Latvia Flag

Latvia

Capital:
Riga
Continent:
Europe
Region(s):
Northern Europe
Largest Cities:
Riga, Daugavpils
Abbreviation:
LVA

1.9M
Total Population
151
Population Rank
29.80
Density (km²)
-18.3K -0.51%
Annual Population Growth

Population of Latvia

Latvia's population structure shows a notably lower male to female ratio of 0.86 to 1, with a median male age of 40.64 years old and a median female age of 48.12 years old. The highest concentration of adults under 75 years old is in the 37 and 36 year-old age groups, while the lowest concentration is in the 26 and 27 year-old age groups.

Latvia Population

Data after 2022 is projected based on recent change

Latvia Population Clock

Latvia Population*
1,861,487
Births per Day
38
Deaths per Day
75
Emigrations per Day
20
Net Change per Day
57
2025 Population Change*
2,451

* As of 2/12/2025

1 birth

Every 37.9 minutes

1 death

Every 19.2 minutes

1 emigrant

Every 1.2 hours

1 person

Every 25.3 minutes

Population by City

City
2025 Pop.
Riga742,572
Daugavpils111,564

Latvia Overview

Latvia, officially the Republic of Latvia, is located in the Baltic region of Northern Europe where it is bordered by Russia, Belarus, Estonia, Lithuania, and a maritime border with Sweden.

Latvia’s estimated population is currently lower than the population of 2.07 million at the last census in 2011. Latvia has a relatively low density of just 34 people per square kilometer (89/sq mi), which ranks 166th in the world. Latvia is currently the third-poorest country in the European Union and about 30,000 people leave the country each year, most of whom are young and well educated. This is most visible in the capital of Riga, which is becoming a ghost town.

Latvia Demographics

While Latvia’s population has been diverse for many centuries, its demographics began to change in the 20th century during the World Wars, occupation by the Soviet Union, the Holocaust, and the emigration and expulsion of Baltic Germans. Latvians made up 68% of the 1.83 million population in 1897, Russians accounted for 12%, Jews made up 7.4%, Germans made up 6.2% and Poles accounted for 3.4%.

In 2011, Latvians and Livonians, the indigenous people of the area, accounted for 62% of the population, followed by Russians (26.9%), Belarusians (3.3%), Ukrainians (2.2%), Poles (2.2%), Lithuanians (1.2%), Jews (0.2%), Romani (0.3%), Germans (0.1%), Estonians (0.1%) and other groups (1.3%). There are about 290,000 non-citizens in the country, which represents 14% of the population.

Ethnic Latvians are a minority in many cities such as Daugavpils. The percentage of ethnic Latvians is steadily growing, even though their numbers are dropping.