Lao in Myanmar (Burma)


Population
Main Language
Lao
Dialect
Largest Religion
Buddhism (Theravada)
Christian
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge

Additional PDF Profile

Identity

Identifying Lao people in Myanmar today is a challenge, as they often blend in with Shan, Khun, and other Tai-speaking groups, where languages and cultures often overlap. The Lao people in northeast Shan State, who may be known locally as “Yun,” first appeared as “Lao Shan” in the 1901 census of Burma, when they had a population of 1,047 people. That number rose to 7,205 three decades later. Of those, 201 were Christians and the rest were Buddhists, with a few animists. The Lao continue to be recognized by the Myanmar government as one of the country’s ethnic groups.

Location: Approximately 25,000 Lao people live in Myanmar, with most concentrated in Tachileik District in Shan State’s Golden Triangle area, where Myanmar, Thailand, and Laos intersect across the Mekong River. The 2015 Laos census recorded 3.4 million Lao people in their homeland. An additional 388,000 live in Thailand, 140,000 in France, and 137,000 now reside in the United States, with significant communities in the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento areas of California, Minneapolis, Dallas, and Seattle. Many American-based Lao families arrived in the late 1970s as refugees after the Vietnam War, during which more bombs were dropped on Laos than on Vietnam. Significant populations of Lao people can also be found in Cambodia, Vietnam, Canada, and in numerous other Western nations. These numbers do not include 19 million Isan people in northeast Thailand, who are closely related culturally and linguistically to the Lao yet have retained their own identity.

Language: The Lao are one of the great Tai-speaking peoples of Asia, alongside groups like the Thais of Thailand, the Shan of Myanmar, and the Zhuang of China. They are not to be confused with the Lao Naga tribe in western Myanmar, which is a Tibeto-Burman speaking group completely unrelated to the Lao.


History

The ancestors of the Lao people are believed to have migrated south from China into Southeast Asia approximately 1,000 years ago. As they made their way into today’s Laos, they found the land already inhabited by the Khmu. They drove the Khmu into the mountains and took the best land for themselves.


Customs

The Lao are renowned for being a gentle, friendly, and peace-loving people. Their communities revolve around close-knit family ties. It is common to find families with ten or more children in Laos, which has one of the highest birth rates of any country. Most of the Lao in Myanmar are engaged in farming or fishing, with some growing fruit and cotton. Their houses are typically built on stilts and are made of wood or bamboo, with chicken and livestock roaming beneath the floorboards.


Religion

Although nearly all Lao people identify as Theravada Buddhists, their faith is “interwoven with beliefs in various deities and local spirits. The latter, called phi, are ever-present in Lao religious beliefs; they reside in villages, houses, gardens, trees, water, crops, and ancestors. They have to be placated by offerings of food placed in small shrines and occasionally with sacrifices, such as chickens and pigs.”


Christianity

Catholic missionaries first entered Laos in the 17th century, but Evangelical Christianity never took root until the late 1800s, when Presbyterian missionary Daniel McGilvary and his team entered Laos from their base in northern Thailand, winning 3,000 Lao converts over the years. Since the start of the new millennium, the Church in Laos has experienced strong growth. Although as many as 100,000 (3%) of Lao people in Laos are Christians today, in Myanmar the status of Christianity among them is unclear, and they remain unreached. One of the biggest obstacles to their evangelization is the relaxed, care-about-nothing attitude of many Lao. A missionary once asked a Lao boy what his idea of heaven was. He replied, “It is like this: A large shade tree that casts a cool shadow under which I can lie and have someone fan me and bring me water and wait on me…. And I must have nothing whatever to do.”


Prayer Items

Scripture Prayers for the Lao in Myanmar (Burma).


Profile Source:   Asia Harvest  

Additional PDF Profile


People Name General Lao
People Name in Country Lao
Pronunciation lao
Alternate Names Eastern Thai; Lào; Lao Boc; Lao Noi; Lao Shan; Lao Tai; Lao Wiang; Lao-Lu; Lao-Noi; Laotian; Laotian Tai; Laotian Thai; Lum Lao; Phou Lao; Rong Kong; Tai Lao; Tai Sar; Ts'un Lao; လာအို
Population this Country 25,000
Population all Countries 4,114,000
Total Countries 9
Indigenous No
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached Yes
Frontier No
GSEC 4  (per PeopleGroups.org)
Pioneer Workers Needed 1
PeopleID3 12989
ROP3 Code 105643
Country Myanmar (Burma)
Region Asia, Southeast
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 14  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Shan State: Tachileik, Mong Yawng, and Mong Hpayak townships in Tachileik District   Source:  Asia Harvest prayer profiles 2026
Country Myanmar (Burma)
Region Asia, Southeast
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 14  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Shan State: Tachileik, Mong Yawng, and Mong Hpayak townships in Tachileik District.   Source:  Asia Harvest prayer profiles 2026
Primary Religion: Buddhism (Theravada)
Major Religion Estimated Percent
Buddhism
93.00 %
Christianity
3.00 %
Ethnic Religions
4.00 %
Hinduism
0.00 %
Islam
0.00 %
Non-Religious
0.00 %
Other / Small
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
Primary Language Lao (25,000 speakers)
Language Code lao   Ethnologue Listing
Primary Dialect Vientiane
Dialect Code 12765   Global Recordings Listing
Written / Published Yes   ScriptSource Listing
Total Languages 1
Primary Language Lao (25,000 speakers)
Language Code lao   Ethnologue Listing
Primary Dialect Vientiane
Dialect Code 12765   Global Recordings Listing
Total Languages 1
People Groups Speaking Lao

Primary Language:  Lao

Bible Translation Status  (Years)
Bible-Portions Yes  (1906-1967)
Bible-New Testament Yes  (1926-1973)
Bible-Complete Yes  (1932-2012)
FCBH NT (www.bible.is) Online
YouVersion NT (www.bible.com) Online
Possible Print Bibles
Amazon
World Bibles
Forum Bible Agencies
National Bible Societies
World Bible Finder
Virtual Storehouse
Resource Type Resource Name Source
Audio Recordings Audio Bible teaching Global Recordings Network
Film / Video God's Story video God's Story
Film / Video Jesus Film: view in Lao Jesus Film Project
Film / Video Magdalena video Jesus Film Project
Film / Video My Last Day video, anime Jesus Film Project
Film / Video Story of Jesus for Children Jesus Film Project
Film / Video The Hope Video Mars Hill Productions
Film / Video World Christian Videos World Christian Videos
General Bible for Children Bible for Children
General Biblical answers to your questions Got Questions Ministry
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Scripture Earth Gospel resources links Scripture Earth
General Voice of the Martyrs resources Voice of the Martyrs
General YouVersion Bible versions in text and/or audio YouVersion Bibles
General Zume Resources Zume Project
General Zume Training Zume Project
Mobile App Android Bible app: Lao YouVersion Bibles
Mobile App Android Bible app: ພຣະຄໍາພີລາວ Revised Lao Bible General / Other
Mobile App Android Book Reading app: ພະເຈົ້າ ແລະ ມະນຸດ Internet Publishing Sevice
Mobile App iOS Bible app: Lao YouVersion Bibles
Text / Printed Matter Literacy primer for Lao Literacy & Evangelism International
Text / Printed Matter tools for gospel conversations Cru
Text / Printed Matter Topical Scripture booklets and Bible studies World Missionary Press
Photo Source Cambodia Research Network 
Map Source Asia Harvest-Operation Myanmar  
Profile Source Asia Harvest 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.