No, the Hispanic population of the United States is concentrated in the West, Southwest, and southern Florida
As of 2020, Latinos make up approximately 18% of the total U.S. population. This makes Latinos the largest ethnic minority group in the country.
Los Angeles, CA
The majority of Hispanic Cubans in the United States live in the state of Florida, primarily in the Miami metropolitan area.
70% of Miami is hispanic/latino (according to the 2010 Census) or about 280,000 hispanics in Miami. There are about 37 million hispanics in the US (2010 census), which makes Miami have .76% of the US hispanic population (280,000/37000000).
Texas has the largest Hispanic population among those states, with over 11 million Hispanics. Colorado and New Mexico have significantly smaller Hispanic populations in comparison.
The total population of the United States is 319 million people. The Hispanic population is 50.55 million of which 32.7 million are Mexican and 4.739 million are Puerto Rican. The remainder are Cuban, Dominican, Central American, South American, and 'other Hispanic or Latino.'
The largest incorporated city is Huron, California. 98.27% Hispanic. The largest city, 1,000,000+ population, is San Antonio, Texas. 58.66% Hispanic The major city is Santa Ana, California. 76% Hispanic.
Hispanic Scholarship Fund and The National Hispanic Recognition Program are the two top Hispanic scholarships in the US.
As of 2020, Iowa has a population of approximately 3.2 million people. About 6.3% of the population identifies as Hispanic or Latino, which corresponds to around 201,000 Hispanic individuals living in the state.
According to the CIA World Factbook, about 15.1% of the total US population is Hispanic. *the US Census Bureau defines Hispanic to mean persons of Spanish/Hispanic/Latino origin including those of Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican, Dominican Republic, Spanish, and Central or South American origin living in the US who may be of any race or ethnic group
As of 2013 Hispanic or Latino people made up 17.1% of the US population. Around 37.6 million people spoke Spanish in the home as of 2011, that is two-thirds of the non-english speaking population in the US.
Cuban and Puerto Rican populations in the US exceed the median age of the total population, with median ages of 40.2 and 39.5 years, respectively.