Number of new members of Church of Sweden from 2010 to 2026
Even as the Church of Sweden loses members overall, the number of people actively choosing to join has been rising. The count of new members climbed from roughly 5,000 a year in 2010 to a record 12,135 in 2021, and an estimated 18,000 by 2025. This report tracks the number of new members of the Church of Sweden from 2010 to 2026.
It is a striking counter-current. The total share of Swedes who belong to the church has fallen for years, a trend covered in our Sweden church members overview, yet the inflow of new members has grown. The two facts sit side by side: a shrinking church that, paradoxically, more people are joining each year. The contrast defines the modern church. A shrinking body that more people join.
A rising inflow: active joiners climbed from about 5,000 a year in 2010 to a record 12,135 in 2021, then to an estimated 18,000 by 2025. The trend is clearly upward, led by younger Swedes.
Crucially, these new members are people who actively join, not babies enrolled automatically through baptism. The rise has been driven largely by younger Swedes, in what one sociologist of religion called a clear trend break. The same youth revival appears in our belief in God in Sweden data.
A note on the figures. The count is new members of the Church of Sweden per year, from Church of Sweden statistics. The 2021, 2022 and 2023 figures are reported; 2017 exceeded 10,000; the 2024 figure is estimated from preliminary data showing over 10,000 joiners by September; and the 2025 and 2026 numbers are estimates. Earlier years are interpolated from the reported rising trend. The recent figures are the firmest.
Number of New Members of the Church of Sweden, 2010-2026
| Year | New members | Change vs 2010 (000s) |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 5,000 | +0.0 |
| 2011 | 5,500 | +0.5 |
| 2012 | 6,000 | +1.0 |
| 2013 | 6,500 | +1.5 |
| 2014 | 7,000 | +2.0 |
| 2015 | 8,000 | +3.0 |
| 2016 | 9,000 | +4.0 |
| 2017 | 10,200 | +5.2 |
| 2018 | 9,500 | +4.5 |
| 2019 | 9,000 | +4.0 |
| 2020 | 8,500 | +3.5 |
| 2021 | 12,100 | +7.1 |
| 2022 | 9,800 | +4.8 |
| 2023 | 10,900 | +5.9 |
| 2024 | 13,500 | +8.5 |
| 2025 | 18,000 | +13.0 |
| 2026 | 19,000 | +14.0 |
The table lists the number of new members of the Church of Sweden for each year from 2010 to 2026. It shows a clear upward path, from around 5,000 a year early in the decade to a record 12,135 in 2021 and an estimated 18,000 by 2025. Sorting the figures highlights the standout years and the overall rise.
Cumulative New Members of the Church of Sweden Since 2010
Adding up the yearly intake shows the scale of the inflow. Across 2010 to 2026, well over 150,000 people are estimated to have actively joined the Church of Sweden. The cumulative line climbs steadily, then steepens sharply in the most recent years. The pace of joining has accelerated. Recent years tower over the early ones.
The steepening curve reflects the recent surge in new members. Where the early years added five to seven thousand annually, the 2020s have added ten thousand or more each year, and the latest years far more. The accelerating cumulative total mirrors the broader picture in our religion in Europe coverage.
Over 150,000 joiners: the running total climbs steadily, then steepens sharply in the 2020s as annual intakes pass 10,000 and then far more. A large inflow, still outpaced by an even larger outflow.
Seen cumulatively, the inflow is substantial, but it must be read against an even larger outflow. The Church gains over a hundred and fifty thousand new members across the period, yet still shrinks, because resignations and deaths remove far more. The cumulative gains soften, but do not reverse, the long decline in total church membership. Gains soften but cannot reverse it. The outflow remains far larger.
New Members of the Church of Sweden: Year-on-Year Change
The year-on-year change in new members is far from smooth. Some years bring sharp increases, such as the jump to a record in 2021, while others see the number fall back, as in 2022. This volatility marks the inflow out from the steady, one-directional decline in total membership. The inflow rises and falls year to year.
The swings reflect real events and moods. The 2021 record came amid the pandemic, a period of reflection for many, before the number eased in 2022. The renewed surge from 2023 onward, especially among the young, points to something more durable, a pattern echoed in our Church of England attendance by age findings.
Volatile but trending up: green years of growth, like the jump to a record in 2021, outweigh the red dips, like 2022. The down years are shallow, the up years steep, lifting the baseline over time.
What stands out is that, despite the year-to-year volatility, the trend in new members points firmly upward. The down years are shallower and the up years steeper, lifting the baseline over time. The direction contrasts sharply with the steady fall in overall membership covered in our share of non-religious people in Spain analysis.
New Members Rise as Church of Sweden Membership Falls
The central paradox of the Church of Sweden is captured by setting two trends side by side. The number of people joining each year has risen, while the share of the population who are members has fallen. One line climbs, the other descends. The split captures the whole story. Two trends moving in opposite directions.
These are not contradictory once the mechanics are clear. A church can attract more new joiners each year and still shrink overall, if the much larger numbers leaving through resignation and death outweigh the inflow. The falling membership share reflects that net loss. Many more leave than ever arrive. The net result is a steady fall.
The core paradox: new joiners (gold) keep rising while the membership share of the population (blue) keeps falling. A church can attract more people each year and still shrink, if many more leave than join.
The widening contrast between rising joiners and falling membership tells a nuanced story. The Church of Sweden is not simply fading; it is being actively chosen by a growing minority, even as its inherited majority slips away. It is a church in transition, a dynamic also visible in our wider Sweden religion coverage. The church is chosen, not inherited.
New Members vs Members Lost by the Church of Sweden
To understand why rising joiners do not halt the decline, the inflow must be set against the outflow. In a typical recent year, around ten to fourteen thousand people actively join the Church of Sweden. But far more, on the order of a hundred thousand, are lost through resignations and deaths combined. The outflow dwarfs the inflow each year. A turnaround would need far more joiners.
The arithmetic is stark. Even a record intake of new members is dwarfed by the annual losses, leaving the church with a substantial net decline every year. This is why the membership total keeps falling despite the genuinely encouraging rise in joiners, a tension that mirrors our church members in the Netherlands data.
Dwarfed by losses: even a record intake of around 13,000-14,000 joiners is swamped by roughly 95,000 lost through resignation and death, leaving a large net decline. Illustrative figures derived from the membership trend.
The gap between inflow and outflow also frames what a turnaround would require. For membership to stabilise, joiners would need to rise many times over, or losses to fall sharply. The current surge in new members narrows the gap at the margin, a shift comparable to trends in our evangelical church members in Germany coverage.
New Members of the Church of Sweden by Era
Grouping the years into eras shows how steadily the inflow has grown. In the early 2010s, the Church of Sweden gained under six thousand new members a year on average. By the late 2010s that had risen to around eight to nine thousand. The climb was steady through the decade.
The most recent era stands apart. From 2022 onward, the average annual intake of new members has climbed well into double digits in thousands, lifted by the standout years of 2024 and 2025. Each era has added more joiners than the last, a steady escalation unlike the patterns in our weekly church attendance in Italy analysis.
Each era larger than the last: average annual joiners rose from under 6,000 in the early 2010s to over 14,000 from 2022 on. The recent surge is part of a longer escalation, not a single freak year.
The era-by-era rise underlines that the recent surge is not a single freak year but part of a longer upward shift. The baseline level of new members has roughly tripled across the period, a structural change in who chooses the church, even as its overall footprint shrinks, as shown in our Catholic population in Germany comparison.
Record Years for New Members of the Church of Sweden
Ranking the standout years puts the recent surge in perspective. The estimated 18,000 joiners in 2025 and around 14,000 in 2024 top the list, ahead of the previous record of 12,135 in 2021 and the second-place 2022 figure. The year 2017 was the first to pass 10,000. The bar has since been raised sharply. Each new record beats the last.
The clustering of record years in the 2020s is telling. Before 2017, no single year saw more than ten thousand active joiners. Since then, the threshold has been crossed repeatedly, and recent years have left the old records far behind, a momentum echoed in our religious community data in Finland coverage.
Records cluster in the 2020s: 2025 and 2024 top the list, ahead of the 2021 record of 12,135. Before 2017, no year passed 10,000; since then the threshold has been beaten repeatedly.
The pace of record-breaking suggests the trend is strengthening, not fading. Each new high in joining the Church of Sweden has come within a few years of the last, and the most recent figures are the largest of all. The upward path stands in clear contrast to the long decline in our Catholic church followers in Poland data.
New Members of the Church of Sweden, 2010 to 2026
Tracing new members across the period, from 2010 through 2018 to 2026, captures the rise in three snapshots. The annual intake grew from about 5,000 in 2010 to roughly 9,500 in 2018, and to an estimated 19,000 by 2026. The number has roughly quadrupled. Few European church trends rise so fast. The Swedish case stands out clearly.
Unlike many religious trends in Europe, this line points firmly upward. The acceleration is most pronounced in the final stretch, as the youth-led surge of the mid-2020s lifts the count to new highs. The steepening slope marks a genuine break with the past, distinct from the figures for the Swedish church.
Roughly quadrupled: annual joiners grew from about 5,000 in 2010 to ~9,500 in 2018 and an estimated 19,000 by 2026. The steepest rise comes at the very end, with the youth-led surge of the mid-2020s.
Projected on its current slope, the number of new members joining the Church of Sweden could keep climbing through the late 2020s. Whether the surge holds is uncertain, but the trajectory so far is unmistakably upward, an outlier against the wider secular drift seen across Europe.
Who Joins the Church of Sweden: New Members by Age
The recent surge in new members has a clear demographic signature: it is driven by the young. Sociologists tracking the trend describe the increase among younger Swedes as the largest, the heart of what has been called a clear trend break for the Church of Sweden. The young lead the way back in. A youthful revival in a secular land.
Younger adults, those in their teens, twenties and early thirties, make up the largest share of new joiners in the latest figures. Older age groups still join, but in smaller numbers, so the inflow skews noticeably young in the latest figures. Older converts are a smaller part.
A young surge: teens, twenties and early thirties make up the largest share of new joiners. A rise led by the young hints at a more durable shift than a one-off bump among older converts. Shares are estimated.
This youthful profile is what makes the trend significant. A surge led by the young hints at a more durable shift than a one-off bump among older converts, suggesting the Church of Sweden may be finding renewed relevance for a new generation of Swedes.
The Recent Surge in New Church of Sweden Members
Zooming in on the most recent years shows the surge most clearly. After hovering around nine to ten thousand in the late 2010s and the pandemic years, the annual intake of new members jumped to an estimated 14,000 in 2024 and 18,000 in 2025. The jump caught observers by surprise. The church itself sounded hopeful.
Officials and researchers have not hidden their surprise. The Church of Sweden described sensing a morning breeze, and one associate professor of the sociology of religion called the 2024 figures a clear trend break. The momentum is described as the strongest in many years, a strongest such shift in many years. Researchers see a genuine turning point.
A morning breeze: after hovering near 9,000-10,000, the intake jumped to an estimated 14,000 in 2024 and 18,000 in 2025. Researchers call it a clear trend break, the strongest in many years.
Whether this recent surge marks a lasting revival or a temporary spike is the key open question. For now, the number of new members of the Church of Sweden is at its highest in decades, a hopeful note for the church even as its overall membership keeps falling. The paradox is likely to persist.
The number of new members of the Church of Sweden rose from about 5,000 a year in 2010 to a record 12,135 in 2021, and an estimated 18,000 by 2025. After 2017 the annual intake repeatedly passed 10,000, and the mid-2020s brought the highest figures in decades, driven above all by younger Swedes actively choosing to join. It is a deliberate, personal decision.
Yet this rising inflow has not reversed the church wider decline. Resignations and deaths still far outnumber new joiners, so total membership keeps falling year after year. The Church of Sweden is a shrinking institution that, paradoxically, a growing number of people are choosing to join. That contradiction sums up the church today.
Frequently Asked Questions: New Members of the Church of Sweden
The number of new members joining the Church of Sweden has risen from about 5,000 a year in 2010 to a record 12,135 in 2021, with an estimated 14,000 in 2024 and around 18,000 in 2025. These figures count people who actively choose to join, excluding babies who become members automatically through baptism. After 2017, the annual intake repeatedly passed 10,000, and the mid-2020s brought the highest numbers of new members in decades, in what researchers have called a clear trend break.
This is the central paradox. The Church of Sweden can attract more new joiners each year and still shrink overall, because the number of people leaving through resignation and dying each year is far larger than the number joining. In a typical recent year, perhaps 10,000 to 14,000 people actively join, while around 100,000 are lost. The result is a steady net decline in total membership, even though the inflow of new, actively choosing members is genuinely rising.
Young people. Sociologists tracking the trend say the increase in new members is largest among younger Swedes, those in their teens, twenties and early thirties. This youthful profile is what makes the trend notable, since a surge led by the young suggests a more durable shift than a one-off bump among older converts. The same youth-led pattern appears in belief data, where belief in God among young Swedes has risen sharply in recent years, against the longer-term secular trend.
Before the mid-2020s, the record was 2021, when 12,135 people joined the Church of Sweden, a figure reached during the pandemic. However, preliminary and estimated data suggest 2024 and 2025 have since surpassed it, with an estimated 14,000 joiners in 2024 and around 18,000 in 2025. If confirmed, these would be the highest annual intakes of new members in decades, continuing a clear upward trend that began to accelerate after 2017.
No. The figures for new members of the Church of Sweden specifically count people who actively choose to join the church. They exclude individuals who become members automatically through baptism, which historically was the main route into the church. This distinction matters, because it means the rising numbers reflect deliberate decisions by adults and young people to join, rather than the traditional automatic enrolment of infants, making the upward trend a more meaningful signal of active interest.
It slows the decline but does not stop it. Total Church of Sweden membership has fallen from about 70 percent of the population in 2010 to roughly 49 percent by 2026, because resignations and deaths far outnumber new members. The rising inflow of joiners narrows the gap between losses and gains at the margin, but the church still records a substantial net loss each year. For membership to stabilise, joiners would need to rise many times over, or losses to fall sharply.
The first year the Church of Sweden recorded more than 10,000 active new members was 2017. Before that, annual intakes were in the range of 5,000 to 9,000. After 2017, the threshold was crossed repeatedly: 2021 set a record at 12,135, and although 2022 dipped to around 9,848, the numbers climbed again from 2023 onward, reaching an estimated 14,000 in 2024 and around 18,000 in 2025, the highest figures in decades.
That is the key open question. The recent surge, especially the youth-led jump in 2024 and 2025, has surprised officials and researchers, with the Church describing it as sensing a morning breeze and one sociologist calling it a clear trend break. Because the increase is concentrated among the young and has built over several years rather than a single spike, some see it as potentially durable. However, it is too early to know whether it marks a lasting revival or a temporary high.
People join the Church of Sweden for a mix of reasons, including a search for meaning and community, major life events such as marriage or the birth of a child, a desire to access rites like church weddings and funerals, and renewed spiritual or religious interest. For the recent youth-led surge, researchers point to a broader questioning of secular life among younger Swedes. Because joining is now an active choice rather than automatic, each new member reflects a deliberate personal decision.
The Church of Sweden had around 5.4 million members at the end of 2024, equal to about 51 percent of the population. It remains the largest single organisation in Sweden by membership. However, the total is declining each year, because deaths and resignations outpace the rising number of new members joining. The share of the population who are members has fallen steadily from about 70 percent in 2010, and is estimated at roughly 49 percent by 2026.
Church of Sweden (Svenska kyrkan) membership statistics - Source for the annual number of new members joining the church.
Sweden Herald and Swedish sociology of religion researchers - Reference for the recent youth-led surge and preliminary 2024 figures.
Church of Sweden statistics - Reference for joining and membership figures.
