In 2025, 5.2 million people in multidimensional poverty per Dane

Dane reported that in 2025, 5.2 million people lived in multidimensional poverty conditions, or 9.9% of the national population. This marks a 1.6 percentage point reduction from 2024, with 793,000 people exiting the condition.

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) published data showing a 9.9% multidimensional poverty rate nationally in 2025, the first time below 6 million affected people, totaling 5.2 million.

In municipal capitals, the figure was 6.3%, while in population centers and dispersed rural areas it reached 22.4%, 3.6 times higher. Compared to 2024, the national reduction was 1.6 percentage points, 1.5 in capitals and 1.9 in rural areas. The trend has declined since 2010, peaking at 18.1% in 2020 due to the pandemic.

Multidimensional poverty measures deprivations in education, work, housing, health, and childhood conditions. The largest contributions were education (35.9%), work conditions (29.6%), housing (14.1%), children and youth (12.5%), and health (7.9%), per Dane director Piedad Urdinola.

The Amazonía-Orinoquía region had the highest average deprivations (41.3%), followed by areas like Caribe and Pacífica. Bogotá had the lowest (37.7%). Departments with highest incidence include Vichada (55.2%), Guainía (51.8%), Vaupés (41.7%), La Guajira (40.1%), and Chocó (30.8%). There is also a 1.9-point gender gap, with 10.9% for women and 9% for men.

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Joyful diverse Colombians on a Bogotá street celebrating record-low 8.9% unemployment rate since 2001, with job growth billboard.
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Colombia's unemployment rate reaches lowest since 2001

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Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) reported that the unemployment rate for 2025 was 8.9%, the lowest since 2001. This figure marks a 1.3 percentage point decrease from 2024. In December 2025, the rate fell to 8%, with employed population rising by 603,000 people.

DANE released results from the 2025 National Quality of Life Survey, showing 53.3 million people across nearly 19 million households, averaging 2.82 people per household. Vaupés and Atlántico have the largest average sizes, while Putumayo has the smallest.

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Huila department recorded 9.7% multidimensional poverty in 2025, below the national average of 9.9%. This marks the first time it reaches a single digit, down from 11.9% in 2023 and 10.9% in 2024. Economic dynamism, led by coffee and aquaculture, drives this improvement.

DANE reported 433,678 births in 2025, the lowest in 10 years and a 4.5% drop from 2024. Non-fetal deaths rose 2.8% to 283,378 cases.

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Consultancy firm Empiria reported that in February 2026, the poorest 10% of households faced 3.3% inflation, compared to 2.9% for the richest 10%. The gap stems from the heavier weight of food and housing in low-income baskets. INDEC confirmed a general monthly inflation rate of 2.9%.

Colombia's unemployment rate fell to 10.9% in January 2026, according to Dane, marking a 0.8 percentage point improvement from January 2025. Andi president Bruce Mac Master questioned the one-point drop in informality and noted that job growth was driven by non-salaried positions.

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In January 2026, Colombia's unemployment rate stood at 10.9%, the lowest for a first month since 2001, according to the Dane. While 324,000 new jobs were created, 60% were self-employment positions. This indicates employment improvement, but raises concerns about job quality.

 

 

 

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