In the last decade, the population in South Africa has increased by around 10-million people, with a total of 62-million people living in the country, according to the 2022 census.
Statistics South Africa released the fourth democratic census on Tuesday. The last census was published in 2011.
According to the data, there are 62 027 503 people in South Africa compared to the 2011 census, which recorded 51 770 560 people. This translated to a population growth rate of 1.8%.
Compared to the first democratic census published in the '90s, the population increased by more than 20-million people from 40 583 573 recorded in 1996.
The census also showed that there are more than 2.4-million international migrants in the country, which equates to around 3% of the total population.
Most of the international migrants come from the SADC region. Around 45.5% of international migrants come from Zimbabwe, 18.7% from Mozambique, and 10.2% from Lesotho.
Population composition
Black Africans remained the dominant population group, accounting for 81.4% of the population, which translates to around 50.4-million.
The black African population increased by around 9-million compared to the 2011 census, which recorded around 41-million black people.
The coloured population accounted for 8.2% or around 5-million people, followed by white people at 7.3% or 4.5-million people.
According to the data, the white population has steadily declined from 11% of the total population in 1996 to 8.9% in 2011 and then 7.3% in 2022.
The Indian and Asian population accounts for 2.7% of the total population.
Women constituted 51.1% of the population, while men accounted for 48.5%.
Population distribution by languages spoken at home
IsiZulu remains the language most spoken at home, accounting for 24.4%, followed by isiXhosa at 16.3%, Afrikaans at 10.6% and Sepedi at 10%.
Around 8.7% of the population speak English at home.
IsiZulu speakers increased by 1.7% compared to 2011, while isiXhosa speakers increased by 0.3% and Afrikaans speakers decreased by 2.9%.
Religion
The majority of the population reported that they were Christians (85.3%) followed by traditional African religions (7.8%).
Around 1.6% of the population subscribed to Islam, while 2.9% said they had no religious affiliation.
Population by province
Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal remained the most populated provinces, with 15-million and 12.4-million people living there, respectively. The Western Cape has a population of around 7.4-million.
The Northern Cape has the smallest population of around 1.3-million people.
In terms of internal migration, Gauteng dominated, receiving more than a third of all internal migrants, followed by the Western Cape with 15%.
In the last decade, KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, the Eastern Cape and the Free State experienced an outflow of people.
Housing
Based on census 2022 findings, a total of 17.8-million households were recorded in South Africa, an increase from the 14-million households recorded in 2011. This includes formal and informal dwellings.
Gauteng with 5.3-million households and KwaZulu-Natal with 2.9-million, account for just under 50% of all households in the country.
The Northern Cape recorded the fewest households at 330 000.
According to the data, the number of households who reside in informal dwellings has declined from 13.6% in 2011 to 8.1% in 2022.
Meanwhile, households residing in formal dwelling units increased to 88.5% in 2022 from the 65.1% recorded in 1996.
Homelessness
The census also looked at collating the number of homeless people in South Africa.
Around 55 719 people were recorded as homeless in 2022. Of these, 44 512 were roofless while 11 207 were in shelters.
Gauteng recorded the highest number of homeless people at 45.6% followed by the Western Cape at 17.5%.
As a metropolitan area, the City of Tshwane recorded the highest proportion of homelessness.
Most people recorded loss of job/income (41.3%) as the reason for their homelessness, followed by alcohol ...