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Central Coast NSWCommunity profile

Central Coast Council area

Language spoken at home

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In 2021, 61.6% of recent overseas arrivals in 2021, spoke a language other than English at home.

Central Coast NSW's language statistics show the proportion of the population who speak a language at home other than English. For recent arrivals, this is a good indicator of translation services which might be required, as recent arrivals may be less likely to have good English skills. They represent the languages which have increased in prevalence in just the last few years in Central Coast NSW compared to Greater Sydney.

Central Coast NSW's language statistics should be analysed in conjunction with Country of Birth and Proficiency in English to assist in identifying specific cultural and ethnic groups in the area and the services required by the multicultural community.

Q:

Derived from the Census question:

'Does the person use a language other than English at home?'

Language spoken at home - Ranked by size
Central Coast NSW - Recent arrivals2021
LanguageNumber%Greater Sydney
Mandarin2925.912.6
Nepali2775.68.7
Tagalog1923.91.9
Punjabi1803.62.9
Malayalam1743.51.3
Afrikaans1633.30.5
Filipino1553.11.7
Thai1422.81.3
Hindi1352.75.0
Portuguese1152.32.4
Show all (41 entries)
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Census of Population and Housing 2021 (Usual residence data). Compiled and presented in profile.id by .id (informed decisions).
Please refer to specific data notes for more information

Excludes languages with fewer than 10 people speaking them at home.

Language spoken at home - Summary
Central Coast NSW - Recent arrivals2021
Language summaryNumber%Greater Sydney
Speaks English only1,84537.017.6
Non-English total3,07361.681.0
Not stated671.31.3
Total people4,985100.0100.0
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Census of Population and Housing 2021 (Usual residence data). Compiled and presented in profile.id by .id (informed decisions).
Please refer to specific data notes for more information

Dominant groups

Analysis of the language spoken at home by recent overseas arrivals in Central Coast NSW in 2021 compared to Greater Sydney shows that there was a larger proportion of people who spoke English only, and a smaller proportion of those speaking a non-English language (either exclusively, or in addition to English).

Overall, 37.0% of recent overseas arrivals spoke English only, and 61.6% spoke a non-English language, compared with 17.6% and 81.0% respectively for Greater Sydney.

The dominant language spoken at home by recent overseas arrivals, other than English, in Central Coast NSW was Mandarin, with 5.9% of the population, or 292 people speaking this language at home.

The major differences between the languages spoken at home for the recent overseas arriving population of Central Coast Council area and Greater Sydney in 2021 were:

  • A larger percentage speaking Afrikaans at home (3.3% compared to 0.5%)
  • A smaller percentage speaking Mandarin at home (5.9% compared to 12.6%)
  • A smaller percentage speaking Arabic at home (1.9% compared to 5.4%)
  • A smaller percentage speaking Nepali at home (5.6% compared to 8.7%)

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