Population

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Population

Main articles: Americans and Race and ethnicity in the United States See also: List of U.S. states by population The U.S. Census Bureau reported 331,449,281 residents on April 1, 2020,[w][392] making the United States the third-most-populous country in the world, after China and India.[180] The Census Bureau's official 2024 population estimate was 340,110,988, an increase of 2.6% since the 2020 census.[393] According to the Bureau's U.S. Population Clock, on July 1, 2024, the U.S. population had a net gain of one person every 16 seconds, or about 5400 people per day.[394] In 2023, 51% of Americans age 15 and over were married, 6% were widowed, 10% were divorced, and 34% had never been married.[395] In 2023, the total fertility rate for the U.S. stood at 1.6 children per woman,[396] and, at 23%, it had the world's highest rate of children living in single-parent households in 2019.[397] The United States has a diverse population; 37 ancestry groups have more than one million members.[398] White Americans with ancestry from Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa form the largest racial and ethnic group at 57.8% of the United States population.[399][400] Hispanic and Latino Americans form the second-largest group and are 18.7% of the United States population. African Americans constitute the country's third-largest ancestry group and are 12.1% of the total U.S. population.[398] Asian Americans are the country's fourth-largest group, composing 5.9% of the United States population. The country's 3.7 million Native Americans account for about 1%,[398] and some 574 native tribes are recognized by the federal government.[401] In 2022, the median age of the United States population was 38.9 years.[402] Language Main article: Languages of the United States  Most spoken languages in the U.S. While many languages are spoken in the United States, English is by far the most commonly spoken and written.[403] Although there is no official language at the federal level, some laws, such as U.S. naturalization requirements, standardize English, and most states have declared it the official language.[404] Three states and four U.S. territories have recognized local or indigenous languages in addition to English, including Hawaii (Hawaiian),[405] Alaska (twenty Native languages),[x][406] South Dakota (Sioux),[407] American Samoa (Samoan), Puerto Rico (Spanish), Guam (Chamorro), and the Northern Mariana Islands (Carolinian and Chamorro). In total, 169 Native American languages are spoken in the United States.[408] In Puerto Rico, Spanish is more widely spoken than English.[409] According to the American Community Survey (2020),[410] some 245.4 million people in the U.S. age five and older spoke only English at home. About 41.2 million spoke Spanish at home, making it the second most commonly used language. Other languages spoken at home by one million people or more include Chinese (3.40 million), Tagalog (1.71 million), Vietnamese (1.52 million), Arabic (1.39 million), French (1.18 million), Korean (1.07 million), and Russian (1.04 million). German, spoken by 1 million people at home in 2010, fell to 857,000 total speakers in 2020.[411]

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