A diverse population mixing retirees, Latinos, and Haitians
Fort Myers has a mixed demographic profile, with a strong presence of Caribbean and Central American communities, alongside retirees from the northeastern United States and the Midwest.
The city has around 90,000 residents, while the Cape Coral-Fort Myers metropolitan area exceeds 800,000. The composition is diverse: non-Hispanic whites, Latinos (primarily of Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican, and Guatemalan descent), African Americans, and a significant Haitian community concentrated in neighborhoods such as Dunbar.
English is dominant, but Spanish is the second most commonly heard language in commerce and public schools, and Haitian Creole is strongly present in churches and ethnic markets. There are also longer-established European immigrants, including Germans, Italians, and British nationals, who chose the region for retirement.
The predominant religion is Christianity, divided among Catholics, Baptists, Methodists, and Latino and Haitian evangelical churches. The median age is higher than the national average, reflecting the weight of the retiree population, though neighborhoods near Florida SouthWestern State College and Florida Gulf Coast University bring a younger demographic profile.
- English
- Spanish
- Haitian Creole
- Portuguese
- Catholic Christianity
- Evangelical Christianity
- Historic Protestant Christianity
- No religion
- Other Christian traditions