 | 289 |
Source: CBS. |
Table explanation
Key figures on the population of the Netherlands.
The following information is available:
- Population by sex;
- Population by marital status;
- Population by age (groups);
- Population by origin;
- Private households;
- Persons in institutional households;
- Population growth;
- Population density.
CBS is in transition towards a new classification of the population by origin. Greater emphasis is now placed on where a person was born, aside from where that person’s parents were born. The term ‘migration background’ is no longer used in this regard. The main categories western/non-western are being replaced by categories based on continents and a few countries that share a specific migration history with the Netherlands. The new classification is being implemented gradually in tables and publications on population by origin.
Data available from: 1950
Figures on population by origin are only available from 2022 at this moment. The periods 1996 through 2021 will be added to the table at a later time.
Status of the figures:
All the figures are final.
Changes as of 17 July 2024:
Final figures with regard to population growth for 2023 and final figures of the population on 1 January 2024 have been added.
Changes as of 26 April 2023:
None, this is a new table. This table succeeds the table Population; key figures; 1950-2022. See section 3.
The following changes have been implemented compared to the discontinued table:
- The topic folder 'Population by migration background' has been replaced by 'Population by origin';
- The underlying topic folders regarding 'first and second generation migration background' have been replaced by 'Born in the Netherlands' and 'Born abroad';
- The origin countries Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Turkey have been assigned to the continent of Asia (previously Europe).
When will new figures be published?
In the last quarter of 2025 final figures with regard to population growth for 2024 and final figures of the population on 1 January 2025 will be added.
Description topics
- Population in institutional households
- Up to and including 1987 the figures refer to the situation on 31 December, 1988-1994 to the midyear situation, from 1995 onwards to the situation on 1 January.
Institutional household:
Household consisting of two or more people living in one accommodation whose housing and daily needs are provided professionally.
Break in series of (persons in) institutional households
Up to and including 2012, data on institutional households were based on address information provided by municipalities. As of 2014, the data have been taken from secondary surveys. 2013 is an intermediate year. The starting point for 2013 was the address information for 2012, supplemented by secondary sources; the quality of data for 2013 may therefore be slightly lower. The main data sources from 2014 onwards are data on individuals who receive residential care under the Long-term Care Act (WLZ, previously the Exceptional Medical Expenses Act, AWBZ) and for which a personal contribution was paid and institutional addresses based on the website zorgkaartnederland.nl. Institutional households are covered better with the method used from 2014 onwards. Furthermore, from 2014 onwards, institutional households also include asylum seekers that live in asylum reception centres and are registered as a resident in the Personal Records Database (BRP). As a result of these changes, 249 thousand persons were counted as members of institutional households in 2014, an estimated 35 thousand more than would be counted using the former method. As of 2011, a new production method has been used to compile household data. This new method uses data on cohabiting couples from the Tax and Customs Administration in addition to data from the Personal Records Database. The number of persons in institutional households was nearly 11 thousand higher on 1 January 2011 than on 1 January 2010. Around half of this increase was due to improvements in the survey method.