Tunisian diaspora
The Tunisian diaspora refers to people of Tunisian origin living outside that country. It is the direct result of the strong rate of emigration which Tunisia has experienced since its independence in 1956. In the 1960s and 70s, the favourable economic situation in France and Europe increased the phenomenon. The beginning of the 1980s saw the clear development of a Tunisian community in Europe as a result of the large number of people.
Population
In 2014 the number of Tunisians residing abroad was numbered at 1,282,371 individuals, of which 87% were living in Europe. However, this official figure appears to be lower than reality because of the inadequate recording of migration statistics. Thus it is not rare to discover a single data point represents all the members of a family or to discover duplicates. Among the citizens which are underrepresented in the statistics are the third generation in France and the children of mixed-nationality parents. The illegal immigrants are by definition not included in the official statistics.750,000 have settled in France - one of the most important foreign communities in the country - and two thirds of them hold double citizenship. They are concentrated mostly in the large cities. Sonia Mabrouk connects this clumping phenomenon with the urban origin of the Tunisian migrants, but also with the nature of the different waves of migration. Thus the 1970s mainly saw the arrival of migrants from the south of Tunisia. These settled in the Rhône Valley and at Paris which offered the greatest number of opportunities for employment and created connections with their places of origin, which subsequently encouraged other migrants to settle in the same places. According to INSEE, 1.4% of children born in 2011 in Metropolitan France had a father born in Tunisia, with the greatest proportion in the departments of Alpes-Maritimes, Var, Seine-Saint-Denis, Rhône, Val-de-Marne, and Bouches-du-Rhône.
In Germany Tunisians are dispersed throughout the country in many medium-sized cities and villages especially in the states Lower Saxony, North Rhine Westphalia, Bavaria, Hessen and Baden Württemberg. The Köln-Bonn region is has the most significant number of Tunisians with about 7.000 Tunisians residing in the two cities and their surroundings. The Braunschweig Region, which has a significant presence of Tunisians, estimating 5.850 Tunisians, with most of the population concentrated in the cities Braunschweig, Wolfsburg and Salzgitter. Braunschweig is a partner city of Sousse and Wolfsburg is a partner city of Jendouba, making the area a significant location for Tunisians to migrate to in Germany. The Rhine-Ruhr region has a population of around 4.500 Tunisians. The Rhine-Main Metropolitan has 3.200 Tunisians with majority of the community in Frankfurt, Wiesbaden and Offenbach. Another region with a sizeable Tunisian community is Rhine-Neckar with Ludwigshafen and Mannheim having the most number of tunisians in this region. The cities Cologne, Berlin, Braunschweig, Bonn, Hamburg and Munich have the largest Tunisian communities in Germany.
There are 110,385 Tunisians in the other Arab countries, 44,195 in North America, 3359 in Subsaharan Africa and 2365 in Asia ; 514 Tunisians are accounted for in Australia.
Demographics
Statistics of the Office of Tunisians Abroad show more than 128,000 Tunisian families in Europe with a concentration in France and Germany. Young Tunisians represent 25% of the Tunisian community abroad. Thus there is currently a rejuvenation of the Tunisian diaspora which is now in its third generation. Women represent nearly 26% of the total community. In France, their percentage is estimated at 38.2%. The portion of the diaspora who are over 60 years old is around 7%.Originally, the largest part of the Tunisians in Europe worked in sectors requiring minimal qualifications. In effect the migrants of the 1960s and 70s were less educated.
Subsequently, the majority of Tunisians settled in France have worked in the service sector or have headed small businesses. In 2008, Tunisia became the first of the Maghreb countries to sign a management agreement concerning the flow of migrants, at the impetus of President Nicolas Sarkozy: it provides easy access for almost 9,000 Tunisian students enrolled in French institutions, but also almost 500 titres de séjour for highly qualified individuals so that they can acquire experience in France, valid for a maximum of six years. In the Arab World the Tunisian population is mostly made up of very highly qualified individuals while labourers and other unskilled individuals form the majority in Asian countries like India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. In 2025, a note from the Immigration Observatory in France notes that integration, particularly economic, is difficult, as are the expulsions of Tunisian undocumented immigrants.
Economic impact
The contribution of Tunisians abroad encapsulates the projects which they support directly or indirectly in Tunisia. According to the Office of Tunisians Abroad, there were more than 8,845 such projects between 1987 and 2004, for a total investment of around 321 million dinar, generating 39,381 jobs, principally in services and industry :- 5,649 projects related to services mobilised 140.1 million dinars and generated 17,397 jobs;
- 2,423 projects in the industrial sector with 133.7 million in investment and 20,513 employed;
- 773 projects in the agricultural sector for 47.2 million dinars of investment and 1,471 employed.
Notable persons of Tunisian descent
Ghali, Claudia Cardinale, Salah Mejri, Max Azria, M. Salah Baouendi, Mustapha Tlili, Ferrid Kheder, Mounir Laroussi,Oussama Mellouli, Leila Ben Youssef, Bushido (rapper),
Loco Dice, Sami Allagui, Änis Ben-Hatira, Mounir Chaftar,
Sofian Chahed, Nejmeddin Daghfous, Rani Khedira, Sami Khedira, Ayman,
Elyas M'Barek, Adel Tawil, Amel Karboul, Michel Boujenah,
Azzedine Alaïa, Tarak Ben Ammar, Lââm, Nolwenn Leroy, Yoann Touzghar, Isleym,
Hatem Ben Arfa, Sadek, Tunisiano, Afef Jnifen, Sana Hassainia, Hinda Hicks, Mohamed Hechmi Hamdi, Hend Sabry, Ghassan bin Jiddo, Cyril Hanouna, Kev Adams