Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jerusalem adds 13,400 new residents, topping one million

As Israel’s capital celebrates 57 years since reunification in the Six-Day War, its majority Jewish population is satisfied with life and work.

An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man standing under a huge Israeli flag in Jerusalem, June 3, 2024. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man standing under a huge Israeli flag in Jerusalem, June 3, 2024. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

Jerusalem’s population continues to increase as Israel’s capital city celebrates 57 years since reunification in the Six-Day War on Tuesday evening and Wednesday, surpassing one million residents.

According to data published by Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics ahead of Jerusalem Day, the country’s largest city added 13,400 residents last year, with most of the new residents coming from Bnei Brak, Beit Shemesh and Tel Aviv-Yafo. The latter two cities, plus Betar Illit, were the localities which welcomed the most out-migration from Jerusalem.

Jews and other non-Arab populations made up 60.5% of the city’s residents at the end of 2023, with Arabs comprising 39.5%. Around 29% of all of the city’s residents were ultra-Orthodox Jews, representing about half of the non-Arab population.

Jerusalem’s total fertility was 3.68 children per woman, exceeding the national average birth rate of 2.89. The total fertility rate of Jewish and other non-Arab Jerusalemites was 4.3, compared to the national average of 2.9. The total fertility rate for Arab women in Jerusalem was 2.81, compared with 2.75 on the national average.

Other statistics of note include the city’s workforce participation rate in 2023, which was 52.2% compared to the national average of 63.5%.

Jerusalemites are as satisfied with their lives as the rest of Israel, at 91% compared 90% nationally, with 93% of Jews and 86% of Arabs. They are also satisfied with their work at 87%, versus 89% nationally.

The U.S. president told reporters that he intends to read his agreement with the Iranian regime “word by word” publicly to set the record straight.
“When you have something saying you can’t go to someone who uses divination, or a witch, or consults spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer, that means this is something people were doing,” Eddy Portnoy, the curator, told JNS.
“No family should have to fight this hard to ensure a Jewish child’s safety at school,” James Pasch, vice president of litigation for the ADL, stated.
The partnership is an “indication that elected officials are taking seriously the unprecedented increase in anti-Jewish incidents occurring in schools across our country,” Brandy Shufutinsky of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies told JNS.
FOZ founder Mike Evans said he plans to urge Trump to recognize Somaliland, citing its growing ties with Israel.
The former Missouri congresswoman stated that she has pledged to “bring an end to the U.S. military aid to Israel that enables genocide against Palestinians.”