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Suicide

Injuries

Age-standardized suicide mortality rate per 100,000 population

Global Average
28.5
per 100K pop.
Countries
191
with data
Data Year
2023
latest available

Countries with Highest Suicide Rate

Rank Country per 100K pop. Year
1 Monaco 219.9 2014
2 Korea, Rep. 128.1 2022
3 Korea, Dem. People's Rep. 128.0 2018
4 Japan 125.9 2022
5 Belarus 97.7 2023
6 Mongolia 85.8 2023
7 Bulgaria 82.0 2023
8 Germany 75.5 2023
9 Romania 72.3 2022
10 Russian Federation 68.1 2023
11 Austria 67.0 2022
12 Hungary 66.3 2022
13 Kazakhstan 65.4 2020
14 Czechia 65.4 2022
15 Barbados 64.0 2023
16 Ukraine 61.4 2022
17 Poland 60.4 2022
18 Serbia 57.8 2022
19 Lithuania 57.1 2022
20 France 56.5 2022
21 China 56.3 2023
22 Croatia 56.0 2023
23 Slovak Republic 55.7 2023
24 Moldova 55.4 2023
25 Belgium 54.2 2023
26 Nauru 49.7 2010
27 Latvia 49.5 2023
28 Haiti 49.0 2023
29 Uzbekistan 48.9 2023
30 North Macedonia 47.4 2021
31 Maldives 45.6 2021
32 Switzerland 43.8 2023
33 Palau 43.4 2010
34 Cuba 43.3 2023
35 Greece 42.7 2022
36 Armenia 42.4 2023
37 Tuvalu 41.6 2001
38 Estonia 41.3 2023
39 Slovenia 41.1 2022
40 Malta 40.9 2022
41 Georgia 40.4 2023
42 Tajikistan 40.4 2023
43 St. Kitts and Nevis 39.8 2023
44 Dominica 39.7 2023
45 Luxembourg 39.5 2023
46 Sri Lanka 39.3 2023
47 Montenegro 38.2 2022
48 Australia 38.2 2016
49 Mauritius 38.0 2023
50 Kyrgyz Republic 37.3 2023

Countries with Lowest Suicide Rate

Rank Country per 100K pop. Year
1 Chad 1.5 2020
2 Burkina Faso 2.0 2020
3 Mali 2.5 2018
4 Niger 2.8 2020
5 Guinea 3.0 2011
6 Madagascar 3.2 2014
7 Ethiopia 3.3 2016
8 Togo 3.3 2022
9 Afghanistan 3.5 2023
10 Timor-Leste 3.8 2023
11 Mauritania 4.0 2006
12 Sierra Leone 4.0 2006
13 Cote d'Ivoire 4.0 2006
14 Benin 4.3 2021
15 Guatemala 4.5 2023
16 Yemen, Rep. 4.6 2023
17 Nigeria 5.0 2004
18 Uganda 5.0 2010
19 Honduras 5.3 2023
20 Nepal 5.4 2023

How should you read Suicide data?

Disease-burden figures are modelled estimates, not simple death counts, and that distinction matters when you read them. They draw on vital registration, hospital records, surveys, and statistical modelling to fill gaps where direct reporting is weak, so the precision implied by a decimal point is wider than it looks, especially for countries with limited health-information systems. Rates are usually age-standardised to allow fair comparison between younger and older populations, which can move a country's apparent ranking up or down relative to a crude count. Because definitions and methods are periodically revised, two figures from different release years are not always directly comparable. Read these numbers as the best available signal of relative burden, useful for spotting patterns rather than for pinpoint accuracy.

Suicide falls within the injuries disease category in the WHO Global Burden of Disease classification. Age-standardized suicide mortality rate per 100,000 population Data is available for 191 countries for 2023, with values reported per 100K pop. to allow fair comparison across populations of different sizes. The global average for this indicator is 28.5, giving a rough benchmark for interpreting any single country's number.

The highest recorded Suicide rate is in Monaco at 219.9 per 100K pop. (2014). At the other end of the distribution, Chad records 1.5 per 100K pop. (2020). That spread — often an order of magnitude or more — reflects differences in healthcare access, preventive care, early detection, underlying risk factors (such as diet, pollution, or occupational exposure), and the completeness of each country's cause-of-death reporting system. The top 50 countries above surface the highest-burden places; the lowest-rate countries are shown alongside where applicable to make the full range visible.

Click any country name to open its full profile on PlainCountries, which combines this disease rate with population, GDP per capita, life expectancy, healthcare spending, and dozens of other indicators. Reading disease mortality together with economic and social context is more informative than either number in isolation. All disease figures on this page are sourced from the WHO Global Health Observatory under a CC BY 4.0 licence and are identified by WHO indicator code WHS6_102. Rates are age-standardised where WHO provides the adjusted series, which removes the effect of differences in population age structure between countries.

Source: WHO Global Health Observatory. Source: WHO indicator WHS6_102. Rates are age-standardized where available.