Cuban Australians
| Total population | |
|---|---|
| 2,135 | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Mainly in New South Wales and Queensland; Victoria (state); Western Australia | |
| Languages | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| Caribbean and West Indian Australians |
Cuban Australians (Spanish: cubanos australianos) are Australians whose full or partial ancestry can be traced back to Cuba.
2,135 Cuban Australians were residing in Australia as of 2023, of whom 1,021 had been born in Cuba, whereas some other 1,114 people had been born in Australia and claimed either partial or full Cuban ancestry.
The number of Australian residents of Cuban descent who were born elsewhere abroad does not seem to be available at the moment, for which the total number of Cuban Australians may have varied throughout times, including both Cuban-born and Australian-born residents of Cuban descent.
The Cuban immigration to Australia goes back to the early 1980s, to a point where millions of Cubans left Cuba during the takeover of Fidel Castro's regime for many other countries worldwide, of whom many have settled in Oceania, mainly in Australia.
Between 2018 and 2023, the Australian Bureau of Statistics registered 71 new Cuban-born individuals residing in the country.
Most Cuban Australians are concentrated in New South Wales, from the Greater Sydney area to Campbelltown, New South Wales, referred to as to the pinpoint gateway of immigration for Cuban migrants in the country, where is hosted the fastest growing population.
Another wave of Cuban Aussies is also vibrant and currently growing in Queensland, from Gold Coast, Queensland to the Brisbane metro area, followed by Victoria: with Melbourne being the most notable area of settlement and Western Australia, both hosting currently growing populations of Cuban Australians.