Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain – The Catholic Church in the province of Barcelona is experiencing a significant resurgence, with official data confirming a long-suspected trend: mass attendance has doubled in just five years, now comfortably exceeding half a million people. This phenomenon is part of what analysts and ecclesiastical leaders describe as a ‘Catholic awakening’ that is beginning to be felt in various parts of Spain, manifesting strongly in Barcelona, especially among young people and adults who are consciously embracing the faith.
Mass Attendance Surges to Over 600,000
According to data from the Centre d’Estudis d’Opinió (CEO), Idescat, and the Archbishopric of Barcelona, in July 2020, just over 300,000 people in the province attended mass with varying frequency. Five years later, in July 2025, that figure has already surpassed 600,000, even reaching around 650,000 people, according to a report accessed by LA RAZÓN. In percentage terms, the jump is equally significant: from 10.4% of Catholics in 2020 to 20.1% in 2025.
The report highlights a particularly revealing fact: while five years ago barely one in ten Catholics regularly attended Sunday mass-understood as attending at least once a month-today that proportion has doubled. Added to this is a very significant number of faithful who, without attending weekly, have participated at least once in the Eucharist over the past year.
Considering these figures, the Archbishopric estimates that more than one million people have attended at least one Catholic mass in the province of Barcelona during 2025. The more than 600,000 regular faithful are joined by some 400,000 who have attended occasionally, painting a very different picture from a decade ago, when secularization seemed to be advancing unchecked.
A Broader Religious Awakening
This upturn is not an isolated phenomenon nor exclusive to Barcelona. The document indicates that attendance at religious services has generally increased across all denominations present in Catalonia since the end of the Covid-19 pandemic. However, in the case of Catholicism, the growth presents unique features that reinforce the idea of a shift in cycle.
Sources from the Archbishopric openly speak of a ‘religious awakening’ that is not solely explained by the familial transmission of faith-which still exists-but above all by the incorporation of adults and young people who decide to be baptized and begin to live Christianity voluntarily. This phenomenon is also being observed in other Spanish dioceses, with an increase in adult baptisms, confirmations, and participation in catechumenates.
In Barcelona, this profile is replicated: young people approaching the Church after personal search processes, and adults who, without having had a religious education or having abandoned it for years, are resuming the practice of faith. The pandemic, social and existential uncertainty, and the need for fundamental answers appear as contextual factors that have favored this return or discovery.