2026-03-19 20:43:59
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The world’s happiest countries are often ranked, but looking at happiness scores from the latest 2026 World Happiness Report in relation to population gives a clearer view of the global population’s happiness or unhappiness.
While Nordic nations consistently top global happiness rankings, they represent only a small fraction of the world’s population. Meanwhile, billions of people live in countries with more moderate—or lower—levels of life satisfaction.
Using data from the 2026 World Happiness Report, this visualization combines happiness scores with population data from the UN World Population Prospects to reveal how happiness is truly distributed across the globe.
At the top of the rankings, countries like Finland, Denmark, and Iceland continue to report the highest levels of life satisfaction.
Life satisfaction was measured using the Cantril Ladder, which asked people to rate their lives on a scale of 0-10, where 10 represents the best possible life, and 0 represents the worst. Rankings averaged data over three years, to better capture happiness and well-being.
The data table below shows the happiness score and population of each country in the 2026 World Happiness Report:
| Rank | Country | Happiness Score | Population | Region |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Finland |
7.8 | 5.6M | Europe |
| 2 |
Iceland |
7.5 | 398K | Europe |
| 3 |
Denmark |
7.5 | 6.0M | Europe |
| 4 |
Costa Rica |
7.4 | 5.2M | North America |
| 5 |
Sweden |
7.3 | 10.7M | Europe |
| 6 |
Norway |
7.2 | 5.6M | Europe |
| 7 |
Netherlands |
7.2 | 18.3M | Europe |
| 8 |
Israel |
7.2 | 9.5M | Asia |
| 9 |
Luxembourg |
7.1 | 680K | Europe |
| 10 |
Switzerland |
7.0 | 9.0M | Europe |
| 11 |
New Zealand |
7.0 | 5.3M | Oceania |
| 12 |
Mexico |
7.0 | 131.9M | North America |
| 13 |
Ireland |
6.9 | 5.3M | Europe |
| 14 |
Belgium |
6.9 | 11.8M | Europe |
| 15 |
Australia |
6.9 | 27.0M | Oceania |
| 16 |
Kosovo |
6.9 | 1.7M | Europe |
| 17 |
Germany |
6.9 | 84.1M | Europe |
| 18 |
Slovenia |
6.9 | 2.1M | Europe |
| 19 |
Austria |
6.8 | 9.1M | Europe |
| 20 |
Czechia |
6.8 | 11.3M | Asia |
| 21 |
United Arab Emirates |
6.8 | 10.6M | Europe |
| 22 |
Saudi Arabia |
6.8 | 34.6M | Asia |
| 23 |
United States |
6.8 | 347.3M | North America |
| 24 |
Poland |
6.8 | 38.1M | Europe |
| 25 |
Canada |
6.7 | 40.1M | North America |
| 26 |
Taiwan |
6.7 | 23.1M | Asia |
| 27 |
Belize |
6.7 | 423K | North America |
| 28 |
Lithuania |
6.7 | 2.8M | Europe |
| 29 |
United Kingdom |
6.7 | 69.6M | Europe |
| 30 |
Serbia |
6.7 | 6.7M | Europe |
| 31 |
Uruguay |
6.6 | 3.4M | South America |
| 32 |
Brazil |
6.6 | 212.8M | South America |
| 33 |
Kazakhstan |
6.6 | 20.8M | Asia |
| 34 |
Romania |
6.6 | 18.9M | Europe |
| 35 |
France |
6.6 | 66.7M | Europe |
| 36 |
Singapore |
6.6 | 5.9M | Asia |
| 37 |
El Salvador |
6.6 | 6.4M | North America |
| 38 |
Italy |
6.6 | 59.1M | Europe |
| 39 |
Panama |
6.5 | 4.6M | North America |
| 40 |
Kuwait |
6.5 | 5.0M | Asia |
| 41 |
Spain |
6.5 | 47.9M | Europe |
| 42 |
Guatemala |
6.5 | 18.7M | North America |
| 43 |
Malta |
6.4 | 545K | Europe |
| 44 |
Argentina |
6.4 | 45.9M | South America |
| 45 |
Viet Nam |
6.4 | 101.6M | Asia |
| 46 |
Estonia |
6.4 | 1.3M | Europe |
| 47 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
6.4 | 3.1M | Europe |
| 48 |
Latvia |
6.4 | 1.9M | Europe |
| 49 |
Jamaica |
6.3 | 2.8M | North America |
| 50 |
Chile |
6.3 | 19.9M | South America |
| 51 |
Nicaragua |
6.3 | 7.0M | North America |
| 52 |
Thailand |
6.3 | 71.6M | Asia |
| 53 |
Uzbekistan |
6.3 | 37.1M | Asia |
| 54 |
Slovakia |
6.3 | 5.5M | Europe |
| 55 |
Bahrain |
6.3 | 1.6M | Asia |
| 56 |
Philippines |
6.2 | 116.8M | Asia |
| 57 |
Paraguay |
6.2 | 7.0M | South America |
| 58 |
Oman |
6.2 | 5.5M | Asia |
| 59 |
Ecuador |
6.1 | 18.3M | South America |
| 60 |
Montenegro |
6.1 | 633K | Europe |
| 61 |
Japan |
6.1 | 123.1M | Asia |
| 62 |
Cyprus |
6.1 | 1.4M | Europe |
| 63 |
Honduras |
6.1 | 11.0M | North America |
| 64 |
Dominican Republic |
6.1 | 11.5M | North America |
| 65 |
China |
6.1 | 1.42B | Asia |
| 66 |
Kyrgyzstan |
6.0 | 7.3M | Asia |
| 67 |
Republic of Korea |
6.0 | 53.4M | South America |
| 68 |
Colombia |
6.0 | 51.7M | Asia |
| 69 |
Portugal |
6.0 | 10.4M | Europe |
| 70 |
Croatia |
6.0 | 3.8M | Europe |
| 71 |
Malaysia |
6.0 | 36.0M | Asia |
| 72 |
Peru |
6.0 | 34.6M | South America |
| 73 |
Mauritius |
5.9 | 1.3M | Africa |
| 74 |
Hungary |
5.9 | 9.6M | Europe |
| 75 |
Mongolia |
5.9 | 3.5M | Asia |
| 76 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
5.9 | 1.5M | North America |
| 77 |
Republic of Moldova |
5.9 | 3.0M | Europe |
| 78 |
Bolivia |
5.8 | 12.6M | South America |
| 79 |
Russian Federation |
5.8 | 144.0M | Europe |
| 80 |
Venezuela |
5.8 | 28.5M | South America |
| 81 |
Libya |
5.7 | 7.5M | Africa |
| 82 |
North Macedonia |
5.7 | 1.8M | Europe |
| 83 |
Algeria |
5.7 | 47.4M | Africa |
| 84 |
Bulgaria |
5.7 | 6.7M | Europe |
| 85 |
Greece |
5.7 | 9.9M | Europe |
| 86 |
Albania |
5.7 | 2.8M | Europe |
| 87 |
Indonesia |
5.6 | 285.7M | Asia |
| 88 |
Tajikistan |
5.6 | 10.8M | Asia |
| 89 |
Armenia |
5.6 | 3.0M | Asia |
| 90 |
Hong Kong SAR |
5.6 | 7.4M | Asia |
| 91 |
Georgia |
5.5 | 3.8M | Asia |
| 92 |
Lao PDR |
5.5 | 7.9M | Asia |
| 93 |
Mozambique |
5.3 | 35.6M | Africa |
| 94 |
Türkiye |
5.3 | 87.7M | Asia |
| 95 |
Iraq |
5.2 | 47.0M | Asia |
| 96 |
Gabon |
5.2 | 2.6M | Africa |
| 97 |
Iran |
5.2 | 92.4M | Asia |
| 98 |
Côte d’Ivoire |
5.1 | 32.7M | Africa |
| 99 |
Nepal |
5.1 | 29.6M | Asia |
| 100 |
Cameroon |
5.1 | 29.9M | Africa |
| 101 |
South Africa |
5.0 | 64.7M | Africa |
| 102 |
Azerbaijan |
5.0 | 10.4M | Asia |
| 103 |
Niger |
4.9 | 27.9M | Africa |
| 104 |
Pakistan |
4.9 | 255.2M | Asia |
| 105 |
Tunisia |
4.8 | 12.3M | Africa |
| 106 |
Nigeria |
4.8 | 237.5M | Africa |
| 107 |
Senegal |
4.8 | 18.9M | Africa |
| 108 |
Namibia |
4.8 | 3.1M | Africa |
| 109 |
State of Palestine |
4.7 | 5.6M | Asia |
| 110 |
Kenya |
4.7 | 57.5M | Africa |
| 111 |
Ukraine |
4.7 | 39.0M | Europe |
| 112 |
Morocco |
4.6 | 38.4M | Africa |
| 113 |
Guinea |
4.6 | 15.1M | Africa |
| 114 |
Mali |
4.6 | 25.2M | Africa |
| 115 |
Ghana |
4.6 | 35.1M | Africa |
| 116 |
India |
4.5 | 1.46B | Asia |
| 117 |
Somalia |
4.5 | 19.7M | Africa |
| 118 |
Uganda |
4.5 | 51.4M | Africa |
| 119 |
Jordan |
4.5 | 11.5M | Asia |
| 120 |
Mauritania |
4.5 | 5.3M | Africa |
| 121 |
Cambodia |
4.5 | 17.8M | Asia |
| 122 |
Congo |
4.5 | 6.5M | Africa |
| 123 |
Burkina Faso |
4.5 | 24.1M | Africa |
| 124 |
Benin |
4.4 | 14.8M | Africa |
| 125 |
Chad |
4.4 | 21.0M | Africa |
| 126 |
Lesotho |
4.4 | 2.4M | Africa |
| 127 |
Bangladesh |
4.3 | 175.7M | Asia |
| 128 |
Gambia |
4.3 | 21.9M | Africa |
| 129 |
Myanmar |
4.3 | 54.9M | Asia |
| 130 |
Liberia |
4.3 | 5.7M | Africa |
| 131 |
Togo |
4.3 | 9.7M | Africa |
| 132 |
Madagascar |
4.2 | 32.7M | Africa |
| 133 |
Zambia |
4.1 | 21.9M | Africa |
| 134 |
Sri Lanka |
4.0 | 23.2M | Asia |
| 135 |
Ethiopia |
4.0 | 135.5M | Africa |
| 136 |
Comoros |
3.9 | 883K | Africa |
| 137 |
Eswatini |
3.9 | 1.3M | Africa |
| 138 |
Tanzania |
3.9 | 70.5M | Africa |
| 139 |
Egypt |
3.9 | 118.4M | Africa |
| 140 |
DR Congo |
3.8 | 112.8M | Africa |
| 141 |
Lebanon |
3.7 | 5.8M | Asia |
| 142 |
Yemen |
3.5 | 41.8M | Asia |
| 143 |
Botswana |
3.5 | 2.6M | Africa |
| 144 |
Zimbabwe |
3.3 | 17.0M | Africa |
| 145 |
Malawi |
3.3 | 22.2M | Africa |
| 146 |
Sierra Leone |
3.3 | 8.8M | Africa |
| 147 |
Afghanistan |
1.4 | 43.8M | Asia |
Across all nations in the top 10, populations stood below 20 million, or well under it.
Mexico, meanwhile, stood as a clear outlier. Ranking in 12th globally, it not only holds a 131.9 million population, but it outranks several major economies like Germany and the UK which have significantly smaller populations.
Moreover, the U.S. (#23), Brazil (#32), and Vietnam (#45) are among the few large populations that rank in the top 50.
With nearly a 1.5 billion population, India is the world’s most populous nation, but ranks 116th overall in happiness.
Covering 17% of the global population, India ranks below countries like Ukraine, Venezuela, and Iran. Despite strong economic growth, this has yet to translate into improved lived experience across its population.
China, the world’s second-most populous country, ranked significantly higher. In the past decade, its ranking has climbed from 79th to 65th, although it still remains lower than most other major economies.
Together, these population giants highlight a key reality: global happiness is shaped far more by where most people live than by which countries rank at the top.
While the happiest nations tend to dominate headlines, they represent only a small share of humanity. In contrast, billions of people live in countries where happiness levels are more moderate—or still developing—shifting the true center of global well-being away from the top of the rankings.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the countries with the highest and lowest life expectancy in the world.
2026-03-19 15:01:00
India’s AI boom is poised to reshape one of the world’s fastest-growing major economies. According to PwC, artificial intelligence could contribute between $550 billion and $607 billion to India’s GDP by 2035, equivalent to roughly 6% of total GDP.
This visualization, created in partnership with Adobe, explores how AI could unlock hundreds of billions in economic value across India’s key industries. The projected gains reflect not just technological innovation, but a broad productivity shift across foundational sectors of the economy.
AI‑powered productivity tools are driving this shift by streamlining everyday document workflows. They help teams analyze information faster, collaborate more efficiently, and turn data into decisions seamlessly.
Manufacturing is expected to see the largest gains, generating between $235.0 billion (low estimate) and $259.1 billion (high estimate) in value. From predictive maintenance to intelligent automation and supply chain optimization, AI could help Indian manufacturers increase output while lowering costs.
| Sector | Value Creation (high) ($ billions) | Value Creation (low) ($ billions) |
|---|---|---|
| Agriculture | 153.9 | 139.3 |
| Education | 77.6 | 70.2 |
| Energy Utilities | 84.6 | 76.6 |
| Health | 32.1 | 29.1 |
| Manufacturing | 259.1 | 235.0 |
| Total | 607.3 | 550.2 |
Agriculture follows closely behind, with $139.3–$153.9 billion in projected value creation. AI-driven crop monitoring, smarter irrigation, and advanced weather forecasting could significantly improve yields and reduce waste in a sector that employs millions.
Other sectors also stand to benefit:
In the education sector, AI is streamlining administrative tasks, allowing teachers to focus on high-value activities that enhance student engagement and improve learning outcomes.
Altogether, these sector gains total between $550.2 and $607.3 billion by 2035.
AI transformation doesn’t begin with futuristic robotics—it starts by improving everyday document workflows. Tasks like editing reports, reviewing scanned files, or updating PDFs are increasingly handled through browser‑based PDF tools that help simplify routine workflows and support faster decision‑making.

Explore AI-powered Document Workflows.

Dive into this bar chart, which shows global venture capital investment into artificial intelligence versus all other sectors.

Dive into this map, which shows which U.S. states have the highest use of Anthropic’s chatbot Claude relative to their workforce data.

Dive into this map, which shows which countries use Anthropic’s chatbot Claude the most, relative to their workforce populations.

From the U.S. and China to Singapore, dive in to which countries have the most supercomputers.

Google and YouTube dominate web traffic in 2026, as ChatGPT surges into the top five.

The U.S. tops the list with nearly 4,000 data centers.
2026-03-19 08:02:08
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Every year, the World Happiness Report reveals where people feel most satisfied with their lives, and where they don’t.
This graphic uses data from the 2026 edition of the World Happiness Report to show the happiest and unhappiest countries in the world.
The report ranks 147 countries using data from the Gallup World Poll, where respondents score their lives on a scale from 0 to 10, known as the Cantril Ladder. The rankings are based on a three-year average from 2023 to 2025, offering a more stable snapshot of global well-being.
Finland ranks as the world’s happiest country as of the 2026 report, extending a streak that has lasted nine consecutive years.
Alongside Iceland and Denmark, it highlights that high trust in institutions and quality of life remain key drivers of well-being.
The data table below ranks the top 30 countries by their happiness score from the World Happiness Report 2026:
| Rank | Country | Life evaluation (3-year average) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Finland |
7.8 |
| 2 |
Iceland |
7.5 |
| 3 |
Denmark |
7.5 |
| 4 |
Costa Rica |
7.4 |
| 5 |
Sweden |
7.3 |
| 6 |
Norway |
7.2 |
| 7 |
Netherlands |
7.2 |
| 8 |
Israel |
7.2 |
| 9 |
Luxembourg |
7.1 |
| 10 |
Switzerland |
7.0 |
| 11 |
New Zealand |
7.0 |
| 12 |
Mexico |
7.0 |
| 13 |
Ireland |
6.9 |
| 14 |
Belgium |
6.9 |
| 15 |
Australia |
6.9 |
| 16 |
Kosovo |
6.9 |
| 17 |
Germany |
6.9 |
| 18 |
Slovenia |
6.9 |
| 19 |
Austria |
6.8 |
| 20 |
Czechia |
6.8 |
| 21 |
United Arab Emirates |
6.8 |
| 22 |
Saudi Arabia |
6.8 |
| 23 |
United States |
6.8 |
| 24 |
Poland |
6.8 |
| 25 |
Canada |
6.7 |
| 26 |
Taiwan |
6.7 |
| 27 |
Belize |
6.7 |
| 28 |
Lithuania |
6.7 |
| 29 |
United Kingdom |
6.7 |
| 30 |
Serbia |
6.7 |
Beyond Europe, Costa Rica and Mexico are notable standouts, ranking in the global top 10 and outperforming many wealthier nations. Costa Rica’s rise to fourth is the strongest recording ever for a Latin American nation, while Mexico has jumped to 12th spot up from 36th in 2022.
The U.S. ranks 23rd, one of its lowest positions on record.
This follows a broadly declining trend seen over the past 15 years. The U.S. ranked 11th in 2011, but by 2024 it had fallen down to its lowest ranking of 24th. A key driver is the sharp drop in well-being among younger Americans, often linked to rising social media use and declining mental health.
Elsewhere, Israel ranks eighth, making it the highest-ranked country in the Middle East, followed by the UAE (21st) and Saudi Arabia (22nd). In Asia, Taiwan stands out as the only country to make the global top 30, ranking 26th overall.
Afghanistan ranks as the world’s unhappiest country, followed by Sierra Leone and Malawi.
For years, Afghanistan’s political instability, war, and restrictions on rights and freedoms has led to an increased sense of hopelessness. Over the course of the past decade, its score has dropped from 3.8 in 2016 to just 1.4.
The data table below ranks the bottom 30 countries by their happiness score from the World Happiness Report 2026:
| Rank | Canada | Life evaluation (3-year average) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Afghanistan |
1.4 |
| 2 |
Sierra Leone |
3.3 |
| 3 |
Malawi |
3.3 |
| 4 |
Zimbabwe |
3.3 |
| 5 |
Botswana |
3.5 |
| 6 |
Yemen |
3.5 |
| 7 |
Lebanon |
3.7 |
| 8 |
DR Congo |
3.8 |
| 9 |
Egypt |
3.9 |
| 10 |
Tanzania |
3.9 |
| 11 |
Eswatini |
3.9 |
| 12 |
Comoros |
3.9 |
| 13 |
Ethiopia |
4.0 |
| 14 |
Sri Lanka |
4.0 |
| 15 |
Zambia |
4.1 |
| 16 |
Madagascar |
4.2 |
| 17 |
Togo |
4.3 |
| 18 |
Liberia |
4.3 |
| 19 |
Myanmar |
4.3 |
| 20 |
Gambia |
4.3 |
| 21 |
Bangladesh |
4.3 |
| 22 |
Lesotho |
4.4 |
| 23 |
Chad |
4.4 |
| 24 |
Benin |
4.4 |
| 25 |
Burkina Faso |
4.5 |
| 26 |
Congo |
4.5 |
| 27 |
Cambodia |
4.5 |
| 28 |
Mauritania |
4.5 |
| 29 |
Jordan |
4.5 |
| 30 |
Uganda |
4.5 |
Myanmar also ranks among the least happy countries globally, as ongoing conflict between the military junta and rebel groups since 2021 has displaced millions and deepened a severe humanitarian crisis.
Political upheaval has also swept across other Asian countries, including Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, amid economic difficulties. In recent years, both countries have seen protests that led to the ousting of their leaders.
Ultimately, the global happiness rankings reveal a clear divide: countries with stability, strong institutions, and social support systems consistently rank highest, while those facing conflict and uncertainty continue to fall behind.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the countries where people live the longest.
2026-03-19 08:01:25
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Finland tops the global happiness rankings once again, according to the World Happiness Report 2026. But beyond the familiar Nordic dominance, this year’s rankings include some standout surprises.
Costa Rica places fourth globally, while Mexico also ranks ahead of many wealthier nations. Together, these results show how social trust, community, and everyday quality of life can matter as much as income.
The map shows how happiness levels compare across countries worldwide.
Finland ranks first with a score of 7.8 out of 10, continuing its long-standing lead in global happiness.
The nation’s continued lead reinforces a broader trend: countries with strong institutions, high trust, and robust social safety nets consistently rank highest in life satisfaction.
| Rank | Country | Happiness Score |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Finland |
7.8 |
| 2 |
Iceland |
7.5 |
| 3 |
Denmark |
7.5 |
| 4 |
Costa Rica |
7.4 |
| 5 |
Sweden |
7.3 |
| 6 |
Norway |
7.2 |
| 7 |
Netherlands |
7.2 |
| 8 |
Israel |
7.2 |
| 9 |
Luxembourg |
7.1 |
| 10 |
Switzerland |
7.0 |
| 11 |
New Zealand |
7.0 |
| 12 |
Mexico |
7.0 |
| 13 |
Ireland |
6.9 |
| 14 |
Belgium |
6.9 |
| 15 |
Australia |
6.9 |
| 16 |
Kosovo |
6.9 |
| 17 |
Germany |
6.9 |
| 18 |
Slovenia |
6.9 |
| 19 |
Austria |
6.8 |
| 20 |
Czechia |
6.8 |
| 21 |
United Arab Emirates |
6.8 |
| 22 |
Saudi Arabia |
6.8 |
| 23 |
United States |
6.8 |
| 24 |
Poland |
6.8 |
| 25 |
Canada |
6.7 |
| 26 |
Taiwan |
6.7 |
| 27 |
Belize |
6.7 |
| 28 |
Lithuania |
6.7 |
| 29 |
United Kingdom |
6.7 |
| 30 |
Serbia |
6.7 |
| 31 |
Uruguay |
6.6 |
| 32 |
Brazil |
6.6 |
| 33 |
Kazakhstan |
6.6 |
| 34 |
Romania |
6.6 |
| 35 |
France |
6.6 |
| 36 |
Singapore |
6.6 |
| 37 |
El Salvador |
6.6 |
| 38 |
Italy |
6.6 |
| 39 |
Panama |
6.5 |
| 40 |
Kuwait |
6.5 |
| 41 |
Spain |
6.5 |
| 42 |
Guatemala |
6.5 |
| 43 |
Malta |
6.4 |
| 44 |
Argentina |
6.4 |
| 45 |
Viet Nam |
6.4 |
| 46 |
Estonia |
6.4 |
| 47 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
6.4 |
| 48 |
Latvia |
6.4 |
| 49 |
Jamaica |
6.3 |
| 50 |
Chile |
6.3 |
| 51 |
Nicaragua |
6.3 |
| 52 |
Thailand |
6.3 |
| 53 |
Uzbekistan |
6.3 |
| 54 |
Slovakia |
6.3 |
| 55 |
Bahrain |
6.3 |
| 56 |
Philippines |
6.2 |
| 57 |
Paraguay |
6.2 |
| 58 |
Oman |
6.2 |
| 59 |
Ecuador |
6.1 |
| 60 |
Montenegro |
6.1 |
| 61 |
Japan |
6.1 |
| 62 |
Cyprus |
6.1 |
| 63 |
Honduras |
6.1 |
| 64 |
Dominican Republic |
6.1 |
| 65 |
China |
6.1 |
| 66 |
Kyrgyzstan |
6.0 |
| 67 |
Republic of Korea |
6.0 |
| 68 |
Colombia |
6.0 |
| 69 |
Portugal |
6.0 |
| 70 |
Croatia |
6.0 |
| 71 |
Malaysia |
6.0 |
| 72 |
Peru |
6.0 |
| 73 |
Mauritius |
5.9 |
| 74 |
Hungary |
5.9 |
| 75 |
Mongolia |
5.9 |
| 76 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
5.9 |
| 77 |
Republic of Moldova |
5.9 |
| 78 |
Bolivia |
5.8 |
| 79 |
Russian Federation |
5.8 |
| 80 |
Venezuela |
5.8 |
| 81 |
Libya |
5.7 |
| 82 |
North Macedonia |
5.7 |
| 83 |
Algeria |
5.7 |
| 84 |
Bulgaria |
5.7 |
| 85 |
Greece |
5.7 |
| 86 |
Albania |
5.7 |
| 87 |
Indonesia |
5.6 |
| 88 |
Tajikistan |
5.6 |
| 89 |
Armenia |
5.6 |
| 90 |
Hong Kong SAR |
5.6 |
| 91 |
Georgia |
5.5 |
| 92 |
Lao PDR |
5.5 |
| 93 |
Mozambique |
5.3 |
| 94 |
Türkiye |
5.3 |
| 95 |
Iraq |
5.2 |
| 96 |
Gabon |
5.2 |
| 97 |
Iran |
5.2 |
| 98 |
Côte d’Ivoire |
5.1 |
| 99 |
Nepal |
5.1 |
| 100 |
Cameroon |
5.1 |
| 101 |
South Africa |
5.0 |
| 102 |
Azerbaijan |
5.0 |
| 103 |
Niger |
4.9 |
| 104 |
Pakistan |
4.9 |
| 105 |
Tunisia |
4.8 |
| 106 |
Nigeria |
4.8 |
| 107 |
Senegal |
4.8 |
| 108 |
Namibia |
4.8 |
| 109 |
State of Palestine |
4.7 |
| 110 |
Kenya |
4.7 |
| 111 |
Ukraine |
4.7 |
| 112 |
Morocco |
4.6 |
| 113 |
Guinea |
4.6 |
| 114 |
Mali |
4.6 |
| 115 |
Ghana |
4.6 |
| 116 |
India |
4.5 |
| 117 |
Somalia |
4.5 |
| 118 |
Uganda |
4.5 |
| 119 |
Jordan |
4.5 |
| 120 |
Mauritania |
4.5 |
| 121 |
Cambodia |
4.5 |
| 122 |
Congo |
4.5 |
| 123 |
Burkina Faso |
4.5 |
| 124 |
Benin |
4.4 |
| 125 |
Chad |
4.4 |
| 126 |
Lesotho |
4.4 |
| 127 |
Bangladesh |
4.3 |
| 128 |
Gambia |
4.3 |
| 129 |
Myanmar |
4.3 |
| 130 |
Liberia |
4.3 |
| 131 |
Togo |
4.3 |
| 132 |
Madagascar |
4.2 |
| 133 |
Zambia |
4.1 |
| 134 |
Sri Lanka |
4.0 |
| 135 |
Ethiopia |
4.0 |
| 136 |
Comoros |
3.9 |
| 137 |
Eswatini |
3.9 |
| 138 |
Tanzania |
3.9 |
| 139 |
Egypt |
3.9 |
| 140 |
DR Congo |
3.8 |
| 141 |
Lebanon |
3.7 |
| 142 |
Yemen |
3.5 |
| 143 |
Botswana |
3.5 |
| 144 |
Zimbabwe |
3.3 |
| 145 |
Malawi |
3.3 |
| 146 |
Sierra Leone |
3.3 |
| 147 |
Afghanistan |
1.4 |
Nordic nations, in particular, combine relatively high incomes with low inequality, accessible public services, and strong social cohesion, factors associated with self-reported well-being.
Costa Rica (4th) and Mexico (12th) stand out as notable examples, ranking well above many higher-income countries like Ireland, Australia, and Germany. Their performance highlights the role of social connection, community, and lifestyle factors not fully captured by GDP.
The report uses the Cantril ladder (a scale from 0 to 10) to capture life satisfaction across 147 countries and a sample size greater than 100,000 people. Scores are averaged from 2023 to 2025 to better capture happiness and well being, and to reduce sampling error.
High income doesn’t always translate into higher life satisfaction rankings.
Many advanced economies—including the U.S., Canada, the UK, and much of Western Europe—fall within a narrow band of scores between 6.7 and 6.9. While still high by global standards, this clustering suggests that life satisfaction has plateaued across wealthier nations.
At the same time, key countries in Eastern Europe, such as Poland and Estonia, are steadily climbing the rankings, pointing to improving living standards and social conditions.
Across Asia, Taiwan ranks as the region’s happiest country at 26th place, well ahead of Japan (61st) and China (65th). In Africa, Mauritius leads the continent, supported by relatively low corruption and high life expectancy.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the top 30 countries by quality of life.
2026-03-18 23:55:00
Demand for new data centers is soaring across the United States. By 2028, the projected growth of total U.S. load capacity for data centers is about 150 GW.
That’s nearly double the 80 GW capacity from 2025 and the equivalent of 75 Hoover Dams worth of power demand.
In response, new growth is shifting to places where power is cheaper, faster to secure, and easier to expand.
This graphic, in partnership with the National Public Utilities Council, shows which U.S. states may win or lose data center market share by 2028. It uses data from Bloom Energy’s 2026 Data Center Power Report.
Power availability, or lack of it, is redrawing the traditional map of U.S. data centers.
The table below shows the expected change in U.S. data center market share among the top markets in 2025 to 2028:
| U.S. State | Expected Change (%) |
|---|---|
| Texas | 142 |
| Georgia | 75 |
| Rest of U.S. | 21 |
| Arizona | 0 |
| Ohio | -17 |
| Illinois | -25 |
| Virginia | -35 |
| California | -50 |
| Iowa | -60 |
| Oregon | -67 |
| Nebraska | -75 |
Here, market share means each state’s slice of the overall U.S. market. Expected change is how much that slice will increase or decrease over time.
By 2028, Texas has the largest expected growth of any U.S. state with an increase of 142%. This is an addition of over 40 GW, or about 30% of the total projected U.S. capacity of 150 GW.
This means that in two years the Lone Star State will grow the most and control the most in terms of U.S. market share.
Following Texas is Georgia (+75%) with the second-largest gain while the rest of the U.S. will grow by 21% overall.
The geographic shift in growth suggests that developers are moving future growth away from legacy markets towards the Southeast.
Unlike the Southeast, many legacy markets are losing market share. The largest expected loss is Nebraska (-75%), followed by Oregon (-67%), then Iowa (-60%).
Most notable declines may be in California (-50%) and Virginia (-35%), two states tied closely to data centers.
California is home to Silicon Valley, the HQ hub for many of the tech companies driving the data center market forward, like Apple, Meta, and Google.
Virginia is currently the largest data center market in the world and home to 35% of the world’s known hyperscale data centers.
Despite growth in absolute terms, market share decline is expected in both states. This indicates developers are turning to new regions with fewer grid constraints for future expansion.

Questions about powering gigawatt-scale data centers? Contact NPUC

Which states dominate carbon offsets? This U.S. map shows the hotspots as utilities respond to the AI electricity surge.

Just four U.S. utilities operate with over 80% carbon-free generation. This graphic ranks the top 10 cleanest utilities by their fuel mix.

This streamgraph shows projected offshore wind capacity by region, according to The Global Wind Energy Council.

Severe weather caused all ten of the largest U.S. power outages in the past decade, highlighting the importance of grid resiliency.

This treemap chart uses data from Statistical Review of World Energy to show the top 10 countries with the most battery storage capacity in 2023.

This voronoi depicts the countries that capture the most carbon globally in 2023, with data from Rystad Energy.

This bar chart shows the countries’ highest and lowest energy transition index scores determined by the World Economic Forum.

This dumbbell plot shows the most and least expensive sources of energy in the U.S., using data from Lazard.

This infographic shows the greenhouse gas emissions targets of all countries and their target years with data from Net Zero Tracker.

This bar chart shows the varying prices of carbon across different economies around the globe, using data from the World Bank.

This streamgraph shows the growth in renewable energy capacity by country and region since 2000.

From tropical cyclones to severe storms, the number of extreme weather disasters with losses exceeding $1 billion has climbed over time.

What are the most polluted cities in the U.S. according to data from the American Lung Association’s 2024 State of the Air Report?

The U.S. emits about 6 billion metric tons of greenhouse gases a year. Here’s how these emissions rank by sector.

Can America become carbon-free by 2035? This graphic breaks down the United States’ electricity mix, by state.

This infographic highlights announced coal plant closures in the U.S. and how much power will be affected.
2026-03-18 22:35:32
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Life expectancy varies widely across the U.S., with clear regional patterns emerging in the latest data.
States in the Northeast and on the West Coast tend to have higher life expectancies, while many in the South and Appalachia rank lower.
This map shows these differences using data from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, based on 2022 life tables published in December 2025, the latest publicly available state-level figures as of March 2026.
The CDC’s report uses period life tables, which estimate how long a hypothetical group would live if it experienced the death rates observed in 2022 at every age. In other words, the measure captures current mortality conditions in each state, not a forecast for babies born there today.
Among the 50 states and D.C., Hawaii had the highest life expectancy at birth in 2022 at 80.0 years. Massachusetts followed at 79.8, with New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut close behind.
The data table below shows the life expectancy of every U.S. state and D.C.:
| Rank | State | Life Expectancy (Years) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hawaii | 80.0 |
| 2 | Massachusetts | 79.8 |
| 3 | New Jersey | 79.6 |
| 4 | New York | 79.5 |
| 5 | Connecticut | 79.4 |
| 6 | California | 79.3 |
| 7 | Minnesota | 79.3 |
| 8 | Rhode Island | 79.2 |
| 9 | Utah | 79.0 |
| 10 | New Hampshire | 78.7 |
| 11 | Colorado | 78.5 |
| 12 | Idaho | 78.4 |
| 13 | Washington | 78.4 |
| 14 | Nebraska | 78.3 |
| 15 | Vermont | 78.3 |
| 16 | Wisconsin | 78.1 |
| 17 | North Dakota | 77.9 |
| 18 | Iowa | 77.9 |
| 19 | Florida | 77.9 |
| 20 | Maryland | 77.8 |
| 21 | Oregon | 77.7 |
| 22 | Illinois | 77.5 |
| 23 | Virginia | 77.5 |
| 24 | Pennsylvania | 77.3 |
| 25 | South Dakota | 77.3 |
| 26 | Montana | 77.3 |
| 27 | Texas | 77.1 |
| 28 | Wyoming | 76.8 |
| 29 | Michigan | 76.8 |
| 30 | Arizona | 76.7 |
| 31 | Maine | 76.6 |
| 32 | District of Columbia | 76.6 |
| 33 | Delaware | 76.5 |
| 34 | Kansas | 76.5 |
| 35 | Nevada | 76.4 |
| 36 | Georgia | 75.9 |
| 37 | North Carolina | 75.9 |
| 38 | Alaska | 75.8 |
| 39 | Ohio | 75.6 |
| 40 | Indiana | 75.4 |
| 41 | Missouri | 75.2 |
| 42 | South Carolina | 75.1 |
| 43 | New Mexico | 74.5 |
| 44 | Arkansas | 73.9 |
| 45 | Oklahoma | 73.8 |
| 46 | Tennessee | 73.8 |
| 47 | Alabama | 73.8 |
| 48 | Louisiana | 73.8 |
| 49 | Kentucky | 73.6 |
| 50 | Mississippi | 72.6 |
| 51 | West Virginia | 72.2 |
On the other end of the ranking, West Virginia came in last at 72.2 years, behind Mississippi at 72.6 and Kentucky at 73.6.
The broad pattern is regional: the Northeast and West Coast have higher life expectancies, while many Southern and Appalachian states cluster at the bottom.
While the national average is 77.5 years, only 21 states cleared that mark. Illinois and Virginia matched it exactly, and the remaining 28 states came in below it.
The CDC also found that females had higher life expectancy than males in every state and D.C., but the size of that gender gap varied widely. States on the lower end of life expectancy tended to have larger divides, while higher-ranked states had smaller gaps.
For example, New Mexico (ninth-lowest life expectancy at 74.5) recorded the largest female-male gap at 6.9 years, while Utah (ninth-highest at 79 years) had the smallest at 3.6 years.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Why Living Longer Isn’t Always Living Healthier on Voronoi.