07 April 2026

Life expectancy 2025, country & gender

Life Expectancy at birth of the world's populations, based on the latest United Nations Population Division estimates.

World Map Life Expectancy at Birth, UN 2023, Wiki:

Dark green: Aus & NZ, Canada, Japan, W & Sth Europe etc
Light greens: USA, Brasil, Peru, Chile, China, Russia, Algeria..
Yellow & Orange: Sth Africa, Egypt, Libya, Zambia, Angola..

Countries ranked by life expectancy (2025):
 

Rank

Country  

Life Expectancy

both sexes

Females Life

Expectancy

Males Life

Expectancy

1

Hong Kong

85.77

88.39

83.1

2

Japan            

85

88.03

81.99

3

South Korea 

84.53

87.4

81.44



5

Switzerland

84.23

86.06

82.34

6

Australia

84.21

85.97

82.43

7

Italy

84.03

86.01

81.94

8

Singapore

84

86.48

81.53

9

Spain

83.96

86.59

81.27


11

Malta

83.63

85.51

81.69

12

Norway

83.61

85.09

82.11

13

France

83.58

86.31

80.73

14

Sweden

83.58

85.34

81.84

15

Macao

83.42

85.49

81.26

16

UnArabEmir

83.23

84.44

82.37

17

Iceland

83.15

84.57

81.8


19

Canada

82.88

85.03

80.74

20

Israel

82.77

84.81

80.67

21

Ireland

82.75

84.72

80.79

22

Portugal

82.72

85.37

79.89

23

Qatar

82.68

83.6

81.96

24

Luxemb'g

82.49

84.06

80.91

25

Neth'lands

82.45

83.98

80.89

26

Belgium

82.43

84.57

80.26


28

New Zealand

82.39

84

80.77

29

Austria

82.29

84.57

79.97

30

Denmark

82.25

84.1

80.39

31

Finland

82.24

84.91

79.6

32

Greece

82.22

84.6

79.74

33

Puerto Rico

82.08

85.5

78.5

34

Cyprus

81.99

83.93

80.05

35

Slovenia

81.94

84.58

79.33

36

Germany

81.71

84.01

79.42

37

U. Kingdom

81.6

83.45

79.72

38

Bahrain

81.58

82.26

81.03

39

Chile

81.54

83.37

79.67



41

Costa Rica

81.19

83.72

78.6

42

Taiwan

80.94

83.88

78.09

43

Kuwait

80.78

82.15

79.63

44

Oman

80.45

82.21

78.95

45

Czechia

80.11

82.85

77.35

46

Panama

79.96

82.84

77.1

47

Albania

79.95

81.74

78.12

48

United States

79.61

82.11

77.22

49

Estonia

79.48

83.3

75.35

50

Saudi Arabia

79.19

81.51

77.56

51

New Caldnia

79.07

81.53

76.63

52

Poland

78.98

82.61

75.31

53

Croatia

78.92

81.95

75.8

54

Slovakia

78.65

81.84

75.41

55

Uruguay

78.45

82.17

74.59

56

Cuba

78.45

80.84

76.06

57

China

78.37

81.25

75.65

58

BosniaHerz.

78.24

81.23

74.88

59

Jordan

78.13

80.46

76.06

60

Peru

78.12

80.45

75.82

61

Colombia

78.09

80.77

75.36

62

Lebanon

78.08

79.99

76.02

63

Iran

78.05

79.99

76.22

64

Antigua Bar

77.94

80.6

74.93

65

Sri Lanka

77.85

80.9

74.65

66

 Turkey         

77.82

80.82

74.94

67

Ecuador

77.76

80.46

75.08

68

Argentina

77.69

80.16

75.14

69

Nth Maced

77.68

79.83

75.41

70

Guam

77.63

81.74

73.89

71

Montenegro

77.43

80.6

74.12

72

FrenchGuian

77.37

80.3

74.52

73

Hungary

77.33

80.46

74.07

74

Curaçao

77.17

81.1

72.87

75

Serbia

77.14

80.35

73.89

76

Malaysia

76.99

79.67

74.63

77

Tunisia

76.9

79.5

74.34

78

Thailand

76.83

81.17

72.65

79

Algeria

76.69

78.13

75.3

80

Aruba

76.64

79.06

73.99

81

Barbados

76.49

78.91

73.93

82

Latvia

76.48

80.72

71.94



85

Lithuania

76.32

80.92

71.61

86

Romania

76.25

79.82

72.74

87

Brazil

76.2

79.3

73.14

88

Armenia

76.01

79.73

71.76

89

Bulgaria

75.96

79.51

72.52

90

US Virgin Is

75.92

81.6

70.95

91

Morocco

75.68

77.96

73.54

92

Brunei

75.67

77.9

73.65

93

Grenada

75.52

78.64

72.67

94

Mexico

75.45

78.17

72.63

95

Mauritius

75.27

78.5

72.28

96

Nicaragua

75.27

77.74

72.64

97

Bangladesh

75.19

76.94

73.55

98

Vietnam

74.88

79.49

70.23

99

Ukraine

74.86

79.54

69.99

100

Bahamas

74.86

78.46

71.21

101

Georgia

74.82

79.36

69.93

102

Belarus

74.79

79.37

69.94


104

Kazakhstan

74.67

78.65

70.43

105

Paraguay

74.11

77.22

71.14

106

DomincnRep

73.99

77.23

70.79



109

North Korea

73.86

76.02

71.66



112

Russia

73.52

79.32

67.69


115

Libya

73.19

75.26

71.23


117

St. Palestine

73.1

76.86

69.72

118

India72.4874.1370.95

119

Syria

72.99

75.42

70.58

120

Guatemala

72.89

75.21

70.57

121

Venezuela

72.84

76.82

69.05

122

Uzbekistan

72.66

75.7

69.68

123

Iraq

72.53

74.33

70.59



Apologies for the other (mainly tiny) countries that I ran out of space for.

Our World In Data explains a problem. The term "life expectancy" refers to the number of years a person can expect to live. By definition, life expectancy is based on an estimate of the average age that members of a particular population group will be when they die. In practice, however, things are often more complicated. 

An important distinction is the difference between cohort and period life expectancy. The cohort life expectancy is the average life length of a particular group of individuals born in a given year. When we can track a group of people born in a particular year, many decades ago, and observe the exact date in which each one of them died, we can calculate this cohort's life expectancy by simply calculating the average of the ages of all members when they died.

You can think of period life expectancy in a particular year as the age a person born in that year would expect to live if the average age of death did not change over their lifetime. It is of course not possible to know this metric before all members of the cohort have died. Imagine that every over-65 year old in USA died in the 3 years of  Covid, the average age of the U.S population would have gone down marginally by 2024; new-born babies born in 2024 would not have been impacted by the epidemic. Imagine, however if every 18-25 year old male died in the Ukrainian War, the country's average age would have fallen severely. And since women live longer on average than men in every country, killing mainly men in war would make the gender difference even more in favour of (lonely) women.

Women enjoying their retirement together
Cascade Living Group

Because of that, statisticians commonly track members of a particular cohort and predict the average death age for them using a combination of observed mortality rates for past years and projections about mortality rates for future years.

Gloral average life expectancy rose from 32 in 1900.. to 73 in 2023
Our World in Data






22 comments:

Britta said...

Dear Hels, that's very interesting! In my profession I had to do a lot with statistics - thus I take them with a grain of salt. Yet it is very interesting that Hongkong is the paradise for longevity - Japan I expected, with their way of life and philosophy.
I take a look at my family - all became very old - and hope that this is a private statistic with value for me :-)

Andrew said...

Perhaps from top to bottom is equal to smoking rates?
The stand out is the country that spends the most on health care, has such a poor relative outcome on the list, number 48 if anyone is wondering. How can so much money be spent with such a poor outcome? Even the UK and NZ are disappointing.

Deb said...

The average life expectancy at birth for Nigeria and Chad c55.2 years. This is understably low due to long histories of health issues related to conflict, poverty or war. But does the life expectancy of an otherwise healthy country change because of an unexpected brutal war?

Luiz Gomes said...

Bom dia minha querida amiga Helen. Vi que a expectativa de vida do Brasil, ocupa a 87° posição. Eu conheço, uma senhora, que no mês de junho, fará 100 anos. Tive um tio, que chegou a 104 anos. Parabéns pelo seu maravilhoso trabalho de pesquisa. Grande abraço do seu amigo brasileiro.

peppylady (Dora) said...

I'm sure the United States is in there. But I didn't see it. But with Trump and his cutting back funding it will have an effect on American dying quicker. Like Dickens in his novel “Are there no prisons? … And the Union workhouses? … If they would rather die… they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population.” and “I can’t afford to make idle people merry. I help to support the establishments I have mentioned—they cost enough; and those who are badly off must go there.”

nyrequirements.com said...

1. Hong Kong - the place with the highest life expectancy at 84.3 years. 7 mill people live in this densely populated region, where Western and Eastern cultures collide. Severe air pollution poses health risks but the safety net = government-operated hospitals.
2. Japan This Pacific island nation is home to skyscrapers, pop culture, bullet trains, imperial palaces, mountainous parks and dense cities. With a huge population of 127 mill people, the E Asia nation still ranks #2 on the list. Their longevity is in their food eg fish
3. Italy has been embracing music, food, architecture for years on this peninsula in the Mediterranean. 60.6 mill people live in Italy where healthcare is considered a right. Italy ranked among the World Health Organisation’s top countries for quality health services.
4. Spain The Spanish opt for a daily siesta. 46.5+ people call Spain home and they are known for enjoying food, music and bullfights.
5. Switzerland Home to ski resorts, watches and Alps, the residents live to c83 years. 99.5% of Swiss citizens have health insurance.
6. Iceland Known for its drastic geography and unpredictable weather, Iceland makes #6 re highest life expectancy. This Nordic island nation has volcanoes, geysers, lava field, hot springs. While the country is mostly rural land, 335,000 live on the island.
7. France The answer to their longevity is likely rooted in the French health care system, which all residents are entitled to. 67 mill people call this European country home, living to 82 years old.
8. Singapore This island off Sth Malaysia has 5.6 mill residents creating a mix of cultures from Malaysia, China, Indonesia, India
9. Sweden has thousands of coastal islands, including the capital Stockholm, built on 14 islands. Swedish culture is calm and humble
10. Australia The world’s largest island is known for outdoor living. Located SE of Indonesia and best known for the Great Barrier Reef, 24+ million people live here.

River said...

My maternal Grandmother in Germany made it to 96, though her last years were in a nursing home and I hope to also make it to 96 or more. Most other ancestors died in their 80s.

Student said...

Britta, genetics seem to be a very good predictor of long life, one that I also hope works for you. But United Nations Population Division estimates are best based on country and gender because they are two perfectly objective measurements.

Student said...

Andrew, when I examined nyrequirements, the countries that spend the most on public health care seem to do the best for their citizens, at least collectively speaking.
Assuming the results are accurate, the comparisons between Hong Kong (85.8), Japan, Canada and New Zealand are less telling than the comparisons between Hong Kong, Japan, Nigeria and Chad (48.5)

Student said...

Deb, it is a problem of both national honesty and statistical accuracy.
Would the United Nations Population Division know if a nation suffered a major earthquake and never retrieved 2000 young bodies? Would they be told that South America officially lost only 1,344,000 deaths from Covid; that a shortage of testing and medical facilities probably hid a _much_ larger number of Covid deaths

Student said...

Luiz, would you agree that Brazil's decentralised, universal, public health system is funded equally for _all_ citizens? Or do contributions from federal, state and municipal governments not reach all parts of the nation equally? Do people in underserviced areas suffer more from mosquito-borne or heat-attributable diseases?

Student said...

peppylady, the USA was recorded in position #48.
If the U.S health system is having its preventive funding being cut back, it will have a major impact on public health. This will be especially true for children who don't properly receive their diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and polio vaccinations.
If funding for clinical medicine is cut back, the crisis is more visable and critical - hospitals full, ambulance ramping worsening, death rates increasing.

Student said...

River, in 1900 global average life expectancy was 32 (see graph above). And by 2023 their great grand children's average life expectancy had risen to 73. So if your past ancestors mainly died in their 80s, they were doing better than the rest of the world. Well done, your granny!

Student said...

nyrequirements, thank you....your top 10 nations were very similar to the United Nations Population Division when it comes to life expectancy.

But the U.N did not propose reasons for their findings. Certainly it makes sense to suggest that French longevity is likely rooted in the universal French health care system. But the connection between the Spanish practice of a daily siesta and a long life may or may not be established.

Infidel753 said...

Here in the USA there's a substantial difference in life expectancy between "red" (politically conservative) and "blue" (politically left-leaning") areas. The "red" areas mostly have higher rates of smoking and violent crime, a more meat-heavy diet, and above all higher rates of vaccine rejection, all tending toward a lower life expectancy. So the "blue" areas are actually doing better than the chart would suggest, since the national figures are an average.

Student said...

Infidel, the higher rates of smoking, guns and vaccine rejection in some states or countries without a doubt reduce life expectancy. But unless guns are banned or vaccines are enforced by law, how would a national Health Department know what happened to a person many years ago.

Gun death rates were at 5 per 100,000 in 1980, 2.7 per 100,000 by 1995 and after the 1996 Australia gun ban, 0.9 per 100,000 by 2019. Were those changes reflected in the nation's average life expectancy? Probably not.

Just to compare, the U.S. recorded 44,447 gun deaths in 2022, resulting in a rate of 13.1 per 100,000 people.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

Ranking number 6 isn't too bad I knew Japan would be in the top 3

hels said...

Jo-Anne
Me too :)

Luiz Gomes said...

Acho que as regiões mais carentes, como na Região Nordeste e na Região Norte, não recebem a mesma assistência, que as Regiões Sudeste, Sul e Centro-Oeste do Brasil. O SUS, Sistema Único de Saúde é excelente. Foi desprestigiado, pelo Jair Bolsonaro, considero ele, um tipo de anti-Cristo. Muitas pessoas morreram de covid, por culpa dele e do Ministro da Saúde da época.

Hels said...

Luiz
that is appalling :( I think that catastrophe may have happened in other countries as well.

Anonymous said...

Very interesting . I work in the Australia health system and it seems to me that the countries who do the best are those that avoid chronic lifestyle diseases like Type 2 diabetes and this might explain Hong Kong and then those countries that do have higher rates of chronic disease managing them in the community with a subsidized monitoring, education and an emphasis on self management are doing better than those that spend a fortune on technology for the wealthy and then leave the poorer to their own devises and often unable to afford consistent medication ad quality nutrition . A lot of health achievement can be had with low tech encouragement to eat better, exercise and get vaccinated . This can be nudged along by government policy and education .

Hels said...

Anonymous,
you are so clear, I don't understand why it isn't obvious to the entire world!

Mind you, I would not say _subsidised_ monitoring, costly vaccinations and GP visits; it all must be totally free and mandatory for families.

That leaves government policy and education to concentrate on dietary education, exercise, swimming lessons and free milk in schools.