A majority immigrant and minority city
Miramar is one of the most diverse cities in South Florida: a Hispanic and Caribbean majority, a significant African American population, and a foreign-born share well above the U.S. national average.
More than half the population is Hispanic or Latino, with roots primarily in Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, and Central American countries. The non-Hispanic Caribbean community is also large, with strong Jamaican and Haitian representation, a legacy of decades of migration to Broward County.
The Black or African American population is significant and includes both American-born residents and immigrants from Jamaica, Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, and the Bahamas. Non-Hispanic white residents are a minority, and growing Asian communities are present, with Filipinos, Indians, and Chinese concentrated in some western-area condominiums.
The median age is relatively low by American standards, driven by young families. Many households are bilingual, with Spanish, Haitian Creole, or Caribbean English spoken at home and English used at school and work. Hearing three different languages in the same grocery store is not unusual.
- English
- Spanish
- Haitian Creole
- Caribbean English (Jamaican Patois)
- Portuguese
- Catholicism
- Evangelical Protestantism
- Caribbean Pentecostal churches
- African American Baptist churches
- No religion
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