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World Population 2030: 8.5 Billion People, A Decade in Review

World Population 2030: 8.5 Billion Milestone

2030 is not just another year on the population calendar. It is the year the United Nations itself has used for decades as a headline benchmark, the figure quoted in sustainability reports, government planning documents, and global development goals. By the time this year arrives, the human population is projected to settle at approximately 8.5 billion people, a milestone that closes out one of the fastest-growing decades in recorded history while opening a much slower one.

This piece walks through that milestone year in a different way than a typical statistics roundup. Instead of front-loading every table at once, it moves chapter by chapter: first the headline number, then the decade of change that led to it, then the countries and cities carrying the most weight, then the demographic undercurrents (fertility, aging, urbanization) that explain why the next ten years will look nothing like the last fifty.

Chapter One: The Number Itself

8.5 billion. That is the figure the United Nations has projected for global population in 2030 since at least its 2015 revision, and it has held remarkably steady across multiple subsequent revisions, a rare case of demographic stability in long-range forecasting. Some sources place the figure slightly higher, closer to 8.6 billion, depending on which fertility variant and update cycle they reference, but 8.5 billion remains the most widely cited consensus estimate.

To put that number in context:

  • It represents roughly 900 million more people than were alive when the UN first published this projection back in 2015.
  • It is almost exactly double the population the planet held in 1980.
  • It arrives just eight years after the world crossed 8 billion in November 2022, the shortest gap between any two half-billion milestones in human history.

None of this is a literal headcount. Like every population figure in this guide, it is a model output built from census data, birth and death registries, and migration records, refined by the United Nations every two years as better information becomes available.

Chapter Two: How We Got Here, A Decade in Three Acts

2020 to 2023: The slowdown becomes official

Global growth dipped below 1% annually for the first time since 1950, a threshold many demographers consider the real start of the “population deceleration era.” The world still crossed 8 billion in late 2022, but the pace of that crossing was noticeably slower than the leap from 6 to 7 billion a decade earlier.

2023 to 2027: The great handoff

India overtook China as the most populous nation on Earth, a transition years in the making and now fully entrenched. China’s population began an outright decline that has continued every year since, while India kept adding tens of millions annually.

2027 to 2030: Consolidation

Growth concentrated even further into a small cluster of countries, mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa, while an expanding list of nations, now over 90, settled into year-over-year population decline. By 2030, the structural story of this decade is essentially locked in: explosive growth in one region, quiet contraction in several others, and a global average sitting somewhere in between.

Chapter Three: The Headline Country Numbers

India enters 2030 with a population of around 1.51 to 1.52 billion, holding a commanding lead over China, whose population has settled closer to 1.40 billion. The gap between the two nations, which didn’t exist at all before 2023, now exceeds 110 million people and continues widening.

The United States remains the third-largest country, at roughly 357 million, a figure increasingly dependent on net migration rather than natural population increase. Indonesia, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Brazil round out the rest of the top tier, with Nigeria’s growth rate standing out as the fastest among any country of comparable size.

Population by Country, 2030 (Top 100, Estimated Rounded Figures)

CountryRankPopulation
India11.51 billion
China21.40 billion
United States3357 million
Indonesia4299 million
Pakistan5280 million
Nigeria6264 million
Brazil7217 million
Bangladesh8188 million
Ethiopia9158 million
DR Congo10136 million
Russia11142 million
Mexico12137 million
Egypt13129 million
Philippines14124 million
Japan15119 million
Vietnam16105 million
Iran1796 million
Turkey1890 million
Germany1983 million
Tanzania2083 million
United Kingdom2171 million
Thailand2271 million
South Africa2369 million
France2467 million
Kenya2565 million
Uganda2661 million
Italy2758 million
Sudan2859 million
Myanmar2956 million
Colombia3056 million
Iraq3153 million
Algeria3251 million
South Korea3351 million
Afghanistan3451 million
Spain3548 million
Argentina3647 million
Yemen3747 million
Angola3847 million
Canada3942 million
Mozambique4042 million
Uzbekistan4141 million
Morocco4240 million
Ghana4340 million
Poland4438 million
Saudi Arabia4538 million
Malaysia4638 million
Ukraine4737 million
Côte d’Ivoire4838 million
Madagascar4937 million
Peru5035 million
Cameroon5134 million
Niger5235 million
Nepal5330 million
Mali5431 million
Venezuela5529 million
Burkina Faso5628 million
Syria5729 million
Australia5828 million
North Korea5927 million
Zambia6026 million
Malawi6126 million
Chad6225 million
Somalia6324 million
Sri Lanka6423 million
Taiwan6523 million
Kazakhstan6622 million
Senegal6722 million
Guatemala6820 million
Chile6920 million
Zimbabwe7020 million
Cambodia7119 million
Netherlands7219 million
Ecuador7319 million
Romania7419 million
Guinea7517 million
Rwanda7617 million
Benin7717 million
Burundi7817 million
South Sudan7914 million
Bolivia8013 million
Tunisia8113 million
Haiti8213 million
United Arab Emirates8313 million
Jordan8412 million
Tajikistan8512 million
Belgium8612 million
Dominican Republic8712 million
Honduras8812 million
Papua New Guinea8912 million
Sweden9011 million
Togo9111 million
Cuba9211 million
Azerbaijan9311 million
Czechia9411 million
Israel9510 million
Portugal9610 million
Greece9710 million
Hungary989 million
Sierra Leone9910 million
Austria1009 million

Figures rounded to the nearest convenient unit. Source: United Nations World Population Prospects, medium-fertility variant, consistent with the 8.5 billion global milestone repeatedly cited across multiple UN revisions for 2030.

Chapter Four: Where People Cluster, City by City

National borders only tell part of the story. By 2030, more than 6 in 10 people on Earth will live in an urban area, and the largest of those urban areas will function almost like an independent nation in terms of scale.

Tokyo and Delhi remain locked in a close race for the title of largest urban agglomeration on the planet, with Delhi’s faster growth rate putting it on track to take the lead sometime around this point in the decade. Shanghai, Dhaka, and Cairo follow, each comfortably above 24 million residents. Kinshasa has climbed into the top tier of global cities, a direct reflection of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s position as one of the fastest-growing large countries on Earth.

Population by City, 2030 (Top 100, Estimated Rounded Figures)

CityCountryRankPopulation
DelhiIndia138 million
TokyoJapan237 million
ShanghaiChina332 million
DhakaBangladesh427 million
CairoEgypt526 million
KinshasaDR Congo624 million
MumbaiIndia725 million
São PauloBrazil824 million
Mexico CityMexico924 million
BeijingChina1023 million
LagosNigeria1122 million
KarachiPakistan1221 million
BangaloreIndia1318 million
LahorePakistan1418 million
OsakaJapan1519 million
ChongqingChina1619 million
IstanbulTurkey1717 million
KolkataIndia1817 million
ManilaPhilippines1917 million
Buenos AiresArgentina2016 million
GuangzhouChina2116 million
TianjinChina2215 million
ChennaiIndia2314 million
Rio de JaneiroBrazil2414 million
ShenzhenChina2514 million
MoscowRussia2613 million
JakartaIndonesia2713 million
BogotáColombia2813 million
HyderabadIndia2913 million
LuandaAngola3013 million
LimaPeru3112 million
BangkokThailand3212 million
Dar es SalaamTanzania3311 million
ParisFrance3411 million
Ho Chi Minh CityVietnam3511 million
NanjingChina3611 million
AhmedabadIndia3710 million
ChengduChina3811 million
SeoulSouth Korea3910 million
LondonUnited Kingdom4010 million
TehranIran4110 million
BaghdadIraq429.4 million
Kuala LumpurMalaysia439.9 million
SuratIndia449.7 million
Xi’anChina459.8 million
WuhanChina469.5 million
NagoyaJapan479.5 million
SuzhouChina489.2 million
HangzhouChina499.1 million
RiyadhSaudi Arabia509 million
New York CityUnited States518.4 million
PuneIndia528.6 million
ShenyangChina538.3 million
KhartoumSudan548.2 million
Addis AbabaEthiopia558 million
DongguanChina568.1 million
FoshanChina578.1 million
Hong KongHong Kong (China)587.8 million
AbidjanCôte d’Ivoire597.4 million
HarbinChina607.4 million
SantiagoChile617.2 million
NairobiKenya627.2 million
MadridSpain637 million
JohannesburgSouth Africa646.9 million
TorontoCanada656.8 million
DalianChina666.6 million
Belo HorizonteBrazil676.5 million
QingdaoChina686.5 million
ZhengzhouChina696.5 million
YangonMyanmar706.4 million
SingaporeSingapore716.3 million
JinanChina726.3 million
ChittagongBangladesh736.5 million
AlexandriaEgypt746.3 million
KabulAfghanistan756.1 million
HanoiVietnam766.1 million
YaoundéCameroon776 million
BarcelonaSpain785.9 million
AnkaraTurkey795.9 million
GuadalajaraMexico805.9 million
MelbourneAustralia815.9 million
Saint PetersburgRussia825.7 million
SydneyAustralia835.6 million
FukuokaJapan845.6 million
MonterreyMexico855.5 million
KanoNigeria865.6 million
Cape TownSouth Africa875.4 million
JeddahSaudi Arabia885.4 million
ChangshaChina895.4 million
UrumqiChina905.4 million
BrasíliaBrazil915.3 million
KunmingChina925.2 million
ChangchunChina935.2 million
HefeiChina945.2 million
NingboChina955.1 million
Tel AvivIsrael964.9 million
ShantouChina975 million
ShijiazhuangChina984.8 million
New TaipeiTaiwan994.7 million
KozhikodeIndia1004.8 million

Figures rounded to the nearest convenient unit. Source: UN World Urbanization Prospects, projected forward to 2030 using confirmed urban growth trajectories.

Chapter Five: The Seven Continents in 2030 (Estimated Figures)

RegionPopulation (Rounded)Share of Humanity
Asia5.0 billion~58%
Africa1.75 billion~20.5%
Europe730 million~8.5%
North America612 million~7.2%
South America448 million~5.3%
Oceania49 million~0.6%
AntarcticaNo permanent population

Africa’s share has now climbed past 20% of humanity for the first time, a threshold it last touched in the colonial era of the 19th century, before centuries of disease, conflict, and slower development suppressed its relative population share. The continent’s return past this line marks a genuine historical reversal, not just a statistical milestone.

Chapter Six: The Fertility Divide, Wider Than Ever

By 2030, the gap between the world’s highest and lowest fertility nations has stretched further than at any point in modern demographic record-keeping. On one end, several Sub-Saharan African countries continue averaging close to six children per woman. On the other hand, a cluster of East Asian economies has settled at less than one child per woman, a level no country has ever sustained over multiple generations without severe long-term population contraction.

The 20 nations with the highest fertility, 2030 (Estimated, rounded figures):

  1. Niger, 5.7 children per woman
  2. Chad, 5.6 children per woman
  3. Somalia, 5.5 children per woman
  4. DR Congo, 5.4 children per woman
  5. Central African Republic, 5.1 children per woman
  6. Mali, 5.0 children per woman
  7. Angola, 4.6 children per woman
  8. Nigeria, 4.2 children per woman
  9. Burundi, 4.1 children per woman
  10. South Sudan, 4.0 children per woman
  11. Uganda, 4.0 children per woman
  12. Benin, 3.9 children per woman
  13. Burkina Faso, 3.9 children per woman
  14. Mozambique, 3.8 children per woman
  15. Guinea, 3.8 children per woman
  16. Cameroon, 3.7 children per woman
  17. Afghanistan, 3.6 children per woman
  18. Sierra Leone, 3.6 children per woman
  19. Senegal, 3.5 children per woman
  20. Yemen, 3.4 children per woman

The 20 nations with the lowest fertility, 2030 (estimated, rounded figures):

  1. Macao (China), 0.6 children per woman
  2. South Korea, 0.6 children per woman
  3. Hong Kong (China), 0.65 children per woman
  4. Taiwan, 0.75 children per woman
  5. Singapore, 0.8 children per woman
  6. China, 0.9 children per woman
  7. Ukraine, 0.95 children per woman
  8. Puerto Rico, 1.0 children per woman
  9. Italy, 1.1 children per woman
  10. Spain, 1.1 children per woman
  11. Poland, 1.1 children per woman
  12. Japan, 1.15 children per woman
  13. Greece, 1.15 children per woman
  14. Malta, 1.2 children per woman
  15. Thailand, 1.2 children per woman
  16. Cyprus, 1.2 children per woman
  17. Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1.2 children per woman
  18. Canada, 1.2 children per woman
  19. Finland, 1.2 children per woman
  20. Portugal, 1.25 children per woman

Chapter Seven: What Changes Permanently After 2030

A handful of demographic shifts will crystallize by 2030 in ways that will not reverse within most readers’ lifetimes:

The youth bulge moves to Africa for good

By this point, Africa holds the largest concentration of people under 25 anywhere on Earth, a position it will hold for the rest of the century, given current fertility trajectories.

Aging becomes a near-universal policy issue, not a wealthy-nation problem

Countries once considered “young,” including several in Latin America and Southeast Asia, begin confronting aging populations far earlier in their development cycle than today’s wealthy nations did.

The replacement-level club keeps growing

More than half of all countries on Earth now sit below the 2.1 children-per-woman replacement threshold, meaning natural population decline, absent migration, is now the default trajectory for a majority of the world’s nations, not a minority case.

Megacity growth decouples from megacity wealth

The fastest-growing large cities by 2030 are concentrated in countries with modest per-capita income, a reversal of the 20th-century pattern where the largest cities were also typically the wealthiest.

Quick Reference: 2030 at a Glance

MetricFigure
Global population8.5 billion
Most populous countryIndia, 1.51 billion
Second most populousChina, 1.40 billion
Largest urban areaDelhi or Tokyo, both near 38 million
Fastest-growing continentAfrica
Slowest-growing continentEurope
The highest national fertility rateNiger, 5.7
Lowest national fertility rateMacao, 0.6
Countries below replacement fertilityOver 100
Countries with shrinking populationsOver 90
Years since the world passed 8 billion8 years

Closing Note

8.5 billion is a tidy, memorable number, and it has functioned as a planning benchmark for governments and institutions for over a decade. But the real story of 2030 isn’t the headline figure itself, it’s the structural transformation underneath it: a fertility gap wider than ever recorded, a continent reclaiming a demographic share not seen in over a century, and a growing list of nations already living with the long-term consequences of population decline. These currents will keep moving long after the calendar turns past 2030, which is exactly why understanding them matters more than memorizing any single year’s number.

Frequently Searched Questions

Will the world population reach 8.5 billion by 2030?

Yes, this figure has been the United Nations’ consistent medium-variant projection across multiple revisions, making it one of the most stable long-range demographic forecasts available.

Will India remain the most populous country in 2030?

Yes, and by a wider margin than ever. India’s lead over China is projected to exceed 110 million people by this point.

How many people will live in cities by 2030?

More than 60% of the global population, continuing a steady rise from roughly 30% in 1950.

Which country will have the highest birth rate in 2030?

Niger is projected to retain the highest fertility rate globally, close to 5.7 children per woman.

Is the world population growth rate still slowing in 2030?

Yes, growth has decelerated to under 0.8% annually, continuing a decline that began in the mid-1960s.

How many countries will have below-replacement fertility by 2030?

More than 100 countries, over half of all nations tracked by the UN, are projected to sit below the 2.1 replacement threshold.

This article reflects United Nations World Population Prospects projections, consistent with the widely cited 8.5 billion milestone for 2030, and is reviewed periodically as updated UN revisions become available.

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