White Hispanic and Latino Americans

White Hispanic and Latin Americans
Estadounidenses hispanos y latinos blancos
Total population
12,579,626 (white alone)
20.3% of all Hispanic Americans and 3.8% of the U.S. population
31,521,221 (white alone or in combination)
50.8% of all Hispanic and Latino Americans and 9.6% of the U.S. population (2020)
Regions with significant populations
Nationwide, concentrated in Southwest
 Texas3,024,768
26.4% of Hispanics and Latinos
10.4% of total population
 California2,581,535
16.6% of Hispanics and Latinos
6.5% of total population
 Florida1,322,458
23.2% of Hispanics and Latinos
6.1% of total population
 New Mexico305,985
30.3% of Hispanics and Latinos
14.5% of total population
Languages
American English, Spanish language in the United States, American Portuguese, Spanglish, Porglish
Religion
Roman Catholicism, sizeable Protestantism
  Minority: Judaism
Related ethnic groups
White Latin Americans, White Americans, Hispanic and Latino Americans, Spanish Americans, Portuguese Americans, Italian Americans, French Americans, Romanian Americans

White Hispanic and Latin Americans, also called Euro-Hispanics, Euro-Latinos, White Hispanics, or White Latinos, are Americans who self-identify as white of European (diaspora) or West Asian descent with origins from Hispanic countries or Latin America. This includes those who immigrated to the United States.

Based on the definitions created by the Office of Management and Budget and the US Census Bureau, the concepts of race and ethnicity are mutually independent. For the Census Bureau, ethnicity distinguishes between those who report ancestral or cultural origins in Spain or Latin America (Hispanic and Latino Americans), and those who do not (non-Hispanic Americans). From 1850 to 1920, Mexicans in the United States were generally classified as white by the U.S. census. In 1930, "Mexican" was officially added as a racial category on the United States census but was soon after removed due to political pressure from the Mexican consul general in New York, the Mexican ambassador in Washington, the Mexican government itself, Mexican Americans, and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) who protested the exclusion of mixed-race Latinos in comparison to White Latinos or Euro-Latinos from whiteness. In 1970, a 5 percent sample of the census was asked if their "origin or descent" was Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American, or Other Spanish. In 1980, the full population was asked about "Spanish/Hispanic origin or descent" identifying three nationalities ("Mexican, Mexican-American, Chicano"). Thereafter "Latino" was classified solely as an ethnicity separate from race. In 2000, the US Census Bureau allowed persons to check multiple race identifiers.

As of 2020, 62 million or 18.7% of residents of the United States of America identified as Hispanic or Latino of which 12.5 million or 20.3% self-identified as alleged white alone down from the 2019 American Community Survey when 38.3 million, or 65.5% of Latinos self-identified as white.