Texas Immigration Statistics
Legal permanent residents, refugees, asylees, and naturalizations
FY 2023 Immigration Overview
Source: DHS Office of Homeland Security Statistics (2023)Lawful Permanent Residents
126,930
#4 of 50 states
Refugee Arrivals
5,050
#1 of 47 states
Asylees Granted
2,260
Naturalizations
100,290
In fiscal year 2023, Texas received 126,930 new lawful permanent residents (green card holders), ranking #4 among 50 states. The state welcomed 5,050 refugees and 2,260 asylees. A total of 100,290 people became naturalized U.S. citizens in Texas that year.
Immigration Trends Over Time
Source: DHS OHSS (2013β2023)This stacked area chart shows Texas's total immigration volume from FY 2013 to 2023, broken down by lawful permanent residents, naturalizations, refugees, and asylees. Trends may reflect changes in federal immigration policy, refugee ceilings, and processing backlogs.
Lawful Permanent Residents by State
Source: DHS OHSS (2023)In FY 2023, Texas ranked 4th nationally in lawful permanent resident admissions with 126,930 new LPRs. California, New York, and Florida typically lead all states in total LPR volume.
Refugee Arrivals by State
Source: DHS OHSS (2023)Texas ranked 1st among states for refugee arrivals in FY 2023with 5,050 refugees resettled. Refugee admissions vary significantly by state based on resettlement agency capacity and community support infrastructure.
Naturalizations by State
Source: DHS OHSS (2023)Texas saw 100,290 people naturalize in FY 2023, ranking 2nd nationally. Naturalization rates often correlate with the size of a state's existing immigrant population and the availability of USCIS field offices.