Most of the adults in a new survey say they think immigration is good for the country, while those who want to ban it fell by 20 points last year.
The results of the latest Gallup survey released Friday found that 79% of respondents believed immigration was good for the country, while 17% of respondents were the opposite.
The record-breaking highest figure is up 15% from last year, about 64%. Data shows that the number of people who view immigration as a “bad thing” has also dropped by nearly half since 2024, when 32% believed it was harmful to the United States.
Gallup notes that the increase in positive perceptions of immigration is partly due to the impact between Republican voters and to a limited extent independent. Democrats think it is beneficial and now hoveres among 91% of people.
On the other hand, the latest poll found that about 30% of Americans still believe that the United States should reduce how many immigrants to the United States should enter. However, this is 25% lower than 55% of those who held the same view in the 2024 survey.
Nearly 4 respondents (i.e. 38%) said immigration should maintain its current level, while another 26% said it should be improved.
One of President Trump’s top priorities since returning to office is the desire to curb immigration has declined among voters in major political parties, especially among Republican voters, which is now in 48% of voters and has dropped 40 points since last year when it was 88%. This view also dropped by 21 points among independents, from 51% to 30%. According to the survey, sentiment fell by 12 points among Democratic voters and is now 16%.
More and more Americans are also applauding as a way for undocumented immigrants to provide citizenship. The poll found that 78% of respondents favored the pathway, an increase of 8 points from last year.
According to the poll, support for increasing the number of inbound border patrols has been increased, falling from 76% in 2024 to 59% so far in 2025. Support for the expansion of the southern border wall also dropped from 54% to 45% in the previous year.
The Gallup survey was conducted in 1,402 adults from June 26. The margin of error is 4 percentage points of confidence level of 95%.