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Immigration to Spain
Overview of immigration to Spain

Immigration to Spain increased significantly at the beginning of the 21st century. In 1998, immigrants accounted for 1.6% of the population, and by 2009, that number had risen to over 12%. Until 2014, the number of immigrants decreased due to the economic crisis, but since 2015, immigration to Spain has been on the rise, especially after 2021, reaching 19.11% of the population today.

As of 2025, there were 9,379,972 foreign-born people in Spain, making up to 19.11% of the population, including 5,308,314 (11.14%) born in a non-European country. Of these 6,852,348 (13.96%) did not have Spanish citizenship. This makes Spain the 4th country in Europe by immigration numbers and the 10th worldwide. Spain attracts significant immigration from Latin America and Eastern Europe. The fastest-growing immigrant groups in 2017 were Venezuelans, Colombians, Italians, Ukrainians, and Argentines.

During the early 21st century, the average year-on-year demographic growth set a new record with its 2003 peak variation of 2.1%, doubling the previous record reached in the 1960s when a mean year-on-year growth of 1% was experienced. In 2005 alone, the immigrant population of Spain increased by 700,000 people.

Spain accepted 478,990 new immigrant residents in just the first six months of 2022 alone. During these months, 220,443 people also emigrated from Spain, leaving a record-breaking net migration figure of 258,547. More women than men chose to move to Spain during 2022; this is due to higher rates of emigration from Latin America.

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Currently

Foreign population in Spain91011
YearPopulation% total
1981198,0420.52%
1986241,9710.63%
1991360,6550.91%
1996542,3141.37%
1998637,0851.60%
1999748,9541.86%
2000923,8792.28%
20011,370,6573.33%
20021,977,9464.73%
20032,664,1686.24%
20043,034,3267.02%
20053,730,6108.46%
20064,144,1669.27%
20074,519,5549.9%
20085,268,76211.4%
20095,648,67112.1%
20105,747,73412.2%
20115,751,48712.2%
20125,736,25812.1%
20135,546,23811.8%
20145,023,48710.7%
20154,729,64410.1%
20164,618,5819.9%
20174,572,8079.8%
20184,663,72610.0%
20195,023,27910.7%
20205,434,15311.5%
20215,440,14811.5%
20225,542,93211.7%
20236,089,62012.7%
20246,735,48713.8%

According to the United Nations, there were 5,947,106 immigrants in Spain in early 2018, 12.8% of the population of Spain.12 According to the Spanish government, there were 5.6 million foreign residents in Spain in 2010; independent estimates put the figure 14% of total population (Red Cross, World Disasters Report 2006). According to the official 2011 census data, almost 800,000 were Romanian, 774,000 were Moroccan, 317,000 were Ecuadorian, 312,000 were British and 250,000 were Colombian [11]. Other important foreign communities are Bolivian (4.1%), German (3.4%), Italian (3.1%), Bulgarian (2.9%), Chinese (2.6%) and Argentine (2.5%). In 2005, a regularization programme increased the legal immigrant population by 700,000 people. Since 2000, Spain has experienced high population growth as a result of immigration flows, despite a birth rate that is only half of the replacement level.

According to Eurostat, in 2010, there were 6.4 million foreign-born residents in Spain, corresponding to 14.0% of the total population. Of these, 4.1 million (8.9%) were born outside the EU and 2.3 million (5.1%) were born in another EU Member State.13

As of 2005 Spain had the second highest immigration rates within the EU, just after Cyprus, and the second highest absolute net migration in the World (after the USA).14

Over 920,000 immigrants arrived in Spain during 2007, in addition to 802,971 in 2006, 682,711 in 2005, and 645,844 in 2004.15

For nationalities outside of this category, in order to stay in Spain for more than 3 months, a residence card, residence visa or work permit is required.16

Two distinct groups can be identified: those immigrants (mostly in working age) originating from countries mostly located in Eastern Europe, South America or Africa, with lower purchasing power than Spain, comprising most of the immigrating population, and those (of whom many are retired) originating from northern European or other western countries with a higher GDP per capita than Spain.17

Immigrants from Europe

Immigrants from Europe make up a growing proportion of immigrants in Spain. The main countries of origin are Romania, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, and Bulgaria.

The British authorities estimate that the real population of British citizens living in Spain is much bigger than Spanish official figures suggest, establishing them at about 1,000,000, about 800,000 being permanent residents.18 Of these, according to the BBC and contrary to popular belief, only about 21.5% are over the age of 65.19

In fact, according to the Financial Times, Spain is the most favoured destination for West Europeans considering to move from their own country elsewhere in the EU.20

Social attitudes to immigration

Unlike other countries in the EU, Spain has not recorded any relevant anti-immigration about until fairly recently.21 According to some analysts, the causes behind this are multiple. Drawing from the experience of many Spaniards during the 1960s and then again in the beginning of the 21st century when the crisis struck the country, there may be also a collective understanding that hardships force people to seek work abroad.22

A January 2004 survey by Spanish newspaper El País showed that the "majority" of Spaniards believe immigration was too high.23 Small parties, such as Movimiento Social Español, openly campaign using nationalist or anti-immigrant rhetoric as do other small far-right parties such as National Democracy (Spain) and España 2000. These parties have never won national or regional parliamentary seats. However, since its foundation in recent years, the far-right political party Vox has managed to disrupt mainstream politics, favouring tough stance against immigration.24

According to an October 2024 survey for the El País newspaper and Cadena SER radio station, 57% of Spaniards believe there is "too much" immigration to Spain.25

Immigration by country of origin

Population by country of birth as of 31 december 2024:26

CountryPopulation
 Morocco673,360
 Romania472,850
 Colombia341,903
 UK213 947
 Venezuela209 520
 China165 659
 Ukraine145,554
 Peru129,590
 Honduras118,235
 Germany94,751
 Ecuador90,414
 Argentina89,825
 Bulgaria86,789
 France81,381
 Pakistan78,098
 Paraguay73,553
 Brazil73,329
 Russia71,155
 Portugal66,259
 Senegal65,403
 Pakistan123,882
 Bulgaria104,756
 Portugal96,187
 Senegal95,812
 Uruguay89,595
 Algeria87,854
 Nicaragua87,786
 Mexico79,581
 Chile76,638
 USA69,171
 India65,799
  Switzerland59,718
 Netherlands57,771
 Philippines57,498
 Belgium54,776

Recent trends

Countries with at least 10,000 people, immigrating each year.27
Country2016201720182019
Venezuela31,55352,38571,66673,932
Morocco30,09740,37261,71573,560
Colombia24,84436,67856,25380,054
United Kingdom23,87628,87531,27637,617
Romania27,86030,23528,03025,675
Honduras11,07418,57323,67129,185
Italy18,52622,20322,00221,517
Peru9,71115,94521,46331,307
Argentina10,85214,90419,16631,132
Brazil11,95414,81617,86318,703
France13,34116,29016,21016,543
Ecuador12,34915,60015,89317,635
Cuba8,12210,28014,26517,588
United States9,94212,71913,85315,050
Germany10,50512,71413,31413,262
China10,55211,77912,18212,757
Nicaragua4,2506,33011,73217,410
Dominican Republic9,70911,32410,81311,037
Total414,746532,132643,684 748,759
Place of BirthYear
20112829
Number%
Place of Birth in Reporting Country (Spain)41,153,550
Place of Birth Not in Reporting Country5,648,995
Other EU Member State1,890,605
Outside EU but within Europe239,880
Outside Europe/ Non-European3,758,390
Africa945,905
Asia259,345
North America41,220
Caribbean, South or Central America2,265,685
Oceania6,360
Total46,815,910100%
Foreign Population by Nationality30Number%
2022
TOTAL FOREIGNERS5,542,932
EUROPE2,205,961
EUROPEAN UNION1,617,911
OTHER EUROPE588,050
AFRICA1,217,706
SOUTH AMERICA1,173,900
CENTRAL AMERICA368,461
NORTH AMERICA76,628
ASIA493,065
OCEANIA3,580
Instituto Nacional de Estadística

Major immigration

This chart shows the numbers and difference of foreign nationals in Spain after 2000. European Union member states are indicated with the EU flag in regional European sub-divisions. The number of Latin American immigrants decreased massively after 2009 mostly due to the naturalization of hundreds of thousands of these citizens who achieved the Spanish citizenship and therefore do not count as immigrants anymore on the official statistics.31 See the chart from below from the "Naturalizations" paragraph for further information.

Origin2000200520102015202032Article
 Morocco173,158511,294754,080750,883865,945Moroccans in Spain
 Romania6,410317,366831,235752,268667,378Romanians in Spain
 Colombia25,247271,239292,641151,258273,050Colombians in Spain
 United Kingdom99,017227,187387,677283,243262,885British migration to Spain
 Italy27,87495,377184,277179,363252,008Italians in Spain
 China19,19187,731158,244191,638232,807Chinese people in Spain
 Venezuela12,11949,20660,39948,421189,110Venezuelans in Spain
 Ecuador20,481497,799399,586176,397130,919Ecuadorians in Spain
 Bulgaria3,03193,037169,552142,328122,375Bulgarians in Spain
 Honduras1,2937,01727,36343,283121,963-
 Ukraine1,64665,66783,31391,004115,186Ukrainians in Spain
 Germany88,651133,588195,824130,911111,937Germans in Spain
 France46,37577,791123,87099,598108,275French in Spain
 Peru27,42285,029140,18271,112106,712Peruvians in Spain
 Brazil11,12654,115117,80873,86398,655-
 Pakistan4,19531,91356,87777,69597,705Pakistanis in Spain
 Portugal43,33966,236142,52098,75197,628Portuguese in Spain
 Bolivia2,11797,947213,169126,37592,630Bolivians in Spain
 Argentina23,351152,975132,24975,31389,029Argentines in Spain
 Paraguay71116,29585,68769,45187,045Paraguayans in Spain
 Russia5,19936,31949,82068,38782,788Russians in Spain
 Senegal7,52629,60861,97061,79876,973-
 Dominican Republic24,84757,13491,21275,31575,261Dominicans in Spain
 Algeria10,75946,27858,74362,39866,893-
 Cuba17,81445,00954,95446,39764,634-
 Nicaragua7001,95312,19020,94157,530-
 India6,80717,55832,94736,72454,387Indians in Spain
 Poland8,16436,47786,32463,32453,418Poles in Spain
 Netherlands21,76333,84553,98345,84446,891-
 United States15,72025,83125,77130,18340,712Americans in Spain
TOTAL923,8793,730,6105,747,7344,729,6445,036,878

From other countries

Europe

European Union member states are indicated with the EU flag in regional European sub-divisions.

Origin20072006Ref.
 Albania1,3531,31633
 Andorra1,0221,075
 Austria8,6517,776
 Belarus3,1353,262
 Bosnia and Herzegovina1,6591,827
 Croatia1,6491,788
 Cyprus146130
 Czech Republic6,4235,160
 Denmark10,9069,977
 Estonia984784
 Finland9,9909,313
 Georgia7,3556,284
 Greece3,5673,027
 Hungary4,5973,344
 Iceland1,083920
 Ireland13,27911,495
 Latvia2,1281,741
 Liechtenstein48117
 Lithuania18,52815,200
 Luxembourg5621,336
 North Macedonia407440
 Malta152129
 Moldova12,80111,330
 Norway15,63014,154
 Serbia3,1333,474
 Slovakia5,9994,515
 Slovenia799619
 Sweden20,05818,096
 Switzerland16,36115,385
Rest of European countries6683
TOTAL EUROPE1,895,7271,609,856

Africa

Origin20072006Article
 Angola2,1143,698
 Cape Verde2,9983,611
 Cameroon4,0293,955
 Republic of the Congo1,8011,888
 Ivory Coast1,6361,759
 Egypt2,5663,634Egyptians in Spain
 Gambia17,39313,627
 Ghana12,69913,133
 Guinea9,1599,901
 Equatorial Guinea13,12919,456Spanish Equatoguineans
 Guinea-Bissau5,2295,274
 Liberia5811,167
 Mali17,09414,497
 Mauritania9,2719,308
 DR Congo1,0081,548
 Sierra Leone9891,487
 South Africa7042,086
 Tunisia1,5442,194Tunisians in Spain
Rest of African countries5,0418,679
TOTAL806.795
  • Source: [13][permanent dead link]

Central America

Origin20072006
Costa Rica1,3202,373
El Salvador3,7955,102
Guatemala2,4174,321
Honduras14,25310,652
Nicaragua4,5474,204
Panama1,7943,520
Rest of Central America countries1,0022,517
TOTAL139.945

North America

Origin20072006
Canada2,4195,420
United States22,08232,626
Mexico21,10740,574
TOTAL45.608

Asia

Origin20072006Article
 Armenia9,5829,365Armenians in Spain
 Philippines54,38551,368Filipinos in Spain
South Korea22,46513,144Koreans in Spain
India21,29623,296Indians in Spain
Bangladesh6,4806,130
Iran12,3344,568Iranians in Spain
Iraq8801,706Iraqi people in Spain
Israel1,7132,427
Japan11,6367,684Japanese Spaniards
Jordan1,0882,082Jordanian people in Spain
Lebanon6,2502,750Lebanese people in Spain
Syria6,1294,575Syrian people in Spain
 Turkey1,7581,656Turks in Spain
Rest of Asian countries6,4302,517
TOTAL219.843

Oceania

Origin20072006
Australia1,4555,131
New Zealand301298
Rest of Oceanian countries4941,099
TOTAL2.271

Comparison with other countries from European Union

According to Eurostat 47.3 million people lived in the European Union in 2010 who were born outside their resident country. This corresponds to 9.4% of the total EU population. Of these, 31.4 million (6.3%) were born outside the EU and 16.0 million (3.2%) were born in another EU member state. The largest absolute numbers of people born outside the EU were in Germany (6.4 million), France (5.1 million), the United Kingdom (4.7 million), Spain (4.1 million), Italy (3.2 million), and the Netherlands (1.4 million).34

CountryTotal population (millions)Total Foreign-born (millions)%Born in other EU state (millions)%Born in a non EU state (millions)%
Germany81.8029.81212.03.3964.26.4157.8
France64.7167.19611.12.1183.35.0787.8
United Kingdom62.0087.01211.32.2453.64.7677.7
Spain45.9896.42214.02.3285.14.0948.9
Italy60.3434.7988.01.5922.63.2055.3
Netherlands16.5751.83211.10.4282.61.4048.5
Greece11.3051.25611.10.3152.80.9408.3
Sweden9.3401.33714.30.4775.10.8599.2
Austria8.3671.27615.20.5126.10.7649.1
Belgium10.6661.38012.90.6956.50.6856.4
Portugal10.6370.7937.50.1911.80.6025.7
Denmark5.5340.5009.00.1522.80.3486.3
EU 27501.09847.3489.415.9803.231.3686.3

Irregular migration

The concept of an "irregular", "undocumented", or "illegal" migrant did not become meaningful in Spain's social imagination until the passing of the Ley de Extranjería in 1985, a year before Spain's entry into the European Communities.35

Even though the main paths for the entry of clandestine migration have traditionally been airports and land borders, the sea route has proven to have a "profound impact at the social level" owing to qualitative, rather than quantitative, reasons.36

Regarding the governance of the migration of Sub-Saharan people from Morocco (and Western Sahara) into Spain (which include crossings into the autonomous cities of Ceuta and Melilla, as well as a sea route to the Canary Islands), the Moroccan and Spanish authorities follow necropolitical forms of border control which are complemented with the favouring of the idea of "advancing borders" by reaching deals with origin or transit countries such as Guinea Conakry, Mali, Ivory Coast, and Gambia.37

On 9 October 2024, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez urged the European Parliament to speed up the implementation of the New Pact on Migration and Asylum to alleviate the migration crisis in the Canary Islands,38 which had seen the illegal arrival of a record number of 46,843 migrants, mostly from Senegal, Mali and Morocco (up from 39,910 in 2023).39 Sánchez tried to push through a law that would introduce mandatory distribution of migrants among Spanish regions in order to alleviate pressure in the Canary Islands.40

The Sánchez government planned to legalize around 900,000 undocumented migrants by 2027.41

See also: External border of the European Union

Naturalizations

From 2005 to 2022 alone, more than 2.2 million foreigners were granted Spanish citizenship through naturalization.42

Since the end of the 20th century the number of foreigners who have obtained Spanish nationality has grown steadily, as Spain has been the EU country with the biggest number of approved naturalizations since 2010 until 2015. 1 out of 4 naturalizations made in the European Union in 2014 were belonging to Spain. Most of these naturalizations went to citizens coming from Latin America (which explains the massive decrease of these citizens counting as immigrants in Spain) mainly from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, although Morocco was amongst the top 3 as well.43 After 4 years being the first, Spain dropped to the 3rd position in 2015 due to the stricter laws to naturalize citizens. Still, 114.351 foreigners became Spanish citizens in 2015, the majority being Latin Americans.44

New Spanish nationals by naturalization, 2005-2021454647
YearNaturalizations
200542,829
200662,339
200771,810
200884,170
200979,597
2010123,721
2011114,599
2012115,557
2013261,295
2014205,880
2015114,351
2016150,944
201766,498
201890,774
201998,954
2020126,266
2021202,336
2022181,581

Immigration detention

This section is an excerpt from Immigration detention § Spain.[edit]

There are nine detention centers in Spain, known as CIEs (Centro de Internamiento de Extranjeros), run by the Ministry of the Interior, which can be found in the cities of Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Algeciras, Tarifa, Malaga, and in the islands of Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, and Tenerife.48

Expulsion paperwork can be initiated when a foreign person is in one of the following situations:49

  1. Lacking documentation in Spanish territory.
  2. Working without a work permit, even if they have a valid resident permit.
  3. Be involved in activities that violate public order or interior or exterior state security or any activity contrary to Spanish interests or that could put in danger Spain's relations with other countries.
  4. Be convicted inside or outside of Spain of a crime punishable by incarceration for greater than one year.
  5. Hiding or falsifying their situation from the Ministry of the Interior.
  6. Lacking a legal livelihood or taking part in illegal activity.
Various civil organizations (e.g. APDHA, SOS Racismo, and Andalucía Acoge) have appealed to the Supreme Court of Spain, declaring the regulations behind the CIEs null and void for violating several human rights.50

Crime rates

This section is an excerpt from Immigration and crime § Spain.[edit]

A 2008 study finds that the rates of crimes committed by immigrants are substantially higher than nationals.51 The study finds that "the arrival of immigrants has resulted in a lack of progress in the reduction of offences against property and in a minor increase in the number of offences against Collective Security (i.e. drugs and trafficking). In the case of nationals, their contribution to the increase in the crime rate is primarily concentrated in offences against persons."52 By controlling for socioeconomic and demographic factors, the gap between immigrants and natives is reduced but not fully. The authors also find "that a higher proportions of American, non-UE European, and African immigrants tend to widen the crime differential, the effect being larger for the latter ones".53 The same paper provides supports for the notion that labour market conditions impact the relationship between crime and immigration. Cultural differences were also statistically detected.54 This study has been criticized for not using strong instruments for identifying causality: the "instruments (lagged values of the covariates and measures of the service share of GDP in a province) are not convincing in dealing with the endogeneity of migrant location choice."55 Spanish National Statistics Institute (INE) published a study that analyzes records in the Register of Convicted in 2008. The data show that immigrants are overrepresented in the crime statistics: 70% of all crimes were committed by Spaniards and 30% by foreigners.56 Foreigners make up 15% of the population.57

See also

  • Spain portal
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Immigration in Spain.

References

  1. "Sube el número de inmigrantes que viven en España". Datosmacro (in Spanish). 2017. Archived from the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019. https://datosmacro.expansion.com/demografia/migracion/inmigracion/espana

  2. "Población residente por fecha, sexo, grupo de edad y país de nacimiento(56937)". INE (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 March 2025. https://www.ine.es/jaxiT3/Datos.htm?t=56937

  3. "Estadística Continua de Población (ECP) a 7 noviembre de 2024. Datos provisionales". ine.es (in Spanish). Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Retrieved 7 November 2024. https://www.ine.es/dyngs/INEbase/en/operacion.htm?c=Estadistica_C&cid=1254736177095&menu=ultiDatos&idp=1254735572981

  4. R. Sanmartín, Olga (25 June 2018). "La llegada de inmigrantes a España aumenta un 28% y hace crecer la población por segundo año consecutivo". El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid: Unidad Editorial. Archived from the original on 9 August 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019. http://www.elmundo.es/espana/2018/06/25/5b30be1dca4741905f8b465e.html

  5. "Official report on Spanish recent Macroeconomics, including data and comments on immigration" (PDF). La Moncloa: 13–43. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2008. Retrieved 14 November 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20080726044742/http://www.la-moncloa.es/NR/rdonlyres/2E85E75E-E2D9-4148-B1DF-950B06696A6C/74823/Chapter_2.PDF

  6. "Evolution of the foreign population in Spain since 1998". Instituto Nacional de Estadística (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 7 June 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20070929140743/http://www.ine.es/inebase/cgi/axi?AXIS_PATH=%2Finebase%2Ftemas%2Ft20%2Fe245%2Fp08%2Fl0%2F&FILE_AXIS=04001.px&CGI_DEFAULT=%2Finebase%2Ftemas%2Fcgi.opt&COMANDO=SELECCION&CGI_URL=%2Finebase%2Fcgi%2F

  7. Betty Henderson (26 January 2023). "Immigration resumes to pre-pandemic levels in Spain with more women immigrants than men". EuroWeekly News. Archived from the original on 12 February 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023. https://euroweeklynews.com/2023/01/26/immigration-resumes-to-pre-pandemic-levels-in-spain-with-more-women-immigrants-than-men/

  8. Betty Henderson (26 January 2023). "Immigration resumes to pre-pandemic levels in Spain with more women immigrants than men". EuroWeekly News. Archived from the original on 12 February 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023. https://euroweeklynews.com/2023/01/26/immigration-resumes-to-pre-pandemic-levels-in-spain-with-more-women-immigrants-than-men/

  9. Fuente: para los años 1981, 1986 y 1991, los datos se refieren tan sólo a extranjeros con permiso de residencia a 31 de diciembre y proceden del Ministerio de Trabajo y Asuntos Sociales, citado en [1][permanent dead link] (tomando, para el porcentaje de 1986, la población española de hecho según la estimación intercensal del INE para el 1 de julio [2]). Para los datos de 1996 y posteriores, todos los datos proceden del INE [3] http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/iea/migracioninternacional/tab/4_1.xls

  10. "For 2013 and 2014" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 December 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2014. http://www.ine.es/en/prensa/np854_en.pdf

  11. "Población por comunidades, edad (grupos quinquenales), Españoles/Extranjeros, Sexo y Año". INE. Archived from the original on 13 May 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2022. https://www.ine.es/jaxi/Datos.htm?path=/t20/e245/p08/l0/&file=02002.px

  12. "España - Inmigración 2019". Datosmacro.com. Archived from the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved 25 January 2019. https://datosmacro.expansion.com/demografia/migracion/inmigracion/espana

  13. 6.5% of the EU population are foreigners and 9.4% are born abroad Archived August 12, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Eurostat, Katya VASILEVA, 34/2011. http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-SF-11-034/EN/KS-SF-11-034-EN.PDF

  14. Eurostat – Population in Europe in 2005 Archived August 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. (PDF) . Retrieved on 2011-11-14. http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-NK-06-001/EN/KS-NK-06-001-EN.PDF

  15. Kern, Soeren (13 May 2009), "Immigration Policy a Casualty of Unemployment in Spain", World Politics Review, archived from the original on 1 June 2020, retrieved 29 June 2009 https://web.archive.org/web/20200601010004/https://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/3750/immigration-policy-a-casualty-of-unemployment-in-spain

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