The European Union’s 2025 asylum figures, published by Eurostat, tell a story of three shifts at once. Applications fell sharply, the top country of origin changed, and the country receiving the most claims changed too. The EU recorded about 669,400 first-time asylum applications in 2025, down 27% from 912,400 in 2024, the steepest annual drop in years. Behind that headline, the map of who is claiming, and where, has been redrawn.
Key Takeaways
- Asylum claims fell sharply in 2025. The EU recorded about 669,400 first-time asylum applications in 2025, down 27% from 912,400 in 2024, the steepest drop in years.
- Venezuela is now the number-one origin. Venezuelans lodged about 89,500 claims (13% of the total), overtaking Afghanistan (63,950) for the first time. Colombia and Peru also rank in the top 10, a striking Latin American shift.
- Spain overtook Germany as the top destination. Spain received the most first-time claims (141,055, or 21%), ahead of Italy, France and Germany. For years Germany led by a wide margin; the frontline has moved south.
- Two different maps. Where applicants come from and where they claim are separate stories. The origin map spans Latin America, the Middle East, South Asia and Africa; the destination map is concentrated in the EU's southern rim.
Where they come from: Venezuela overtakes Afghanistan

For the first time, Venezuela is the single largest source of asylum seekers in the EU, with about 89,500 claims, or 13% of the total. It has overtaken Afghanistan (63,950), long the leading origin, with Syria (40,405) third. The most striking feature is the rise of Latin America: alongside Venezuela, Colombia and Peru both sit in the top 10, reflecting political and economic crisis in the region and visa-free access to parts of the EU that makes the journey easier than for many others.
| # | Country | First-time claims | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ๐ป๐ช Venezuela | 89,485 | 13% |
| 2 | ๐ฆ๐ซ Afghanistan | 63,950 | 10% |
| 3 | ๐ธ๐พ Syria | 40,405 | 6% |
| 4 | ๐ง๐ฉ Bangladesh | 35,645 | 5% |
| 5 | ๐น๐ท Tรผrkiye | 24,225 | 4% |
| 6 | ๐ช๐ฌ Egypt | 22,720 | 3% |
| 7 | ๐บ๐ฆ Ukraine | 22,390 | 3% |
| 8 | ๐จ๐ด Colombia | 20,895 | 3% |
| 9 | ๐ต๐ช Peru | 19,865 | 3% |
| 10 | ๐ฒ๐ฆ Morocco | 18,835 | 3% |
Where they claim: Spain overtakes Germany

The destination map has flipped. Spain now receives the most first-time claims of any EU state, about 141,000 (21% of the total), ahead of Italy (128,655), France (116,475) and Germany (113,235). For most of the past decade Germany led by a wide margin. The shift reflects both Germany’s falling numbers and Spain’s pull as the main European gateway for Venezuelans and other Latin Americans, who share a language and long-standing ties. The EU’s asylum frontline has moved decisively to its southern rim, with Greece (55,380) also among the top five.
| # | Country | First-time claims | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ๐ช๐ธ Spain | 141,055 | 21% |
| 2 | ๐ฎ๐น Italy | 128,655 | 19% |
| 3 | ๐ซ๐ท France | 116,475 | 17% |
| 4 | ๐ฉ๐ช Germany | 113,235 | 17% |
| 5 | ๐ฌ๐ท Greece | 55,380 | 8% |
| 6 | ๐ง๐ช Belgium | 27,540 | 4% |
| 7 | ๐ณ๐ฑ Netherlands | 24,115 | 4% |
| 8 | ๐ฎ๐ช Ireland | 12,975 | 2% |
| 9 | ๐ฆ๐น Austria | 12,505 | 2% |
| 10 | ๐ต๐ฑ Poland | 11,155 | 2% |
The big picture: claims are falling
After the post-2021 surge, the overall trend is downward. The 27% drop in 2025 was driven by falling numbers from several traditional origins and tighter external border and visa policies. But a lower total does not mean a settled system: the mix of nationalities is changing faster than the total, the burden is unevenly shared across member states, and monthly Eurostat updates show the picture is still moving. The Latin American share, in particular, is a genuinely new feature of the European asylum map.
The two headline shifts 2025 was the year two long-standing rankings broke at once. On origin, Venezuela displaced Afghanistan at the top for the first time. On destination, Spain displaced Germany. Neither the country sending the most people nor the country receiving the most is the one it was a few years ago, even as the overall number of claims falls. |
The bottom line
Asylum numbers are often reported as a single, rising figure. The 2025 data complicates that: the total is falling, but the geography is being redrawn. A Latin American crisis now shapes Europe’s asylum flows as much as the wars of the Middle East and South Asia, and southern Europe, not Germany, is where most of those flows now land. As the EU debates its new migration and asylum pact, these are the maps the argument is really about.