Happiness Statistics 2026: Key Facts, Trends & Charts
Page updated: June 2026 · Data year: 2026 · Source: World Bank, Eurostat
This page compiles the most important happiness statistics for 2026 worldwide. Data is sourced from the World Bank, Eurostat, and peer-reviewed research — all fully open and citable. Charts, ranked tables, and key facts are updated automatically as new data becomes available.
Key Happiness Statistics (2026)
Key Findings: Happiness Statistics — 2026 Data
The headline figure for 2026 is Finland (#1 for 7th year running) — happiest country in the world (2024). This figure comes from UN World Happiness Report 2024 and represents one of the most-cited benchmarks in this space.
Trends and Growth
Looking at broader trends, top 5 happiest countries stands at Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, Israel, according to WHR 2024. The data points to continued momentum in this area, driven by digital transformation, shifting consumer behaviour, and policy changes.
Regional Breakdown
While global-level statistics provide a useful overview, significant variation exists between regions and countries. Europe, North America, and Asia-Pacific each show distinct patterns in happiness statistics, shaped by regulatory environments, infrastructure investment, and demographic factors. The statistics above reflect these regional nuances where data permits.
Key Happiness Statistics at a Glance
| Statistic | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Happiest country in the world (2024) | Finland (#1 for 7th year running) | UN World Happiness Report 2024 |
| Top 5 happiest countries | Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, Israel | WHR 2024 |
| Least happy country (2024) | Afghanistan (rank 143) | WHR 2024 |
| US happiness ranking (2024) | #23 (down from #15 in 2023) | WHR 2024 |
| UK happiness ranking (2024) | #20 | WHR 2024 |
| Countries scored in WHR 2024 | 143 | WHR 2024 |
| Global average life satisfaction score (0-10) | 5.5 | WHR 2024 |
| Biggest happiness decline since 2012 | Türkiye (-0.9 points) | WHR 2024 |
Methodology
All statistics on this page are sourced from open-licensed public datasets. World Bank data is available under CC BY 4.0. Eurostat data is published under the Eurostat copyright notice permitting free reuse. Manual statistics are sourced from primary research publications and are cited inline. Data is refreshed automatically on a weekly basis. Where multiple years are available, the most recent complete year is shown unless otherwise noted.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the latest happiness statistics?
Based on the most recent data compiled by Statsipedia, we've gathered statistics from authoritative sources including the World Bank, Eurostat, and leading research institutions. See the key statistics section above for the most up-to-date figures.
When were these happiness statistics last updated?
This page was last updated in June 2026. The underlying data points may reflect different collection years — each statistic is labelled with its source year.
Where does the happiness statistics data come from?
Our statistics are sourced from publicly available datasets including the World Bank Open Data platform (CC BY 4.0), Eurostat, and peer-reviewed research. All sources are cited inline and linked to the original publication.
Can I use these happiness statistics in my research or content?
Yes. We source data from open-license datasets (CC BY 4.0). Please attribute Statsipedia and the original data source. For commercial use, check the license of each individual source.
Sources & Methodology
- UN World Happiness Report 2024
- WHR 2024