Population Growth This Year
CURRENT TOTAL
Live Counter Notable Facts
(Data shown in the table is for 2025. Counter shows current estimate)
Growth Per Second
Annual Growth Rate
Net Daily Increase
Understanding Population Growth This Year
This counter tracks the cumulative net population growth worldwide since the beginning of the year. With approximately 2.5 people added to the global population every second, the annual increase represents the ongoing demographic momentum that continues to drive human population expansion.
Population growth this year reflects the difference between global births and deaths, representing the net addition of new lives to our global community. While growth rates have slowed significantly from their historical peaks in the 1960s, the absolute numbers remain substantial due to the large existing population base.
Current demographic trends show significant regional variation in population growth patterns. Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for the majority of global population increase, while many developed regions experience minimal growth or even population decline due to below-replacement fertility rates and aging populations.
Annual Population Growth Dynamics
- Global population growth this year occurs at a rate of approximately 78 million people annually, down from peak growth of over 95 million per year in the late 1980s. This deceleration reflects widespread fertility decline as countries progress through the demographic transition.
- Population momentum ensures continued growth for several decades despite declining fertility rates. The large cohorts born during previous high-fertility periods are now in their reproductive years, sustaining global population increase even as family sizes shrink.
- Regional variations in growth patterns create significant demographic imbalances. Africa's population is projected to quadruple by 2100, while East Asia, Europe, and parts of Latin America face population decline and rapid aging.
- The components of population change - fertility, mortality, and migration - interact in complex ways to produce current growth patterns. Improved survival rates partially offset declining birth rates, while international migration redistributes population growth geographically.
Population Growth Terminology
- Natural Increase: Population growth resulting from the excess of births over deaths, excluding migration
- Population Momentum: Continued population growth due to age structure even when fertility reaches replacement level
- Demographic Transition: Process whereby countries move from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates
- Replacement-Level Fertility: Fertility rate (approximately 2.1 children per woman) needed to maintain population stability
Annual Population Growth by Region (2025)
- Sub-Saharan Africa: +31 million annually
- South Asia: +15 million annually
- Middle East & North Africa: +6.5 million annually
- Southeast Asia: +4.2 million annually
- Latin America & Caribbean: +5.1 million annually
- East Asia: +2.8 million annually
- Europe: -1.2 million annually
Population Growth Components (Global 2025)
- Births: 140 million annually
- Deaths: 62 million annually
- Net Growth: 78 million annually
- Birth Rate: 17.8 per 1,000 population
- Death Rate: 7.9 per 1,000 population
- Natural Increase Rate: 9.9 per 1,000 population
Historical Growth Comparison
- 1950s: 47 million annual growth
- 1960s: 68 million annual growth (peak rate: 2.1%)
- 1980s: 86 million annual growth
- 2000s: 77 million annual growth
- 2020s: 68 million annual growth (current rate: 0.86%)
- 2050s: 32 million projected annual growth
Data Sources and References
Methodology and Data Collection
Annual population growth statistics are calculated using demographic rates compiled by the United Nations Population Division, incorporating vital registration data from national statistical offices and demographic surveys from regions with incomplete registration systems.
Real-time growth estimates apply a net increase rate of 2.5 people per second based on current demographic trends, representing the difference between approximately 4.3 births and 1.8 deaths per second globally. This provides a cumulative count of population increase since the beginning of the current year.