E.g., 06/14/2024
E.g., 06/14/2024
Profile of the Unauthorized Population - County Data (6065)
 

Profile of the Unauthorized Population:
Riverside County, CA

DemographicsEstimate% of Total
Unauthorized Population 132,000 100%
Top Countries of Birth
Mexico 100,000 76%
Philippines 8,000 6%
Guatemala 8,000 6%
El Salvador 4,000 3%
- - -
Regions of Birth
Mexico and Central America 114,000 86%
Caribbean- -
South America- -
Europe/Canada/Oceania 2,000 2%
Asia 14,000 11%
Africa- -
Years of U.S. Residence
Less than 5 18,000 13%
5 to 9 12,000 9%
10 to 14 22,000 17%
15 to 19 32,000 24%
20 or more 48,000 36%
Age
Under 16 5,000 4%
16 to 24 17,000 13%
25 to 34 27,000 21%
35 to 44 39,000 30%
45 to 54 28,000 21%
55 and over 15,000 11%
Gender
Female 64,000 48%
FamilyEstimate% of Total
Parental Status
Population ages 15 and older 128,000 100%
Reside with at least one U.S.-citizen child under 18 43,000 33%
Reside with noncitizen children only under 18 12,000 10%
Reside with no children 73,000 57%
Marital Status
Population ages 15 and older 128,000 100%
Never married 41,000 32%
Married to a U.S. citizen 20,000 16%
Married to a legal permanent resident (LPR) 9,000 7%
Married to non-U.S. citizen/non-LPR 36,000 29%
Divorced, separated, widowed 22,000 17%
Education and LanguageEstimate% of Total
School Enrollment of Children and Youth
Population ages 3 to 17 7,000 100%
Enrolled 6,000 94%
Not enrolled- -
Population ages 3 to 12 3,000 100%
Enrolled 2,000 90%
Not enrolled- -
Population ages 13 to 17 4,000 100%
Enrolled 4,000 96%
Not enrolled- -
Population ages 18 to 24 15,000 100%
Enrolled 6,000 40%
Not enrolled 9,000 60%
Educational Attainment of Adults
Population ages 25 and older 110,000 100%
0-5 grade 19,000 17%
6-8 grade 20,000 18%
9-12 grade 20,000 18%
High school diploma or equivalent 28,000 26%
Some college or associate’s degree 14,000 13%
Bachelor’s, graduate, or professional degree 9,000 8%
English Proficiency
Population ages 5 and older 132,000 100%
Speak only English 7,000 5%
Speak English "very well" 35,000 26%
Speak English "well" 27,000 21%
Speak English "not well"/"not at all" 63,000 48%
Top 5 Languages Spoken at Home
Population ages 5 and older 132,000 100%
Spanish 110,000 84%
English 7,000 5%
Tagalog 6,000 5%
-- -
-- -
WorkforceEstimate% of Total
Labor Force Participation
Civilian population ages 16 and older 127,000 100%
Employed 74,000 58%
Unemployed 6,000 5%
Not in the labor force 47,000 37%
Top Industries of Employment
Civilian employed population ages 16 and older 74,000 100%
Construction 14,000 19%
Accommodation and food services, arts, entertainment, and recreation 12,000 17%
Professional, scientific, management, administrative, and waste management services 11,000 15%
Manufacturing 8,000 11%
Retail trade 6,000 8%
EconomicsEstimate% of Total
Family Income
Below 50% of the poverty level 14,000 11%
50-99% of the poverty level 22,000 17%
100-149% of the poverty level 23,000 17%
150-199% of the poverty level 18,000 14%
At or above 200% of the poverty level 55,000 42%
Access to Health Insurance
Uninsured 55,000 41%
Home Ownership*
Homeowner 55,000 41%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Source: These 2019 data result from Migration Policy Institute (MPI) analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data from the pooled 2015-19 American Community Survey (ACS) and the 2008 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), weighted to 2019 unauthorized immigrant population estimates provided by Jennifer Van Hook of The Pennsylvania State University.

Note: For U.S. and state estimates of the unauthorized population potentially eligible for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, click here.

Data-related notes
* “Homeowners” are unauthorized immigrants residing in homes that are owned, not rented.

+ Includes the following Colorado counties: Adams, Broomfield, Clear Creek, Douglas, Elbert, Gilpin, and Jefferson, as well as portions of Arapahoe, Boulder, and Weld counties.

++ NECTAs refer to New England City and Town Areas, geographic entities defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for use as alternatives to counties in the six-state New England region.

Estimate for China includes Hong Kong but excludes Taiwan; estimate for Korea includes South Korea and North Korea.

“School Enrollment of Children and Youth” refers to unauthorized immigrants who reported attending school or college at any time in the three months prior to the survey.

For languages, “Chinese” includes Mandarin, Cantonese, and other Chinese languages; “English” includes English, Jamaican Creole, Krio, Pidgin Krio, and other English-based Creole languages; “French” includes French, Patois, and Cajun; “Pacific Island languages” includes Ilocano, Samoan, Hawaiian, Sebuano, Chamorro, Guamanian, Marshallese, Trukese, Tongan, and other Austronesian languages, but excludes Tagalog and Filipino, which are reported separately; “Portuguese” includes Portuguese and Cape Verdean Creole; “Sub-Saharan African” includes Swahili or other Bantu languages, Mande, Fulani, Kru, and other unspecified African languages; “Tagalog” includes Tagalog and Filipino.

For industries, “Other services” are miscellaneous services, not including the following services listed separately: (1) professional, scientific, management, administrative, and waste management services; (2) educational services; (3) health and social services; and (4) accommodation and food services, arts, entertainment, and recreation.

 “-” estimates are zero, not applicable, or not displayed due to small sample size.

Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.

Methodology in Brief:
MPI’s method uses information from the SIPP to assign legal status to noncitizens in the ACS. In the SIPP, noncitizens report whether they currently have lawful permanent resident (LPR) status—i.e., a green card. Those without LPR status may be recent refugees, temporary visitors (e.g., international students or high-skilled H-1B workers), or unauthorized immigrants. Our method maps characteristics such as country of birth, year of U.S. entry, age, gender, and educational attainment between the two surveys, and those noncitizens in the ACS who have characteristics similar to those reporting LPR status in the SIPP are coded as LPRs in the ACS. The remaining noncitizens—who are similar in characteristics to those not reporting LPR status in the SIPP—are classified as either unauthorized or legal temporary migrants, depending on whether they meet the qualifications for H-1B and the other temporary visa classifications. Estimates of unauthorized immigrants are weighted to match control totals (benchmarks) for immigrants from a set of origin countries and world regions. These control totals are calculated by subtracting the number of legal immigrants from the total of all immigrants for each country and region that are captured in the ACS data. The number of legal immigrants is estimated by adding up all legal admissions from each country and region in every year—using Department of Homeland Security administrative data—and then reducing this number to account for deaths and emigration of legal immigrants. Finally, the unauthorized immigrant population estimates are adjusted upward slightly to account for the undercount of this population in the ACS. 

MPI’s overall method was developed in consultation with James Bachmeier of Temple University and Jennifer Van Hook of The Pennsylvania State University, Population Research Institute. For more detail on the methods, see MPI, “MPI Methodology for Assigning Legal Status to Noncitizen Respondents in U.S. Census Bureau Survey Data.” The control totals were developed by Van Hook. These estimates have the same sampling and coverage errors as any other survey-based estimates that rely on ACS and other Census Bureau data.