Birmingham, AL Historical Language Spoken at Home Data
ACS 2010-2014 data
Total population: 211,705
Birmingham, AL | % | Alabama | U.S. | |
English | 83,435 | 93.94%, see rank | 94.21% | 79.39% |
Spanish | 3,134 | 3.53%, see rank | 3.33% | 11.75% |
Other Indo-European Languages | 1,108 | 1.25%, see rank | 1.29% | 4.52% |
Asian and Pacific Islander Languages | 748 | 0.84%, see rank | 0.92% | 3.36% |
Other | 392 | 0.44%, see rank | 0.26% | 0.99% |
ACS 2008-2012 data
Total population: 213,180
Birmingham, AL | % | Alabama | U.S. | |
English | 83,798 | 94.19%, see rank | 94.27% | 79.64% |
Spanish | 2,930 | 3.29%, see rank | 3.36% | 11.57% |
Other Indo-European Languages | 1,165 | 1.31%, see rank | 1.27% | 4.61% |
Asian and Pacific Islander Languages | 672 | 0.76%, see rank | 0.86% | 3.24% |
Other | 406 | 0.46%, see rank | 0.24% | 0.94% |
ACS 2006-2010 data
Total population: 216,392
Birmingham, AL | % | Alabama | U.S. | |
English | 85,030 | 94.13%, see rank | 94.39% | 79.95% |
Spanish | 3,112 | 3.45%, see rank | 3.27% | 11.42% |
Other Indo-European Languages | 1,038 | 1.15%, see rank | 1.26% | 4.60% |
Asian and Pacific Islander Languages | 670 | 0.74%, see rank | 0.84% | 3.14% |
Other | 482 | 0.53%, see rank | 0.24% | 0.89% |
ACS 2005-2009 data
Total population: 231,486
Birmingham, AL | % | Alabama | U.S. | |
English | 92,030 | 94.12%, see rank | 94.82% | 80.35% |
Spanish | 3,179 | 3.25%, see rank | 2.89% | 11.21% |
Other Indo-European Languages | 1,191 | 1.22%, see rank | 1.26% | 4.62% |
Asian and Pacific Islander Languages | 774 | 0.79%, see rank | 0.78% | 2.95% |
Other | 605 | 0.62%, see rank | 0.25% | 0.87% |
US Census 2000 data
Total population: 242,820
Birmingham, AL | % | Alabama | U.S. | |
English | 91,878 | 93.04%, see rank | 94.23% | 81.14% |
Spanish | 3,789 | 3.84%, see rank | 3.08% | 10.21% |
Other Indo-European Languages | 1,887 | 1.91%, see rank | 1.82% | 5.22% |
Asian and Pacific Islander Languages | 707 | 0.72%, see rank | 0.65% | 2.61% |
Other | 487 | 0.49%, see rank | 0.22% | 0.82% |
* ACS stands for U.S. Census American Community Survey. According to the U.S. Census, if the date is a range, you can interpret the data as an average of the period of time.