Malta’s population increased by 4% in a year

Malta’s population increased by 4% in a year

LA VALLETTA (MALTA) (MNA/ITALPRESS) – Malta’s population is now up to over 563,000 people, according to the latest national statistics.

The number of people in Malta has shot up by almost 21,000, or 4 per cent, in a year to reach 563,443 by the end of 2023. This figure stood at 542,051 a year earlier. This increase was mostly driven by immigration, which reached its highest ever level, with over 42,000 people moving to Malta throughout 2023.

Some 33,000 were third-country nationals including UK citizens, with almost 7,000 EU nationals also coming to live in Malta. Some 2,200 Maltese citizens also returned to Malta in 2023, after a spell living abroad.

Meanwhile, emigration has almost doubled from 13,000 in 2022 to over 21,000 the following year. Most people who left the country were third-country nationals, with 13,500 leaving the country throughout the year, along with 6,000 EU citizens and 1,700 Maltese.

Malta’s migration has also had an effect on the gender balance across Malta’s population. Women in Malta outnumbered men until 2013. Today there are 34,000 more men in Malta than there are women.

Much of this difference can be found amongst working age people between the ages of 20 and 50, which make up roughly half the population. In this group, there are 35,000 more men than women.

People over 60 now make up a just under a quarter of Malta’s total population.

4,462 babies were born in 2023, more than during any other year since 2016. Last year’s tally was 153 more than the previous year. In almost half of all births, the parent who gave birth was between the ages of 30 to 34, with a further one in five between 35 and 39, suggesting that fewer people are choosing to have children throughout their 20s.

Deaths throughout the year topped the 4,000 mark, but were lower than at any point since 2019, with Malta registering 200 fewer deaths last year compared to 2022.

Seven out of every ten deaths were among people over the age of 75.

Meanwhile, infant mortality has dipped to its lowest levels in the past 15 years, with just 16 deaths amongst infants under the age of one. This is half the high of 34 registered in 2008.

(ITALPRESS).

Foto; Agenzia Fotogramma


Source: medNews