Language data for Peru - Translators without Borders (2024)

The 2007 Census of Peru records just four major languages, although over 72 Indigenous languages and dialects are spoken in the country. Around 84% of Peruvians speak Spanish, the official national language. Even so, over 26% of the population speaks a first language other than Spanish. Quechua is the second most commonly spoken language (13%), followed by Aymara (2%), and both have official status. In urban areas of the country, especially the coastal region, most people are monolingual and only speak Spanish. Indigenous languages are spoken at higher rates in rural areas.

Indigenous languages of Peru are primarily located in the central Andes, in the south near the border with Bolivia, and the Amazon rainforest, in the north near the border with Ecuador. In the Andes these are primarily Quechua, Aymara, Jaqaru, and ka*wki. Residents of the Amazon region, meanwhile, speak a large number of Indigenous languages, the most common of which are Asháninka and Aguaruna. More than 105,000 people speak Indigenous languages other than Quechua and Aymara, mostly in the east and north of the country, in Loreto, Madre de Dios, and Ucayali regions.

Language data for Peru - Translators without Borders (2024)
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