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Vietnamese diaspora
Người Việt hải ngoại
Total population
~4,000,000 (estimates) [1]
Regions with significant populations
 United States 2,067,527 (2016)[2]
 Cambodia 600,000[3]
 France 350,000 (2014)[4]
 Australia 294,798 (2016)[5]
 Japan 262,405 (2017)[6]
 Canada 240,514 (2016)[7]
 Taiwan 200,000[8]
 Germany 150,000 (2011)[9]
 South Korea 143,000 (2013)[10]
 Czech Republic 83,000 (2011)[11]
 Malaysia 70,000 (2013)[12]
 United Kingdom 55,000[13]
 Poland 50,000[14]
 Laos 30,000 (2012)[15]
 China 28,199 (2010)[16]
 Norway 21,721 (2014)[17]
 Netherlands 20,603 (2014)[18]
 United Arab Emirates 20,000[19]
 Thailand 17,662 (2010)[20][21]
 Sweden 17,085 (2015)[22]
 Belgium 14,000 (2012)[23]
 Russia 13,954 (2010)[24]
 Denmark 14,669 (2014)[25]
  Switzerland 14,496
 Qatar 8,000 (2008)[26]
 Macau 7,199 (2011)[27]
 New Zealand 6,660 (2013)[28]
 Finland 4,645[29]
 Ukraine 3,850 (2001)[30]
 Hungary 3,019 (2011)[31]
 Italy 3,000 (2004–2005)[32]
 Slovakia 3,000[33]
 Bulgaria 2,600 (2015)[34]
 New Caledonia 2,506 (2014)[35]
 Brazil 1,000

Overseas Vietnamese (Vietnamese: Người Việt hải ngoại, which literally means "Overseas Vietnamese", or Việt Kiều, a Sino-Vietnamese word (越僑) literally translating to "Vietnamese sojourner") refers to Vietnamese people living outside Vietnam in a diaspora, by far the largest community of which live in the United States. Of the about 4 million Overseas Vietnamese, a majority left Vietnam as economic and political refugees after the 1975 capture of Saigon and the North Vietnamese takeover of the pro-U.S. South Vietnam.

The term "Việt Kiều" (literally translating to "Vietnamese sojourner") is used by people in Vietnam to refer to ethnic Vietnamese living outside the country.[36] It is not the Overseas Vietnamese's term of self-identification; most Overseas Vietnamese prefer the term of Người Việt hải ngoại (literally translating to Overseas Vietnamese), or occasionally the politically-charged Người Việt tự do (Free Vietnamese).

History