Immigration to and Emigration from Estonia
In its history, Estonia has been part of various empires before (re)gaining independence. People have moved across borders – and sometimes borders have moved across them. The legacies of the past still shape the immigrant population as well as the diaspora.
Historical phases of immigration to and emigration from Estonia
The history of migration to and from Estonia is notably connected to the political history of the country. Estonia has been a part of the Holy Roman Empire, the Kingdoms of Denmark and Poland, the Swedish and Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. The migration legacies from the earlier periods include a German nobility that controlled the land from the 13th till the 19th century (most of whom returned to their ancestral homeland when Estonia was occupied by the Soviet Union), the coastal villages in Estonia where a dialect of Swedish (rannarootsi) was spoken (and whose speakers left for Sweden during the Second World War), and numerous Estonian villages in various parts of the Russian Empire.In the past 150 years, Estonia has witnessed three major waves of emigration and one major wave of immigration.


The second wave of emigration took place during and after the Second World War. The main bulk of emigrants were refugees (some 70,000-75,000 persons) who fled the war or the Soviet occupation and finally settled in the West – the biggest Estonian communities in exile were located in Sweden, the United States, Canada and Australia.[2]
The third wave of emigration occurred after Estonia had regained its independence in 1991. While Estonia’s net migration rate fell into the negative already with regained independence, the rate of emigration rapidly grew in the mid 2000s, after Estonia had joined the EU in 2004 and free movement was gradually granted to Estonian nationals. Most Estonian emigrants therefore opted to migrate to other EU Member States.


Characteristics of the current immigrant and ethnic minority population
On 1 January 2019, 1,324,820 persons lived in Estonia, 198,064 of them were foreign-born (of which 197,463 did not hold Estonian citizenship). With 15 percent of its total population, Estonia has one of the largest shares of foreign-born residents in Europe.[3] The vast majority amongst them are persons born in Russia and in other ex-Soviet states (e.g. Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan)[4] – many of them migrated to Estonia during the Soviet period. However, in the past few years, the number of residents born in other EU member states has been growing steadily (the largest national groups are from Latvia, Finland, Germany and Lithuania).[5] Furthermore, while the net migration rate of third country nationals has been negative since 1989, it has become positive in the past few years, in particular with regard to Ukrainian labour migrants. However, most of them engage in short-term migration (on a visa or visa-free entry regime) and thus, are not represented in the population statistics, as only persons with a residence permit are required to register their place of residence in Estonia.[6]



Estonian immigration, integration and naturalization policy
Estonian immigration policy has been relatively restrictive, although the past few years have witnessed some liberalisation. In 1990, labour immigration to Estonia was capped by an immigration quota that was equal to 0,1 percent of the total population. Furthermore, third-country citizens who want to immigrate to Estonia for employment reasons have to earn a salary that equals the national average salary (until 2016, the requirement was 1,24 times the national average salary). This is to discourage low-skilled migration that is not considered an asset for Estonia's economy.While some exemptions to the immigration quota have been made over time, for many years, the quota has not been much of an issue, as before 2016, the annual number of immigrants did not exceed it. However, recent economic growth has prompted new exemptions for highly skilled migrants (introduced inter alia in the 2019 reform of the Aliens Act) – e.g. ICT specialists, start-up founders and staff, researchers, qualified specialists who are paid at least double the national average salary. Migrants who come to Estonia in the framework of family reunification or to pursue their studies, were exempted from the quota already before.[7]
The need for less skilled labour is met with short-term migration schemes – for instance, foreigners can work in Estonia for up to one year if they hold a D-visa, or for the duration of their visa or visa-free stay, provided that they register their short-term work. The salary requirement applies for short-term migrants as well. Additionally, labour migrants can come to Estonia as seasonal workers, to work e.g. in farming or hospitality industries.
The integration policies in Estonia are designed to support two broader groups of people:
- scarcely integrated permanent residents (mostly immigrants from the Soviet period or their descendants)
- newly arrived immigrants (i.e. foreigners who have arrived in Estonia in the last five years).[8]
Newly arrived immigrants have access to a variety of settlement support services, e.g. a devoted website (settleinestonia.ee), a one-stop-shop service centre for arranging all the details concerning settling in Estonia, and a Welcoming Programme, which introduces the essentials of managing in the Estonian society (e.g. basic knowledge on Estonian society and culture, administrative basics, etc.). Recent immigrants can also make use of free language courses and other integration programmes. There are also separate integration measures for specific groups, e.g. beneficiaries of international protection.[9]
Estonian citizenship law follows the ius sanguinis principle, which means that citizenship is inherited from one’s parents. However, in order to avoid the reproduction of the undetermined citizenship status, there are some separate naturalisation clauses in place for children born in Estonia to parents with undetermined citizenship, who automatically get Estonian citizenship by naturalisation. Others who are over 15 years of age can naturalise, if they have resided in Estonia for at least eight years (five of them continuously) and fulfil other requirements. For example, they need to prove a permanent legal income, and need to certify B1 level in Estonian language, take a citizenship test and an oath of loyalty.[10]
Estonians abroad: numbers, destinations, policies
In 2019, 115,105 Estonians had registered their residential address abroad in the Estonian national population registry.[11] Almost half of them reside in Finland – the main contemporary migration destination. While most EU countries are a destination to more recent emigrants from Estonia, the UK, the USA, Canada, Sweden, Australia and Russia have been hosting Estonians from both the most recent as well as the historic emigration waves.Estonians are notably transnational and mobile people: more than ten percent of the population has worked abroad in the past ten years, the highest share in Europe.[12] Also, return migration rates to Estonia are higher than in other Central and Eastern European countries (e.g. Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania).[13]

