The United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Kuwait lead globally with foreign populations exceeding 70-80% of totals, but native citizens remain the majority in each.​

Closest Countries by Foreign Share

Country Foreign-Born % Total Pop. (2024 est.) Foreign Pop. Notes ​
UAE 88.5% 9.5M 8.4M Mostly South Asian workers ​
Qatar 76.7% 3.0M 2.3M Expatriate labor in energy sector ​
Kuwait ~70% 4.3M 3.0M Oil-driven migrant workforce ​
Bahrain ~55% 1.5M 825K Gulf state migrant patterns ​
Singapore 48.7% 5.8M 2.8M Skilled professionals, PR holders ​

Gulf States Phenomenon

Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) nations host vast expatriate populations due to oil wealth and lax citizenship laws. UAE citizens number ~1.1 million against 8.4 million foreigners, primarily Indians (3.5M), Pakistanis (1.7M), and Bangladeshis. Strict nationality rules preserve Emirati control over land and governance.​

Qatar's 2.3 million foreigners vastly outnumber 712,000 citizens, fueled by World Cup infrastructure and LNG projects. Non-citizens face temporary residency tied to employment, with rare naturalization. Kuwait mirrors this, importing labor while citizens enjoy subsidies.​

Small Island and City-States

Singapore integrates 2.8 million foreign-born (48.7%), including permanent residents from China, India, and Malaysia. Citizens total 3.0 million, bolstered by high birth incentives. Foreign talent drives finance and tech hubs.​

Nauru (21.3% foreign-born, pop. 12K) and Tokelau (51.2%, pop. 2.5K) show elevated ratios in micro-states, often Pacific workers. None flip the citizen majority.​

Why No Majority-Foreigner States Exist

Citizenship laws worldwide favor birthright (jus soli/jus sanguinis) or long residency, blocking simple demographic flips. Guest worker programs in GCC cap rights, preventing naturalization floods. UN data confirms no sovereign state exceeds 50% foreign-born when distinguishing citizens from residents.​

Historical Near-Misses

Colonial Hong Kong peaked at ~30% foreign-born pre-1997 handover. Post-independence Algeria reversed French settler majorities via repatriation. Modern micro-nations like Monaco (80% foreign residents) retain citizen cores via property thresholds.​

Implications of High Foreign Shares

High ratios strain housing and services; UAE invests in expatriate compounds. Qatar's reforms grant some kafala workers better protections post-2022 World Cup. Singapore balances via points-based immigration favoring skills.​

Economic reliance on foreigners sustains GDP: UAE remittances exceed $50B annually. Yet cultural preservation drives nativist policies, like Emiratization quotas mandating citizen hiring.​

Data Limitations

UN figures blend foreign-born (possible naturalized citizens) with non-citizens, inflating ratios. Qatar census excludes some migrants; true non-citizen % nears 85%. 2026 updates unlikely to shift standings absent mass naturalizations.​

Future Projections

Climate migration may elevate ratios in labor-short states by 2030. AI automation could reduce low-skill inflows, stabilizing GCC figures. No forecasts predict citizen-minority scenarios due to policy barriers.

GCC dominance persists: UAE projected at 90% foreign-born by 2030, still shy of citizen majority reversal