Hutsuls
| Гуцули | |
|---|---|
| Hutsul family from western Ukraine, 1925–1939 | |
| Total population | |
| >26,400 | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Ukraine | 23,900 (2001) | 
| Romania | At least 2,500 | 
| Languages | |
| Hutsul dialect, Rusyn language, Ukrainian | |
| Religion | |
| Predominantly Ukrainian Greek Catholic or Eastern Orthodox | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| Boykos, Lemkos, Rusyns, Pokutians | |
| Part of a series on | 
| Ukrainians | 
|---|
| Culture | 
| Languages and dialects | 
| Religion | 
| Sub-national groups | 
| Closely-related peoples | 
The Hutsuls (Hutsul/Ukrainian: Гуцули, romanized: Hutsuly; Polish: Huculi, Hucułowie; Romanian: huțuli) are an East Slavic ethnic group spanning parts of western Ukraine and northern Romania (i.e. parts of Bukovina and Maramureș).
In Ukraine, they have often been officially and administratively designated a subgroup of Ukrainians, and, among the Ukrainian scholars, are largely regarded as constituting a broader Ukrainian ethnic group. However, in eyes of some scholars and of some Hutsuls, they are either their own nation, or a part of the Rusyn nation, alongside the closely related ethnic groups of Boykos and Lemkos.