Filipinos really are everywhere, and the numbers now back up what many of us have long felt in our hearts and in our families’ stories.
Filipinos in the Halls of Power
In New Zealand, Paulo Garcia made history in 2019 as the country’s first Member of Parliament of Filipino descent, becoming the first person born in the Philippines elected to another country’s national legislature. In 2024, Francisco Hernandez followed as the second Filipino-New Zealander MP, underscoring how the Kiwi-Filipino community has grown confident and visible enough to send its own leaders to Parliament. These milestones echo a broader truth: Filipino communities abroad are no longer just quiet workers; they are now visible in politics, media, academia, and business in many parts of the world.
How Many Filipinos Live in the United States?
In the United States, Filipinos form one of the largest Asian-origin communities and have been deeply woven into American life for more than a century. Recent analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data estimates that about 4.6 million people in the U.S. identified as Filipino in 2023, making them the third-largest Asian-origin group in the country and roughly 19% of all Asian Americans. California alone is home to more than 1.7 million Filipinos, followed by large populations in states such as Hawaii, Texas, Washington, Nevada, Florida, and Illinois. For many Filipino immigrants and their children, America has become the place where family stories of sacrifice, nursing shifts, and remittances back home are passed on to new generations born in U.S. hospitals and suburbs.
Where Else Are Filipinos “Everywhere”?
The United States hosts the single largest share of Filipinos abroad, but it is only one piece of a much bigger diaspora. According to estimates compiled by the Migration Policy Institute from United Nations data, about one in three international migrants from the Philippines live in the U.S.; other major destinations include Saudi Arabia (around 645,000), Canada (about 634,000), the United Arab Emirates (around 565,000), Australia (about 286,000), and Japan (around 275,000). Behind these numbers are very different kinds of journeys: long-term immigrants who become citizens in North America, temporary contract workers in the Middle East, caregivers in Europe and East Asia, and seafarers who spend most of their lives at sea rather than on any one country’s soil.
Selected countries with large Filipino communities
These figures do not even fully capture Filipinos born abroad to Filipino parents, or those with mixed ancestry who may not always be counted in official statistics, which is why the popular phrase “Filipinos are everywhere” rings so true.
Why the Filipino Diaspora Spread So Widely
The global spread of Filipinos is rooted in a combination of economic necessity, government policy, and cultural values that prize education and family support. Since the 1970s, the Philippine government has actively supported overseas employment, which today sends workers into health care, shipping, domestic work, engineering, and information technology across the globe. For many families, an overseas job was the most realistic way to finance children’s schooling, buy a modest house back home, or help aging parents with medical care. In countless cases, a single overseas worker, like a nurse, seafarer, or caregiver—carried the financial hopes of an entire extended family, turning migration into both a personal sacrifice and a collective survival strategy.
From Invisible Workers to Visible Citizens
One striking change over the last few decades is how Filipinos have moved from being mostly seen as temporary workers to being recognized as permanent residents, citizens, and leaders in their adopted countries. In the U.S., Filipino Americans now include not just nurses and Navy veterans but also professors, tech professionals, judges, and elected officials at local and state levels. In places like New Zealand, the rise of leaders such as Paulo Garcia and Francisco Hernandez shows that Filipino communities are claiming a public voice, helping shape national conversations on migration, diversity, and identity.
- Economic Drivers & Opportunity: Many Filipinos work abroad to provide better lives for their families due to limited, low-paying opportunities at home.
- Major Workforce Sectors: They make up a significant portion of the global workforce, including up to 25% of all merchant marine crews and a large percentage of international nurses and healthcare workers.
- Key Destinations: Top locations for Filipinos abroad include the United States (4 million), Canada, Saudi Arabia, Japan, and Australia.
- Cultural Impact: Known for hospitality and adaptability, Filipinos are often found in service and caregiving roles worldwide.
- Long-Term Impact: Remittances from these workers are a crucial part of the Philippine economy, often contributing 8–12% of the GDP.
THD News: If you are wondering, what all the banging noise in the small Conference room in the Lobby: It will be the new office of Jenny. Jenny's old office will be taken by Jimmy ( I do not know his last name yet), the incoming newly hired Assistant General Manager. THD is expecting Jimmy here before the end of this month. Looking forward for Jimmy's interactions with us. I heard he will be in-charge of all residents services and perhaps a liaison to the Residents as well.



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