Live · IMF · World Bank · 138 Countries

Live World Government Debt Clock — $103 Trillion and Rising

GLOBAL SOVEREIGN DEBT — ALL GOVERNMENTS
+$155,000/sec per second
+$10.3B/day per day
IMF World Economic Outlook · April 2026| general government gross debt| reviewed | Methodology →
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~94%
% of World GDP
$14,800
Per Person (8.1B people)
138
Countries Tracked
$0
Added Today

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Every person alive owes a notional $14,800 — and that number just went up while you read this sentence.
$14,800
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US debt approaching $40 trillion
At current rate of $60,200/sec
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US debt added
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Your share (US)
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per American added since you arrived
Could have paid for
0 teachers
at avg US teacher salary
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138 countries, color-coded by debt-to-GDP, growth rate, or per-capita burden — updated live. Tap any country for details.

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Institutional Data Access · IMF GFS · World Bank IDS · 2026
G20 Sovereign Macro Dataset — Live Export
Real-time debt levels, velocity, debt-to-GDP ratios, and per-capita figures for all 20 G20 nations. Institutional validation required.
What Is Government Debt?

Government debt, also known as sovereign debt or national debt, is the total amount of money a national government owes to its creditors. Governments borrow money by issuing bonds, bills, and other financial instruments to finance spending that exceeds tax revenues — a situation known as running a budget deficit.

Unlike household debt, government debt is denominated in the government's own currency (in most cases), allowing central banks to influence repayment conditions. Most economists view some level of government debt as normal and manageable — the key question is whether debt grows faster than the economy.

How Is Debt Measured?

The most common measure is debt as a percentage of GDP (Gross Domestic Product). This ratio indicates whether an economy is growing fast enough to service its debt. Japan, for example, has debt exceeding 230% of GDP — the highest of any major economy — but has managed it due to low interest rates and domestic bond ownership.

The IMF (International Monetary Fund) and World Bank publish the most widely referenced debt-to-GDP figures, though methodologies vary. Some measures include only central government debt; others include state, local, and social security obligations.

Why Does Global Debt Keep Growing?

Global government debt has grown significantly in recent decades, accelerated by the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. Governments worldwide increased borrowing to support their economies during these periods, adding trillions in new debt.

Structural factors also contribute: aging populations increase social spending, infrastructure investment requires long-term financing, and interest on existing debt compounds over time. As of 2026, total global government debt is approximately $102 trillion — about 94% of world GDP — based on IMF April 2026 Fiscal Monitor / WEO data (general government gross debt).

About Our Live Counters

The live debt counters on this site are estimates based on publicly available data from the IMF, World Bank, and official national treasury publications. They are not real-time feeds from government accounting systems.

Each country's counter uses a known base figure (the most recent official debt total) and a growth rate derived from annual deficit data and historical borrowing patterns. Counters run from the base figure at the specified rate — actual government debt changes through discrete bond issuances, not continuously. These counters are educational tools designed to illustrate the scale and pace of government borrowing.

The Largest Government Debtors

The United States holds the largest nominal government debt at over $39 trillion, driven by decades of deficit spending, two major economic crises, and sustained defense and entitlement spending. China is second, with general government gross debt estimated at roughly $18.6 trillion (about 96% of GDP on the IMF measure).

Japan has the highest debt-to-GDP ratio among major economies at approximately 230%, though it has maintained low borrowing costs due to domestic ownership of its bonds. The European Union collectively carries over $15 trillion in member-state debt, with Italy and France among the most indebted European economies relative to GDP.

Debt Sustainability

Not all debt is equally concerning. Debt sustainability depends on several factors: the interest rate on debt versus economic growth rate, the currency denomination of the debt, who holds it (domestic vs foreign creditors), and the government's revenue-raising capacity.

Countries that borrow in their own currency and have productive economies can sustain higher debt levels. Countries that borrow in foreign currencies (like US dollars) face additional risk if their currency depreciates. The IMF publishes annual debt sustainability analyses for member countries to assess these risks systematically.

🧮 Personal Calculators
Your Lifetime Debt Tab + Impact Calculator
How much has your government borrowed since you were born? What could that debt have funded?
🧮 Personal Calculators
Your Lifetime Government Debt Tab

How much has your government borrowed since the day you were born? What is your personal share — and what could it have funded instead?

Personal Debt Calculator

Your Lifetime Government Debt Tab

How much has your government borrowed since the day you were born? What is your personal share of that debt — and how fast is it growing right now?
Debt added in your lifetime by
Your personal share of that debt
Added to your share every day
Years this debt has been accumulating
Since you opened this page: $0 added to your government's debt
Based on current borrowing rate extrapolated over your lifespan. Rates have varied historically — this illustrates the approximate scale of lifetime accumulation at today's pace. For methodology, see the Methodology page.
Interactive Tool

Debt Impact Calculator

Translate abstract debt figures into real-world equivalents. Select a country and time period to see what its debt could theoretically fund.
🏫
Public schools built
at $15M avg cost
🏥
Hospitals built
at $300M avg cost
👩‍🏫
Teacher salaries
at $70K/yr each
🚀
Moon missions funded
at $25B per Apollo-class
💊
People vaccinated
at $25 per dose course
MW of solar capacity
at $900K per MW installed
* Figures are illustrative only. Actual costs vary by region and specification. This tool is for educational purposes to illustrate scale, not policy advocacy.
🌐 World
🇺🇸
United States
Americas · G20
$--,---,---,---,---
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Population
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🗺 World Debt Map
138 countries — color-coded by debt-to-GDP ratio — tap to explore
WORLD +/SEC $155K COUNTRIES 138
Debt-to-GDP:
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Total Government Debt
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Reading the Map

Switch view modes using the toolbar above: Debt/GDP (relative burden), Total Debt (nominal size), Growth Rate (borrowing velocity), or Per Capita (individual share). Pinch to zoom, drag to pan. Tap or click any country for a live detail panel.

Why These Metrics?

No single metric tells the full story. Debt-to-GDP measures sustainability; nominal debt shows absolute scale; growth rate reveals fiscal trajectory; per capita humanizes abstract trillions. Japan ranks highest on Debt/GDP (~230%) but the US leads on nominal debt ($39T+).

Data & Map Sources

Debt figures from IMF World Economic Outlook 2026. Map geometry from Natural Earth data via world-atlas TopoJSON. Live counters extrapolated from official deficit baselines at per-country rates. Countries appearing unshaded have limited available data.

Understanding World Government Debt

The counter on this page tracks general government gross debt — the IMF's standard measure of what national governments owe, aggregated across the 138 economies in this dataset. Combined, that figure runs to roughly $102 trillion, or about 94% of world GDP. It is not household debt, corporate debt, or private borrowing — just the bonds, bills, and loans that finance the public sector.

World debt grows for the same reasons any government's does: spending routinely outpaces tax revenue, and the shortfall — the annual deficit — has to be financed by issuing new debt. That baseline drift is punctuated by shocks. The 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic each pushed global borrowing sharply higher within a couple of years, as governments cut taxes, propped up banks, or paid for lockdowns and stimulus almost overnight. Interest payments compound the trend: debt taken on in a high-rate environment costs more to service, which itself widens future deficits. Aging populations add a slower, structural pressure in many wealthy countries, as pension and healthcare obligations rise faster than the workforce funding them.

A country's debt-to-GDP ratio generally matters more for assessing risk than its raw debt total. A small economy with a modest debt pile can be under more strain than a giant one, because what matters is a government's capacity to service and eventually refinance what it owes — and that capacity scales with the size of its economy, not the size of its debt in isolation. Japan illustrates this well: it carries one of the highest debt-to-GDP ratios tracked here, yet is not considered a near-term default risk, largely because most of that debt is held domestically at very low interest rates. Compare debt-to-GDP figures across countries on the debt-to-GDP rankings page.

Comparing debt figures across countries is harder than it looks, because "debt" isn't measured identically everywhere. Some national statistics offices report only central-government debt; others include state, local, and social-security borrowing. Some netting conventions subtract government-held financial assets; others don't. China's headline figure, for instance, is often reported on a narrower basis that excludes large volumes of local-government-linked borrowing — a gap explored in more depth in this site's Insights section. This site applies a single, consistent basis (general government gross debt, per the IMF) across every country it tracks, specifically so the numbers can be compared apples-to-apples — see the Methodology page for the full definition and caveats.

To go deeper: explore any of the ranking pages for the fastest-growing or most heavily indebted governments, open a country page like Japan's or the United States' for a live per-country counter, or read the Insights section for explainer articles on defaults, hidden debt, and debt sustainability. For a visual overview, the interactive world debt map color-codes every one of the 138 countries by debt-to-GDP, total debt, growth rate, or per-capita burden at a glance.

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Data represents real-time estimates derived from IMF Government Finance Statistics and World Bank International Debt Statistics. Not investment advice. For institutional research purposes only.
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