| Irreligion around the world
|
| Country |
Percentage stating they have no religion |
Source
|
| Estonia |
75.7% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| People's Republic of China |
59-71% |
Various publications[3]
|
| Sweden |
46%-85% |
Zuckerman, Phil. "Atheism: Contemporary Rates and Patterns", chapter in The Cambridge Companion to Atheism, ed. by Michael Martin, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK (2005)
|
| Albania |
60% |
US Department of State - International Religious Freedom Report 2006[4]
L'Albanie en 2005[5]
Various publications[6]
|
| Czech Republic |
59% (plus additional 8% did not fill in anything) |
Czech Statistical Office (2001 census)[7]
|
| Japan |
51.8% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Russia |
48.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Belarus |
47.8% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Vietnam |
46.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2] |
| Netherlands |
44.0% |
Social and Cultural Planning Office[8]
|
| Finland |
28%-60% |
Zuckerman, Phil. "Atheism: Contemporary Rates and Patterns", chapter in The Cambridge Companion to Atheism, ed. by Michael Martin, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK (2005)
|
| Hungary |
42.6% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2] |
| Ukraine |
42.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2] |
| Latvia |
40.6% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2] |
| South Korea |
36.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Belgium |
35.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| New Zealand |
34.7% (of the 87.3% who answered an optional question) |
Statistics New Zealand (2006 census)[9]
|
| Chile |
33.8% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Germany |
32.7% |
German Worldview Research Group (2004)[10]
|
| Luxembourg |
29.9% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Slovenia |
29.9% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| France |
27.2% (23.9% of women, 30.6% of men) |
INSEE (2004 survey)[11]
|
| Venezuela |
27.0% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Slovakia |
23.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Mexico |
20.5% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Lithuania |
19.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Denmark |
19% |
Eurobarometer(2005)[12]
|
| Australia |
18.7% (of the 88.8% who answered an optional question). 29.9% including no answer/inadequately described |
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2006 census)[13]
|
| Italy |
17.8% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Spain |
17% |
Centre of Sociological Investigations (2005)[14]
|
| Canada |
16.2% |
Canada 2001 Census[15]
|
| Argentina |
16.0% |
Gallup-Argentina poll, April 2001[16]
|
| United Kingdom |
15.5% indicated no religion. (23.2% including no answer) |
United Kingdom 2001 Census.
|
| South Africa |
15.1% |
Statistics South Africa Census 2001[17]
|
| United States |
15.0% (of the 94.6% who answered an optional question, out of a sample of 50,281 households in the 48 contiguous states) |
American Religious Identification Survey (2001), as reported by US Census Bureau [18]
|
| Croatia |
13.2% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Austria |
12.2% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Portugal |
11.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Puerto Rico |
11.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Bulgaria |
11.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Iceland |
11% |
Eurobarometer Poll (2005)[12]
|
| Philippines |
10.9% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Brazil |
7.4% |
National Demografic Census in 2000, conducted by the IBGE. [19]
|
| India |
6.6% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Poland |
6% |
Public Opinion Research Centre (2007)[20]
|
| Serbia and Montenegro |
5.8% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Ireland |
4.5% |
Central Statistics Office Ireland Census 2006[21]
|
| Peru |
4.7% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Greece |
4.0% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Turkey |
2.5% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Romania |
2.4% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Tanzania |
1.7% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Malta |
1.3% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Iran |
1.1% (Atheism and Agnosticism are illegal[22]) |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Uganda |
1.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Nigeria |
0.7% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|
| Bangladesh |
0.1% |
Dentsu Communication Institute Inc, Japan Research Center (2006)[2]
|