New York,
Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania,
Maryland,
Delaware,
District of Columbia,
New Jersey,
Connecticut,
Florida, &
Rhode Island have some of the highest percentages of Hispanics identifying as Black, where up to 15% of Hispanics identify as black, compared to 1.9% of Hispanics nationwide. Overall, the Northeast region has the largest concentration of Black Hispanics; this is partly because of the large Puerto Rican, Dominican, and other mostly or partly African descended Hispanic populations in the region. Black Hispanics numbered 1,163,862 and accounted for 1.9% of the entire U.S. Hispanic population in 2020, down from 1,243,471. Additionally, according to Jessica E. Peña, Ricardo Henrique Lowe, Jr. and Merarys Ríos-Vargas (2023), the U.S. Census Bureau, for the 2020 Census, recoded, or categorized, data for this population into multiple categories which allowed those who are
multiracial, Black Hispanics to also be counted. When including individuals who are multiracial, Black Hispanics, the population count increases to 2.6 million people. The authors show that different categorizations create different understandings of the size of the community. Most Black Hispanics in the United States come from within the
Dominican and
Puerto Rican populations. Aside from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, large numbers of Black Hispanics can also be found in populations originating from northern South America, and the Caribbean coast of Central America as well, including the
Panamanian and
Colombian (usually from western Colombia's
Chocó Department) communities, as well as the
Garifuna people especially from
Honduras, and to a lesser extent, the
Cuban community. Because views of race in Latin America and the United States are slightly different, there is a fluidity in identifying with terms such as "black" or "Afro Latino" among Latinos in the United States. Recent immigrants from Latin America are more likely to embrace mixed identities (mestizaje) while thinking less of their African side, and some immigrant Latinos who are full black with little to no admixture do not identify as black. In contrast, Latinos who have lived in the United States for several generations are more likely to adopt urban afrocentric mentalities from African Americans and abandon that of their home countries, embracing the
One-drop rule. This is especially true for large portions of the Puerto Rican and now Dominican communities on the East Coast. Some white and mixed Latinos who are Americanized, in effect to embracing African American Hip Hop culture and the One drop rule, self-identify as "Afro Latino" (black). The main aspects which distinguish Black Hispanics born in the United States of America from
African Americans is having Spanish as their
mother tongue or most recent ancestors' native language, their culture passed down by their parents, and their
Spanish surnames. Of all Hispanic groups, Puerto Ricans have the closest relationship with the African American community. As a result of this, there is also increasing intermarriages and offspring between non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics of any race, mainly between Puerto Ricans and African Americans, which increases both the Hispanic ethnic and black racial demographics. In May 2022,
Pew Research Center reported that there were an estimated six million Afro-Latino people in the United States, comprising 2% of the adult U.S. population, and 12% of adult Latinos. They also stated that one-in-seven Afro-Latinos did not "identify as Hispanic" and that 30% of Afro-Latino adults were 18 to 29. The report also stated that Afro-Latinos are more likely to be from
Puerto Rico and the
Dominican Republic than from
Mexico, noting that 40% of people had their families talk about challenges they'd face for their ethnic identity when they grew up, and that the "racial groups Afro-Latinos identify with can be varied and diverse." In the latter case, the report stated that about 30% of Afro-Latinos identified as White, 25% as Black, 23% as "some other race," 16% as "multiple races" and 1% as Asians. == Health ==