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Data breaks down Ohio population’s religious affiliation

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OHIO — The percentage of Ohioans who identify as Christian has decreased in the last almost two decades, and the percentage who consider themselves unaffiliated with a religion has increased.


What You Need To Know

  • The percentage of Ohioans who identify as Christian has declined in recent years 
  • Meanwhile, the percentage of those who don’t identify with a religion has increased
  • Pew Research Center’s Religious Landscape Study, released earlier this year, breaks down the data

That’s according to data from the most recent Pew Research Center’s Religious Landscape Study, which has provided survey data highlighting Americans’ spiritual identities across the years. They have data for 2007, 2014 and 2023-2024, the latest of which was released earlier this year.

The most recent set of data states that 64% of adult Ohioans consider themselves Christian. Most of those (26%) are Evangelical Protestants, followed by mainline Protestants (16%) and Catholics (16%).

Meanwhile, 29% of Ohioans are not affiliated with any religion. Other religions also factor into the data but account for only a small total percentage.  

Those numbers are lower than in 2014, when 73% of Ohioans considered themselves Christians and 22% were unaffiliated with a religion, which was even lower than the respective 79% and 17% in 2007.

Ohio’s 2023-2024 data is fairly similar to the U.S. numbers, where 62% of adults identify as Christian and 29% as unaffiliated with a religion.

View a more detailed breakdown of the data within Ohio and its three largest cities here:

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Cody Thompson

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