Labor & Wages ranking · ILO ILOSTAT

Average Monthly Earnings

Luxembourg leads 159 ranked countries at $8,513/mo (2024); the midpoint country sits at $585/mo.

$8,513/mo
Luxembourg
$585/mo
Median
159
Countries ranked
168×
Top–bottom spread
USD/month Source: ILO ILOSTAT Average monthly earnings of employees, both sexes, all sectors, in USD. Source: ILO ILOSTAT.
Top 15 by Average Monthly Earnings (USD/month)
  1. 1 Luxembourg $8,513/mo
  2. 2 Belgium $6,755/mo
  3. 3 Iceland $6,349/mo
  4. 4 Denmark $6,336/mo
  5. 5 Bermuda $6,221/mo
  6. 6 Norway $5,991/mo
  7. 7 United States $5,985/mo
  8. 8 Netherlands $5,809/mo
  9. 9 Finland $5,335/mo
  10. 10 Austria $5,328/mo
  11. 11 Ireland $5,194/mo
  12. 12 France $4,656/mo
  13. 13 Germany $4,647/mo
  14. 14 Bahamas, The $4,585/mo
  15. 15 Australia $4,436/mo

Full ranking — all 159 countries

Rank Country Value Year
1 Luxembourg $8,513/mo 2024
2 Belgium $6,755/mo 2024
3 Iceland $6,349/mo 2020
4 Denmark $6,336/mo 2024
5 Bermuda $6,221/mo 2013
6 Norway $5,991/mo 2024
7 United States $5,985/mo 2024
8 Netherlands $5,809/mo 2024
9 Finland $5,335/mo 2024
10 Austria $5,328/mo 2024
11 Ireland $5,194/mo 2024
12 France $4,656/mo 2024
13 Germany $4,647/mo 2022
14 Bahamas, The $4,585/mo 2019
15 Australia $4,436/mo 2021
16 Sweden $4,316/mo 2024
17 Canada $4,077/mo 2024
18 New Zealand $3,798/mo 2022
19 Italy $3,604/mo 2024
20 Singapore $3,483/mo 2021
21 Israel $3,383/mo 2021
22 Slovenia $3,305/mo 2024
23 Spain $3,290/mo 2024
24 Qatar $3,287/mo 2022
25 Korea, Rep. $3,168/mo 2022
26 Cyprus $2,920/mo 2024
27 Estonia $2,843/mo 2024
28 Japan $2,801/mo 2021
29 Czechia $2,574/mo 2024
30 Malta $2,573/mo 2020
31 Croatia $2,471/mo 2024
32 Latvia $2,314/mo 2024
33 San Marino $2,314/mo 2022
34 Lithuania $2,280/mo 2024
35 Greece $2,141/mo 2024
36 New Caledonia $2,083/mo 2017
37 Guam $2,065/mo 2016
38 United Arab Emirates $2,029/mo 2009
39 Macao SAR, China $1,957/mo 2018
40 Hong Kong SAR, China $1,932/mo 2016
41 Solomon Islands $1,887/mo 2005
42 Poland $1,821/mo 2024
43 Saudi Arabia $1,799/mo 2022
44 Aruba $1,683/mo 2010
45 Romania $1,530/mo 2024
46 Curacao $1,494/mo 2018
47 Slovak Republic $1,447/mo 2024
48 Brunei Darussalam $1,420/mo 2014
49 Barbados $1,340/mo 2016
50 Liberia $1,309/mo 2017
51 Bulgaria $1,299/mo 2024
52 Hungary $1,196/mo 2024
53 Uruguay $1,192/mo 2024
54 Costa Rica $1,174/mo 2024
55 Serbia $1,162/mo 2024
56 Seychelles $1,049/mo 2022
57 Palau $1,042/mo 2023
58 Chile $1,024/mo 2024
59 Antigua and Barbuda $990/mo 2018
60 Bahrain $939/mo 2020
61 Montenegro $929/mo 2022
62 Bosnia and Herzegovina $925/mo 2024
63 Panama $883/mo 2024
64 Trinidad and Tobago $863/mo 2016
65 Turkiye $859/mo 2024
66 China $807/mo 2022
67 Marshall Islands $798/mo 2019
68 St. Lucia $786/mo 2016
69 Lebanon $780/mo 2019
70 Russian Federation $777/mo 2021
71 Maldives $751/mo 2019
72 Mauritius $699/mo 2024
73 Malaysia $698/mo 2020
74 Kazakhstan $673/mo 2022
75 Tonga $663/mo 2023
76 North Macedonia $655/mo 2014
77 Argentina $648/mo 2024
78 Fiji $614/mo 2024
79 Samoa $613/mo 2022
80 Brazil $585/mo 2024
81 Albania $548/mo 2022
82 Namibia $547/mo 2018
83 Mexico $540/mo 2024
84 Djibouti $537/mo 2017
85 Ecuador $525/mo 2024
86 Belize $510/mo 2020
87 Peru $501/mo 2024
88 Azerbaijan $494/mo 2022
89 Mongolia $488/mo 2024
90 El Salvador $484/mo 2024
91 Botswana $483/mo 2024
92 Jordan $481/mo 2023
93 Colombia $473/mo 2024
94 Thailand $468/mo 2024
95 Bolivia $467/mo 2024
96 Guatemala $465/mo 2024
97 Dominican Republic $464/mo 2024
98 Ukraine $459/mo 2022
99 Honduras $430/mo 2024
100 Vanuatu $418/mo 2010
101 Paraguay $416/mo 2024
102 Moldova $406/mo 2024
103 Armenia $405/mo 2023
104 Guyana $393/mo 2019
105 Nicaragua $381/mo 2014
106 Eswatini $378/mo 2021
107 Kiribati $358/mo 2023
108 Viet Nam $355/mo 2024
109 Uzbekistan $351/mo 2022
110 Bhutan $337/mo 2024
111 Jamaica $335/mo 2014
112 Georgia $330/mo 2023
113 Kyrgyz Republic $329/mo 2022
114 Cabo Verde $324/mo 2015
115 Philippines $316/mo 2023
116 Sudan $284/mo 2022
117 Senegal $279/mo 2024
118 Cambodia $279/mo 2023
119 Cameroon $270/mo 2014
120 Timor-Leste $258/mo 2021
121 Comoros $253/mo 2021
122 Tunisia $252/mo 2019
123 India $249/mo 2024
124 Congo, Rep. $215/mo 2009
125 Tanzania $212/mo 2024
126 Cote d'Ivoire $207/mo 2022
127 Chad $206/mo 2022
128 Indonesia $182/mo 2023
129 Ghana $182/mo 2024
130 Lao PDR $178/mo 2022
131 Afghanistan $172/mo 2020
132 Burkina Faso $171/mo 2023
133 Zambia $170/mo 2024
134 Nepal $170/mo 2017
135 Guinea $169/mo 2019
136 Yemen, Rep. $163/mo 2010
137 Mali $163/mo 2023
138 Uganda $161/mo 2021
139 Pakistan $148/mo 2021
140 Congo, Dem. Rep. $145/mo 2016
141 Sri Lanka $144/mo 2023
142 Guinea-Bissau $141/mo 2022
143 Tajikistan $140/mo 2019
144 Togo $138/mo 2022
145 Kenya $137/mo 2019
146 Lesotho $136/mo 2024
147 Myanmar $136/mo 2020
148 Benin $136/mo 2022
149 Bangladesh $134/mo 2024
150 Angola $129/mo 2024
151 Niger $120/mo 2022
152 Egypt, Arab Rep. $109/mo 2024
153 Ethiopia $96/mo 2021
154 Gambia, The $83/mo 2018
155 Madagascar $71/mo 2015
156 Malawi $58/mo 2013
157 Rwanda $53/mo 2024
158 Nigeria $52/mo 2024
159 Burundi $51/mo 2020

Primary source: ILO ILOSTAT, indicator code ILO.EAR_MONTHLY_USD (159 countries). Read methodology →

How is the Average Monthly Earnings ranking compiled?

A ranking is a snapshot of relative position, not a fixed property of a country, and a few habits make it far more useful to read. Every country shown has a non-null observation for its most recent reporting year, and that year is not synchronised across the table, so two neighbouring rows may describe different points in time. The size of the spread between the top and the bottom tells you whether an indicator is structurally uneven across the world or broadly universal, and that shape is often more informative than any single rank. Where a value is expressed per capita or as a share, currency revisions and population updates can shift positions between releases. Treat the order as a starting point for questions, then open the underlying country profiles to understand why each sits where it does.

This ranking orders 159 countries by Average Monthly Earnings, measured in USD/month. Luxembourg leads with $8,513/mo (2024), while Burundi sits at the bottom with $51/mo. The midpoint country reports $585/mo, so any country below that mark falls in the lower half of the distribution and any above sits in the upper half. The spread between the top and bottom gives you an immediate sense of how unevenly this indicator is distributed across the Labor & Wages picture.

Average Monthly Earnings is part of the Labor & Wages topic and is collected by ILO ILOSTAT. Average monthly earnings of employees, both sexes, all sectors, in USD. Source: ILO ILOSTAT. The most recent observations shown here are from 2024, reflecting the latest release cycle for this series. Because definitions, base years, and methodologies can change, the "Year" column is shown for every row — always check it before comparing two countries whose values come from different vintages.

Click any country name to open its full profile with hundreds more indicators in context, or use the Compare tool to pair any two countries from this table side by side. You can also browse all indicators inside the Labor & Wages topic from the breadcrumbs above to see which other measures move together with Average Monthly Earnings. Data is licensed under CC BY 4.0 from ILO ILOSTAT, which means you may reuse the figures freely in articles, reports, and research so long as you credit the original agency.

How rankings are constructed: every country with a non-null observation for Average Monthly Earnings in its most recent reporting year is included; countries with no data for that indicator are excluded from the ranking rather than imputed or interpolated. Ranks are dense (1, 2, 3 with no skips on ties) and ties break alphabetically by country name. The "Year" column carries the observation vintage because the world is not synchronous: some countries publish a 2024 figure for this indicator while others only have a 2021 or 2019 reading, depending on each statistical agency's release cycle and the country's own reporting compliance. We never carry-forward a stale year to make the ranking look complete.

What the spread tells you: when the gap between the top and bottom of a ranking is wide — say a 50× ratio between the leader and the median — the indicator is structurally uneven across the global income gradient. When the spread is narrow — a 2-3× ratio — the indicator is more universal, reaching most economies regardless of GDP per capita. Comparing the spread of Average Monthly Earnings against peer indicators in the Labor & Wages topic is the fastest way to see which dimensions of development are converging globally and which remain stubbornly polarised.

Cross-checks before citing: if you plan to cite a figure from this ranking, open the source country's profile and confirm the year, the unit of measurement, and whether the underlying definition has changed in recent revisions. ILO ILOSTAT publishes definition notes alongside every series; the Labor & Wages chapter of the WDI metadata document is a good place to verify the boundaries of the variable. Be especially careful with per-capita figures (population denominators get revised after each census), GDP figures (PPP vs current-USD vs constant-USD make order-of-magnitude differences), and health indicators that switch between crude rates and age-standardised rates between releases.