The top 25 happiest countries in 2025 plus our 4 favourite findings from the 2025 World Happiness Report

Table of Contents

Our friends at the World Happiness Report have just published their 2025 rankings, based on self-reported happiness. We also wrote a chapter for the report! Read on to learn more.

Once again, the Nordic countries claim the top spots, with Finland retaining its title as the world’s happiest country. These wealthy, homogenous, high-trust states with generous welfare systems continue to dominate the rankings (we assume it doesn’t have to do with the pickled fish).

The UK and United States may be countries that pride themselves on their exceptionalism, but they are not exceptionally satisfied with life – barely making the top 25.

An infographic showing the top 25 happiest countries in 2025, highlighting regional differences and.

Note. This is our own figure, based on data presented in the 2025 World Happiness Report. The happiness levels are an average of the years 2022, 2023, and 2024. The error bars are 95% confidence intervals. For the full list of countries and their happiness in 2025, see the end of this article.

Some of the world’s happiest countries buy wellbeing for WAY cheaper than others

Richer countries tend to be happier. Nevertheless, several Latin American countries continue to outperform expectations based on income alone. Residents of Costa Rica report higher life satisfaction than Americans (and Mexican life satisfaction is very close to that of the US), despite having less than half the income.

Scatter plot showing GDP per capita versus life satisfaction in various regions worldwide in 2025.

Note. This is our own figure. The life satisfaction data is from 2024 (or 2023 for countries missing 2024 data). The GDP data is from 2023 (the World Bank has not yet released 2024 data). We accessed the GDP data from Our World in Data.

Some of the world’s happiest countries in 2025 are also the most generous

Being a happy country is good. But spreading that happiness beyond one’s borders is even better. This year’s World Happiness Report highlights the often-overlooked role of benevolence in improving the lives of  the giver and receiver.

One clear way to measure a country’s generosity is through its levels of international aid. In the World Happiness Report (Chapter 2, p. 46), they found a positive correlation between international aid and a country’s happiness.

Indeed, when we visually look at foreign aid as a share of national income, an interesting pattern emerges: the world’s happiest countries also tend to be among the most generous.

Top 25 Happiest Countries 2025 and Key Insights from the World Happiness Report

Note. This is our own figure. The life satisfaction data is from 2024 (or 2023 for countries missing 2024 data). The Official Development Assistance (ODA) data is from 2023 (the OECD has not yet released 2024 data). We accessed ODA data from Our World in Data. Some countries that have recently announced cuts to their foreign aid (USA, UK, etc.) are represented with larger points.

The connection between helping others and happiness is mirrored on the individual scale. Being more generous is correlated with being happier. Among the generous acts surveyed, donating has twice as large a happiness boost than volunteering or helping strangers (p. 40). Luckily, acts of benevolence may be more common than we imagine.

People are kinder than we think

One of our favourite findings from this year’s report suggests that people are worthier of our trust than we realise.

In Chapter 2 (p. 31), the authors compared survey results about people’s expectations for how often a dropped wallet would be returned with actual return rates from a 40-country experiment.

They found that the actual return rate across the world was about twice as high as people expected.

Cartoon characters showing expectation versus reality in how people behave when they find a wallet on the ground.

These expectations are also strongly and positively related to wellbeing. Having confidence that a wallet would be returned had a much higher associated effect on happiness than most other factors.

Believing a wallet would be returned was twice as related to happiness as unemployment and it was correlated with nearly 8 times as much happiness as having one’s income double.

The authors draw out the implication:

       “people may be made needlessly unhappy by their unwarranted pessimism.” (p. 31)

The best ways to do good are HUNDREDS of times better than others

Just as people are too pessimistic about the kindness of strangers, they also seem to be far too downbeat on the chance that they can do an incredible amount of good.

Most people think the best charity to help the global poor is around 1.5x as good as the typical charity. But is that really the case?

We recently wrote a chapter for the 2025 World Happiness Report that attempts to answer this very question.

Based on our analysis of the data, we (and other experts) think the difference between the best and the rest of charities is much, much larger. This is illustrated in the graph below, but let us tell you why in more detail.

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In our chapter (Chapter 8) we compiled all the cost-effectiveness analyses of charities we could find that use wellbeing as the outcome. Using wellbeing-years (WELLBYs) an increasingly accepted and standardised metric of value, we are able to compare different charities in the same units.

1 WELLBY = A 1-point increase on a 0-10 self-reported wellbeing scale for one person for one year. For context, after a year:

  • Being unemployed reduces life satisfaction by 0.5 points (on a 0-10 scale).
  • Marriage increases life satisfaction by 0.3 points (on a 0-10 scale).
  • Doubling income raises life satisfaction by 0.2 points (on a 0-10 scale).

By using WELLBYs, we can identify which charities create the most happiness per dollar.

After performing our analysis we found that the cost-effectiveness of charities varies dramatically. From our dataset, we draw out three striking comparisons:

  • The top 5 charities in our sample are around 150 times more cost-effective than the average of evaluated charities in the UK (not including Guide Dogs). Note we think the UK charities are more representative of typical charities, as few donations go overseas (between 5% and 15%).
  • The evaluated charity with the highest cost-effectiveness (Pure Earth) is around ~1,000 times better (942 times to be precise) at increasing happiness than the least effective evaluated charity (Football Beyond Borders).
  • But this is just the difference between charities that wanted to be evaluated! We also took a quick stab at estimating some very large and common acts of charity: Guide Dogs and helping the homeless. The best charity is ~3,500 times better than these popular destinations for our charitable dollars.
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What this means is if we’re careful, we can potentially have the same impact when giving $1,000 to the best charities as giving:

  • ~$150,000 to the average UK charity we analysed
  • ~$3,500,000 towards a lower impact charitable cause.
Bar chart comparisons 1 980x392

Your donations have the power to transform lives. You’ve probably heard this for years, maybe your whole life. We think the evidence supports this — IF you choose wisely. By donating to the most effective charities, you can centuplicate (100x – or more!) your impact without spending an additional dollar.

What can you do? You can do a lot! Hopefully, much more than you imagined.

  • Donate to highly impactful charities to maximise the good you do.
  • Read our full chapter to learn more about the research behind these comparisons.
  • Share our findings with others!
  • Stay informed by following our newsletter (scroll down to reach the form).
  • Support our research so that we can find even better opportunities.
  • And reach out if you have any questions.

Top happiest countries 2025 ranking

CountryRankScore
Finland17.736
Denmark27.521
Iceland37.515
Sweden47.345
Netherlands57.306
Costa Rica67.274
Norway77.262
Israel87.234
Luxembourg97.122
Mexico106.979
Australia116.974
New Zealand126.952
Switzerland136.935
Belgium146.91
Ireland156.889
Lithuania166.829
Austria176.81
Canada186.803
Slovenia196.792
Czechia206.775
United Arab Emirates216.759
Germany226.753
United Kingdom236.728
United States246.724
Belize256.711
Poland266.673
Taiwan276.669
Uruguay286.661
Kosovo296.659
Kuwait306.629
Serbia316.606
Saudi Arabia326.6
France336.593
Singapore346.565
Romania356.563
Brazil366.494
El Salvador376.492
Spain386.466
Estonia396.417
Italy406.415
Panama416.407
Argentina426.397
Kazakhstan436.378
Guatemala446.362
Chile456.361
Vietnam466.352
Nicaragua476.33
Malta486.316
Thailand496.222
Slovakia506.221
Latvia516.207
Oman526.197
Uzbekistan536.193
Paraguay546.172
Japan556.147
Bosnia and Herzegovina566.136
Philippines576.107
South Korea586.038
Bahrain596.03
Portugal606.013
Colombia616.004
Ecuador625.965
Honduras635.964
Malaysia645.955
Peru655.947
Russia665.945
Cyprus675.942
China685.921
Hungary695.915
Trinidad and Tobago705.905
Montenegro715.877
Croatia725.87
Jamaica735.87
Bolivia745.868
Kyrgyzstan755.858
Dominican Republic765.846
Mongolia775.833
Mauritius785.832
Libya795.82
Republic of Moldova805.819
Greece815.776
Venezuela825.683
Indonesia835.617
Algeria845.571
Bulgaria855.554
North Macedonia865.503
Armenia875.494
Hong Kong885.491
Albania895.411
Tajikistan905.411
Georgia915.4
Nepal925.311
Laos935.301
Türkiye945.262
South Africa955.213
Mozambique965.19
Gabon975.12
Côte d’Ivoire985.102
Iran995.093
Congo1005.03
Iraq1014.976
Guinea1024.929
Namibia1034.911
Cameroon1044.887
Nigeria1054.885
Azerbaijan1064.875
Senegal1074.856
Palestine1084.78
Pakistan1094.768
Niger1104.725
Ukraine1114.68
Morocco1124.622
Tunisia1134.552
Mauritania1144.542
Kenya1154.51
Uganda1164.461
Gambia1174.423
India1184.389
Chad1194.384
Burkina Faso1204.383
Benin1214.357
Somalia1224.347
Mali1234.345
Cambodia1244.341
Ghana1254.34
Myanmar1264.321
Togo1274.315
Jordan1284.31
Liberia1294.277
Madagascar1304.157
Zambia1313.912
Ethiopia1323.898
Sri Lanka1333.891
Bangladesh1343.851
Egypt1353.817
Tanzania1363.8
Eswatini1373.774
Lesotho1383.757
Comoros1393.754
Yemen1403.561
Democratic Republic of the Congo1413.469
Botswana1423.438
Zimbabwe1433.396
Malawi1443.26
Lebanon1453.188
Sierra Leone1462.998
Afghanistan1471.364

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