List of religious populations

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Which religion is the largest? Which religion is the smallest? Our planet’s population of about 8 billion people follows myriad religions in widely varying numbers. The following tables draw from information available at the World Religion Database at Boston University and is based on data for the world’s population as of 2020 (7.8 billion humans). The populations of each religion are listed from highest to lowest.

Which Religion Is the Largest?

Christianity is the largest religion with 2.5 billion adherents.

However, if the largest religions are divided into their main sects, Sunni Islam would be the largest religious tradition with 1.7 billion adherents.

Which Religion is the Smallest?

Zoroastrianism, with only 205,000 adherents, is the smallest religion on this list.

The first table does not divide the most populous religions into specific sects. The second table reorganizes the data and order by replacing some of the largest religions with their internal subdivisions. The list breaks up broad categories such as Christianity and Islam and lists separately more specific traditions such as Roman Catholicism or Sunni Islam. The second chart thereby shows a slightly different picture of the world’s religious diversity and relative populations.

Populations of world religions in 2020

Populations of World Religions in 2020
religious tradition population
1. Christianity 2,521,460,000
2. Islam 1,899,103,000
3. Hinduism 1,090,592,000
4. agnosticism 744,166,000
5. Buddhism 530,612,000
6. Chinese folk religions 457,672,000
7. ethnic or tribal religions (mostly in Africa) 288,022,000
8. atheist 147,009,000
9. New Religionists (new religious movements in Asia) 67,463,000
10. Sikhism 29,254,000
11. Spiritism and spiritualism 14,805,000
12. Judaism 14,800,000
13. Bahāʾī 9,150,000
14. Daoism 8,767,000
15. Confucianism 8,755,000
16. Jainism 6,344,000
17. Shintō 2,773,000
18. Zoroastrianism 205,000

Populations of world religions in 2020 with sects

Populations of World Religions in 2020 with Sects
religious tradition population
1. Sunni (Islam) 1,695,098,000
2. Roman Catholicism (Christianity) 1,240,312,000
3. agnosticism 744,166,000
4. Protestantism (Christianity) 586,373,000
5. Chinese folk religions 457,672,000
6. Vaishnavism (Hinduism) 399,526,000
7. independent (Christianity) 390,209,000
8. Shaivism (Hinduism) 385,423,000
9. Mahayana (Buddhism) 376,023,000
10. Shaktism (Hinduism) 305,643,000
11. Eastern Orthodoxy (Christian) 291,720,000
12. ethnic or tribal religions (mostly in Africa) 288,022,000
13. Shiʿi (Islam) 188,652,000
14. atheism 147,009,000
15. Theravada (Buddhism) 135,558,000
16. unaffiliated (Christianity) 122,877,000
17. New Religionists (new religious movements in Asia) 67,463,000
18. Sikhism 29,254,000
19. Tibetan Buddhism 19,030,000
20. other Islamic sects 15,352,000
21. Spiritism and spiritualism 14,805,000
22. Judaism 14,800,000
23. Bahāʾī 9,150,000
24. Daoism 8,767,000
25. Confucianism 8,755,000
26. Jainism 6,344,000
27. Shintō 2,773,000
28. Zoroastrianism 205,000

Source: Gina A. Zurlo, World Religion Database (Leiden/Boston: Brill, accessed June 2024). (Subscription required to access.)

Overview

Many possible readings and interpretations can flow from this data, and readers are invited to make of this information what they wish. These religious population numbers are interesting for academic or research purposes, and they might also provide adherents a sense of collective identity—there are x number of “us.” It is also worth noting that larger populations do not indicate a stronger claim to religious truth, nor does a small population indicate a wrong religion. Religion is not a popularity contest. Per the second chart, agnosticism—which the World Religion Database defines as no religion or the inability to know the existence of deities—is the third largest religious identity in 2020. Rather, a view of the world’s religious makeup provides a sense of the world’s current religious variety and allows potential insights into how religious populations impact, and are impacted by, many aspects of human affairs from beliefs to politics to history.

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As religions spring up, spread, and fade away, and as their followers are born, die, or convert, the world’s religious makeup is constantly changing. Note that one of the world’s oldest religions, Zoroastrianism, is also by far the smallest, while the “New Religionists”—followers of a variety of new religious movements founded in the 20th century in Asia—are quite numerous. Many religions that were historically influential—e.g., Greek, Roman, Egyptian, and Mesopotamian religions—are notably absent. A snapshot of the river of religion, as provided in these lists, shows only a momentary splash of water out of that great river’s roaring flow from ancient times to the present across the wide world of humanity.

Charles Preston