Population estimates According to the 2011 report of South Korea's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade on overseas Korean populations, 11,800 overseas Koreans resided in Mexico, down by 2% since the 2009 report. Among them were 876 Mexican citizens, 1,607 South Korean citizens with Mexican permanent resident status, 388 South Korean
international students, and the remainder being South Korean citizens with other types of visas. Mexico City was their most common area of residence, with 6,340 recorded as living there; 1,300 others lived in
Jalisco state, with the remainder in other locations. The 2010 Mexican census recorded 3,960 people who responded that their place of birth was South Korea, up from 327 in the previous census in 2010. This made South Korea the 18th-largest foreign country of origin in Mexico, but those born in South Korea comprised only about 0.4% of the 961,121 total foreign-born persons the census found to be residing in the country. A 2012 report by
Mexico's National Institute of Migration, based on 2009 statistics, stated that 534
North Korean citizens and 6,028
South Korean citizens lived in Mexico. A plurality but not a majority of each of those groups (258 and 2,261) lived in Mexico City. By migration status, 317 of the North Koreans and 2,970 of the South Koreans were non-immigrants. Each group had a
sex ratio somewhat imbalanced towards males. Other sources also report a wide variety of population estimates. A September 2013 article in
The New York Times, citing officials at the
Korean Cultural Center, Mexico City, stated that "at least 12,000 Koreans now call Mexico home". The article stated that in 2010 the Korean population in Mexico was ten times as large as the said population in 2000.
Centers of Korean population Mexico City's
Zona Rosa district has a Koreatown known as
Pequeño Seúl (Little Seoul), filled with businesses established by the new migrants. There, many Korean restaurants can be found as well as hair salons, bakeries, and daycare centers. In the 1990s, others also set up shop in
Tepito. Other districts in Mexico City where Koreans live include
Colonia Juárez,
Santa Fe,
Interlomas,
Polanco and
Anzures. • In the north-central states of
Jalisco,
Colima,
Aguascalientes, and
Nayarit, a community of about a thousand Koreans; within Jalisco, Koreans are concentrated in
Guadalajara and
Zapopan. The
University of Nayarit offers Korean language course and a degree in Korean studies, the only one in Latin America. • The
Monterrey Metropolitan area suburb of Huinalá,
Apodaca) has a new Koreatown filled with businesses in Korean and Spanish. •
Juriquilla,
Querétaro, north of
Querétaro City, where a Korean community has established itself in the area for foreign investment, like the Samsung plant located at the Parque Industrial Juriquilla, north of Querétaro City. •
Pesquería,
Nuevo León is a town in the north of Mexico where Kia motors opened a plant. 6,000 South Koreans arrived the area. South Korean businesses, and Korean and Spanish text billboards, abound in the city, and the town is referred to as "
Pescorea". ==Culture==