How Many South Africans Are Emigrating? A Decade of Brain Drain in Statistics

How Many South Africans Are Emigrating? A Decade of Brain Drain in Statistics

Demographics · Brain Drain · 2025

How Many South Africans Are Emigrating? A Decade of Brain Drain in Statistics

From 501,600 South Africans living abroad in 2000 to 914,901 by 2020 — and rising. Here is the most complete synthesis of emigration statistics available.

✦ Updated April 2026
✦ 16 min read
✦ Beds & All Research Team

914,901
SA citizens abroad
by 2020
UN DESA / Stats SA 2023
More left 2015–2020
than 2010–2015
SA Diaspora data
27%
Of SA adults have
considered emigrating
Afrobarometer 2022
90%
Of SA students want
to work abroad
PPS Student Index 2022/23

Few conversations in South Africa are as emotionally loaded as the one about emigration. It appears in Sunday dinner arguments, family WhatsApp groups, financial planning conversations, and political debates. It is simultaneously overstated by some (“everyone is leaving”) and dismissed by others (“it is not as bad as people think”). The truth, as always, lies in the data — and the data tells a story more consistent and more concerning than either camp typically acknowledges.

This article is the most comprehensive consumer-facing synthesis of South Africa’s emigration statistics available. We have drawn on the Statistics South Africa Migration Profile Report 2023 — the country’s first dedicated migration report — as well as data from the Afrobarometer 2024, the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, the OECD, and multiple destination-country immigration authorities. The goal: a single, reliable reference that covers the scale of departures, where people are going, which professions are leaving fastest, and what the trajectory looks like going forward.

The Numbers: Two Decades of South African Emigration

The most authoritative long-run data on South African emigration comes from the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs’ International Migrant Stock database — the same source used by Stats SA’s 2023 Migration Profile Report for its baseline analysis. The data is compiled every five years and represents South African citizens residing outside the country for more than six months.

South African Citizens Abroad — UN DESA Stock Data

Sources: UN DESA International Migrant Stock; Stats SA Migration Profile 2023; Daily Maverick April 2024

2000
501,600
2005
~640,000
2010
743,807
2015
786,554
2020 (latest UN data)
914,901

+82%

The number of South Africans living abroad grew by 82% between 2000 and 2020. Between 2015 and 2020 alone, 128,347 additional South Africans joined the diaspora — three times as many as the preceding five-year period.

Note: UN DESA data represents citizens in residence abroad for 6+ months. It does not capture short-term departures, citizens who have become naturalised elsewhere and dropped their SA identity, or undocumented migration. Actual totals are likely higher.

The acceleration between 2015 and 2020 is the most striking feature of the data. The 128,000+ people who left in that five-year window exceeded the total for the preceding decade. This coincides with a period of significant political turbulence (state capture, Zondo Commission), intensifying load-shedding from 2019, rising unemployment, and declining perceptions of safety — all of which feature prominently in survey data on emigration motivations.

PPS notes that the number of South Africans living abroad grew from approximately 1.5 million in 2001 to over 2 million in 2021 when using a broader measure that includes long-term residents and naturalised citizens with South African origin — suggesting the UN DESA figure significantly undercounts the full diaspora.

Where South Africans Are Going: The Destination Countries

Destination data for South African emigrants comes from multiple sources: receiving-country immigration statistics, the Stats SA Migration Profile, and the Afrobarometer survey. The picture is remarkably consistent. A handful of English-speaking countries absorb the overwhelming majority of South African emigrants — which reflects both linguistic advantages and active skills-recruitment programs in those countries.

# Destination Country Diaspora Size Trend 2000–2020 Key Pathway for South Africans
1 🇬🇧 United Kingdom ~250,000 +80% since 2000 UK Ancestry Visa; Skilled Worker route. NHS actively recruits SA doctors and nurses. Largest established SA community globally. London, Manchester, Edinburgh.
2 🇦🇺 Australia ~200,000 +80% since 2000 General Skilled Migration program; 26% of SA emigrants 2006–2016. Perth, Sydney, Melbourne are primary cities. Strong SA community networks and lifestyle appeal.
3 🇺🇸 United States ~130,000+ Steady growth 13.4% of SA emigrants 2006–2016. Technology, healthcare, and finance professionals. New York, California, Texas primary destinations. Growing significantly post-2020.
4 🇳🇿 New Zealand ~70,000 Fast-growing Green List pathway for healthcare professionals and engineers. Points-based Skilled Migrant Category. South Africa’s proportion of NZ emigrants rose 80% since 2000.
5 🇨🇦 Canada ~60,000+ Surging Express Entry system. Doctors and nurses exempt from re-certification in Canada. One immigration consultant received 17,000 SA enquiries in a single year. Growing strongly post-2020.
6 🇵🇹 Portugal Growing New major dest. Emerged in top-5 destinations by 2022. EU access, Golden Visa (fund investment), lower cost of living than UK/Australia. Growing Afrikaans and Portuguese-speaking SA community.
7 🇲🇺 Mauritius Growing Retirement/HNW Popular among high-net-worth South Africans. Favourable tax regime, offshore financial planning access, proximity to SA. Retirement and business owner destination.
8 🇩🇪 Germany Rising Emerging Germany’s 2024 Opportunity Card (Chancenkarte) created a new pathway for skilled workers. Engineering, IT, and healthcare professionals increasingly targeting Germany. EU access via naturalisation.

Sources: Stats SA Migration Profile 2023; Afrobarometer 2024; South African Diaspora data (Wikipedia)

The 80% increase to the UK, Australia, and US

The Afrobarometer Dispatch 914 (December 2024) reports that the proportion of South African emigrants living in the United States and the United Kingdom increased by 80% between 2000 and 2020. For Australia and New Zealand, the figure was also 80%. Europe overall attracts 39.3% of South African migrants. This concentration in a handful of English-speaking destinations reflects the real advantages of language, professional recognition, and existing community networks.

The Brain Drain: Which Professions Are Leaving Fastest?

The term “brain drain” understates what is happening. South Africa is not losing random citizens — it is disproportionately losing its most educated, most experienced, and most economically productive people. The Afrobarometer 2024 found that intention to emigrate rises sharply with education level — from just 10% of those with primary schooling considering leaving, to significantly higher rates among university graduates and postgraduates.

The professions most affected, according to multiple sector analyses cited in the Stats SA Migration Profile and Afrobarometer:

🏥

Healthcare

Doctors, nurses, and allied health professionals are leaving at crisis rates. The UK’s NHS actively recruits South African-trained medical staff. Canadian immigration consultant reports 17,000 SA healthcare enquiries in a single period. Nearly 85% of SA’s population has no medical insurance — doctors face impossible workloads in the public sector.

✈️

Aviation

South Africa’s aviation industry has experienced severe brain drain as airlines globally compete for pilots, engineers, and air traffic controllers. The Afrobarometer data identified aviation as one of the hardest-hit sectors. International operators offering significantly higher rand-equivalent salaries have created a systematic recruitment pipeline from SA to overseas.

💻

Software & IT

Tech talent is uniquely mobile — software developers and IT professionals can work remotely for international employers while residing anywhere. Many South African tech workers initially take remote positions for international companies while still in SA, then transition to emigration. Salary multiples of 5–10× make this the most financially compelling emigration case.

⚙️

Engineering

Engineering bodies consistently identify significant losses of South African-trained engineers, particularly mid-career professionals aged 45–60 — taking decades of practical experience that cannot be quickly replaced. Infrastructure dysfunction (water, electricity, roads) makes engineering careers in SA increasingly demoralising.

📚

Education

Teacher emigration — the “educator exodus” — has been documented through multiple surveys. Low salaries relative to international counterparts, classroom safety concerns, and poor school infrastructure are drivers. UK, Australia, and Canada actively recruit SA-trained teachers, who are generally well-regarded internationally.

⚖️

Legal, Finance & Accountancy

South African-qualified lawyers, chartered accountants, and financial professionals are internationally recognised and increasingly recruit to UK, Australia, and Mauritius-based financial services. Mauritius has become a specific destination for SA-trained financial professionals managing offshore structures for both SA clients and international firms.

The Pipeline Problem: 90% of SA Students Want to Work Abroad

The Professional Provident Society (PPS) 2022/23 Student Confidence Index Report surveyed 2,400 undergraduate and postgraduate students across South African universities. 90% said they want to live and work abroad to gain professional experience. While 67% expressed a desire to eventually return, the intent to leave is nearly universal among the next generation of skilled South Africans. This creates a structural pipeline problem: South Africa invests in educating professionals who then depart at the point of highest productivity.

Who Is Considering Emigrating? The Afrobarometer 2024 Profile

The most recent comprehensive survey data on emigration intent comes from Afrobarometer Dispatch 914 (December 2024), based on face-to-face interviews with 1,582 South Africans in November–December 2022. The findings define exactly who is most likely to leave.

% Who Have Considered Emigrating — by Group

Source: Afrobarometer Dispatch 914, December 2024

Overall national average
27%
Youth (18–35 years)
32%
Full-time employed
36%
Most educated (university+)
38%
Wealthiest respondents
42%

Nearly 1 in 2 of South Africa’s wealthiest citizens are actively considering leaving.

The pattern is unmistakable: emigration intent is highest precisely among the people South Africa can least afford to lose. The wealthiest, the most educated, the fully employed, and the young are disproportionately considering departure. Among those who have considered emigrating, the Afrobarometer found that 6% are already taking concrete steps (visas, applications), 20% plan to move within one to two years, and 66% are not yet making specific plans. This suggests a substantial cohort in the preparatory or intention phase.

Why South Africans Are Leaving: The Main Drivers

Crime & SafetyConsistently the #1 cited reason. South Africa ranks among the most dangerous countries globally by multiple crime indices.
Economic StagnationGDP growth at 0.6–1.2% in 2024, 34% unemployment, declining real wages for skilled workers.
Load-SheddingEnergy instability from 2019–2024 severely damaged business productivity and quality of life — a direct emigration trigger for many.
Children’s ProspectsEducation quality, safety at schools, and university funding pressures drive parents to emigrate for their children’s futures.
Salary MultiplesInternational tech, medical, and engineering salaries can be 5–10× equivalent SA packages in rand terms — a financially transformative difference.
Political UncertaintyPolicy direction on expropriation, NHI, and BEE creates long-term investment and career uncertainty for some demographics.

What Emigration Means for Property, Furniture, and the SA Economy

Emigration is not just a social or demographic story — it has direct economic consequences that ripple through sectors including housing, retail, and household spending. For businesses supplying into South African homes, the emigration picture matters in several ways.

Property market impact

Emigrating households sell their properties — a net supply injection into the market. Estate agents consistently track this as a driver of listings, particularly in Johannesburg’s northern suburbs (Sandton, Fourways, Northcliff) and Atlantic Seaboard Cape Town. The 2.3 million unit housing shortage means emigration-driven listings are quickly absorbed, supporting prices — but in specific suburbs, emigrant selling clusters can create micro-level price softness.

Furniture and household goods market impact

An emigrating household typically disposes of most of its furniture before departure — selling, donating, or placing in storage. This creates both a secondary supply of used furniture and, for those who remain, purchasing opportunities. More significantly, the semigration wave — which is in part driven by the same emotional drivers as emigration — directly stimulates furniture purchasing as hundreds of thousands of households relocate internally and refurnish.

Skills shortage and service delivery impact

The departure of doctors, engineers, and educators directly degrades the public services that all South Africans rely on — a feedback loop that potentially accelerates further emigration. The Stats SA Migration Profile specifically notes that South Africa sees steady emigration of healthcare professionals, creating demand for a comprehensive policy response.

Remittances as a partial offset

South Africans abroad send significant remittances home. UN data shows remittance flows to Africa doubled in the decade to 2022, reaching £80 billion — and South Africa is one of the continent’s largest remittance recipients. These inflows support families, fund property purchases, and contribute to consumer spending for those who remain — a partial economic offset to the brain drain.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many South Africans have emigrated?

According to UN DESA data cited in the Stats SA Migration Profile Report 2023, 914,901 South African citizens were residing abroad as of 2020 — the latest available UN DESA figure. This number has been growing consistently since 2000, when it stood at 501,600. Using a broader measure that includes naturalised citizens and long-term residents of SA origin, PPS estimates over 2 million South Africans now live abroad.

Where do most South Africans emigrate to?

The most popular destinations are the United Kingdom (largest SA diaspora globally, ~250,000), Australia (~200,000), the United States, New Zealand, and Canada. Europe overall attracts 39.3% of SA migrants. In 2022, Portugal and Mauritius emerged as significant new destinations. North America is the most preferred destination among potential future emigrants, according to the Afrobarometer 2024 survey.

Is South Africa emigration accelerating?

Yes — markedly. Between 2010 and 2015, approximately 43,000 people emigrated. Between 2015 and 2020, that figure jumped to over 128,000 — three times as many in the same period. The acceleration coincides with intensifying load-shedding, political instability during the state capture era, rising crime perception, and increasingly accessible skilled migration pathways in destination countries. The 2024 Afrobarometer found 27% of SA adults have considered emigrating — with the figure reaching 42% among the wealthiest segment.

Which professions are most affected by South Africa’s brain drain?

The most heavily affected sectors are healthcare (doctors, nurses), aviation, software and IT, engineering, education, and legal/financial services. The PPS 2022/23 Student Confidence Index found 90% of SA students working toward professional degrees want to live and work abroad. The Afrobarometer 2024 identifies emigration intent as directly proportional to education level — rising from 10% among those with primary education to 38% among university graduates.

Are South Africans returning home?

The much-discussed “brain regain” appears, according to the Daily Maverick’s April 2024 analysis of the Stats SA Migration Profile, to be significantly overstated. While anecdotal accounts from estate agencies and moving companies suggest returns are occurring, the actual data shows the diaspora growing — not shrinking. The proportion of South Africans returning from the UK, Australia, and US is declining, not rising. While 67% of students who want to work abroad say they plan to eventually return, this is an intention expressed by 22-year-olds — not a demonstrated behavioural pattern.

The Data Does Not Lie — But It Does Not Tell the Whole Story Either

The emigration statistics are unambiguous in their direction: more South Africans are leaving, the pace is accelerating, and the people leaving are disproportionately the most educated, most skilled, and most economically productive. The 914,901 citizens recorded abroad in 2020 is almost certainly a significant undercount of the true diaspora.

What the statistics cannot capture is why roughly 60 million South Africans remain — because most do. The semigration data tells a different story alongside the emigration story: hundreds of thousands of South Africans are also making the active decision to stay, but to relocate to better-governed parts of the country. Both stories are true. Both matter. And both shape the property market, the labour market, and the household goods economy in ways that every South African consumer and business owner should understand.

Whether You Are Staying, Semigrating, or Starting Fresh

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Sources & Further Reading

All emigration statistics in this article are drawn from publicly available and peer-reviewed sources. UN DESA International Migrant Stock data is published every five years; the most recent SA-specific data covers the 2020 reference year. The 2025 data update, when published, will be incorporated into this article. This article does not constitute legal, financial, or immigration advice. Next planned update: upon publication of the 2025 UN DESA Migrant Stock data or updated Stats SA migration figures.

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