Why the United States Leads the World in Prison Population

By total number of people behind bars, the United States ranks #1 in the world. Below is a current ranking table (by total prison population), followed by context on why the U.S. number is so high, how per-capita rates tell a different story, and where reforms like the First Step Act fit in.

In this article: Global ranking • Quick visual • Why the U.S. total is #1 • Per-capita vs. totals • Reform levers • FAQs • How we help

Global Ranking: Total Prison Population

Note: This table ranks total people incarcerated, not per-capita rates. Totals reflect all prison systems within each jurisdiction; numbers are rounded where shown and subject to change as governments update counts.

Quick Visual (Top 10 by total population)

United States — 1,808,100

China — 1,690,000

Brazil — 909,067

India — 573,220

Russia — 433,006

Turkey — 419,194

Indonesia — 277,869

Thailand — 277,475

Mexico — 252,466

Iran — 189,000

Bars are an approximate visual proportion to the U.S. total (not to scale for print).

Ranking Title Prison Population Total
1 United States of America 1,808,100
2 China 1,690,000
3 Brazil 909,067
4 India 573,220
5 Russian Federation 433,006
6 Turkey 419,194
7 Indonesia 277,869
8 Thailand 277,475
9 Mexico 252,466
10 Iran 189,000
11 Philippines 171,247
12 South Africa 166,008
13 Vietnam 133,986
14 Argentina 133,585
15 Egypt 120,000
16 Ethiopia 110,000
17 El Salvador 109,519
18 Pakistan 108,643
19 Colombia 104,357
20 Peru 103,112
21 Morocco 102,653
22 Myanmar (formerly Burma) 100,324
23 Algeria 94,749
24 Cuba 90,000
25 United Kingdom: England & Wales 88,424
26 Rwanda 87,621
27 Malaysia 87,419
28 France 84,177
29 Nigeria 81,349
30 Uganda 78,819
31 Bangladesh 77,291
32 Iraq 73,715
33 Poland 70,224
34 Saudi Arabia c. 68,056
35 Venezuela 67,200
36 Italy 63,167
37 Chile 62,248
38 Taiwan 61,949
39 Kenya 60,000
40 Germany 59,413
41 Republic of (South) Korea 59,088
42 Cambodia 57,000
43 Spain 56,698
44 Democratic Republic of Congo 44,536
45 Australia 44,403
46 Ukraine 44,024
47 Japan 40,544
48 Ecuador 36,616
49 Canada 35,485
50 Turkmenistan 35,000
51 Sri Lanka 34,727
52 Cameroon 34,419
53 Tunisia 33,000
54 Belarus 32,556
55 Kazakhstan 32,171
56 Bolivia 31,105
57 Madagascar 30,530
58 Nepal 29,484
59 Uzbekistan 29,000
60 Zambia 28,225
61 Cote d’Ivoire 27,149
62 Azerbaijan 26,894
63 Tanzania 26,802
64 Dominican Republic 24,801
65 Romania 24,628
66 Panama 24,512
67 Angola 24,068
68 Zimbabwe 23,654
69 Guatemala 23,361
70 Afghanistan 23,000
71 Mozambique 22,000
72 Sudan 21,000
73 Nicaragua 20,918
74 Jordan 20,000
75 Israel 19,756
76 Paraguay 19,652
77 Benin 19,563
78 Czech Republic 19,534
79 Honduras 19,481
80 Libya 19,103
81 Hungary 18,729
82 Costa Rica 18,090
83 Malawi 16,536
84 Niger 15,831
85 Uruguay 15,767
86 Tajikistan 14,911
87 Senegal 14,147
88 Ghana 14,133
89 Belgium 13,075
90 Portugal 12,941
91 Laos 11,885
92 Burundi 11,796
93 Serbia 11,701
94 Netherlands 11,537
95 New Zealand 10,783
96 Mali 10,773
97 Syria 10,599
98 Greece 10,203
99 Hong Kong (China) 10,184
100 Georgia 9,845

If you need the complete CSV for research or media, we can provide it on request.

Why Is the U.S. Total So High?

  • Scale: The U.S. is a large, wealthy nation with a big criminal-justice footprint (federal + 50 state systems + local jails).
  • Policy choices: Mandatory minimums, sentence lengths, parole limits, and supervision revocations increase time in custody.
  • Case volume: High arrest and charging volumes—especially for drug, property, and supervision cases—compound totals.
  • Pretrial detention: Local jail populations awaiting trial add to the national total at any given time.

Totals alone don’t tell the whole story—per-capita rates show the relative intensity of incarceration after adjusting for population size.

Totals vs. Per-Capita Rates

The U.S. often also ranks near the top on a per-capita basis (people incarcerated per 100,000 residents), which many researchers prefer for apples-to-apples comparisons across countries of different sizes. Still, the ranking above shows the sheer volume of people incarcerated on any given day.

What Could Change the Trend?

  • First Step Act (federal): Time credits, RDAP, and earned-time incentives can reduce federal totals at the margins by moving eligible people to prerelease custody sooner.
  • State reforms: Most incarcerated people are in state prisons and local jails. Changes to sentencing, probation/parole rules, and pretrial policies have the largest potential impact nationally.
  • Reentry investments: Housing, jobs, and treatment lower returns to custody.

How Prison Law Firm Helps—Nationwide

We represent people in federal custody and their families with:

  • Time-calculation reviews (Good Conduct Time, First Step Act credits, RDAP eligibility)
  • Medical/safety interventions and injunctive relief
  • FTCA claims for negligence; RFRA/Rehabilitation Act for religious/disability accommodations

Request a free, confidential case review

Free Consultations Nationwide

Whether you’re a prisoner, a family member, or an attorney, we’re here to listen. Tell us what’s going on with you, your client, or your loved one—and we’ll help you understand your options.