People using safely managed drinking water services (% of population) - Country Ranking

Definition: The percentage of people using drinking water from an improved source that is accessible on premises, available when needed and free from faecal and priority chemical contamination. Improved water sources include piped water, boreholes or tubewells, protected dug wells, protected springs, and packaged or delivered water.

Source: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (washdata.org).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Greece 100.00 2020
1 Hong Kong SAR, China 100.00 2020
1 Kuwait 100.00 2020
1 Malta 100.00 2020
1 Singapore 100.00 2020
1 Iceland 100.00 2020
1 Liechtenstein 100.00 2020
1 Monaco 100.00 2020
1 New Zealand 100.00 2020
1 San Marino 100.00 2020
11 Germany 99.99 2020
12 Macao SAR, China 99.98 2020
13 Netherlands 99.97 2020
14 Belgium 99.91 2020
15 Puerto Rico 99.86 2020
16 United Kingdom 99.82 2020
17 Cyprus 99.77 2020
18 Sweden 99.75 2020
19 Finland 99.64 2020
20 Spain 99.59 2020
21 Luxembourg 99.46 2020
22 Israel 99.32 2020
23 France 99.25 2020
24 Slovak Republic 99.24 2020
25 Korea 99.19 2020
26 Canada 99.04 2020
27 Bahrain 98.98 2020
28 Austria 98.90 2020
29 Chile 98.77 2020
30 Norway 98.64 2020
31 Japan 98.57 2020
32 Poland 98.33 2020
33 Slovenia 98.27 2020
34 Czech Republic 97.88 2020
35 Bulgaria 97.62 2020
36 Ireland 97.33 2020
37 United States 97.33 2020
38 Greenland 96.74 2020
39 Denmark 96.73 2020
40 New Caledonia 96.64 2020
41 Latvia 96.29 2020
42 Qatar 96.18 2020
43 Italy 95.82 2020
44 Estonia 95.76 2020
45 Portugal 95.35 2020
46 Lithuania 94.92 2020
47 Turkmenistan 94.83 2020
48 Belarus 94.61 2020
49 Switzerland 94.25 2020
50 Iran 93.98 2020
51 Malaysia 93.82 2020
52 Hungary 92.59 2020
53 Palau 91.31 2020
54 Andorra 90.64 2020
55 Oman 90.56 2020
56 Kazakhstan 89.33 2020
57 Ukraine 89.02 2020
58 Bosnia and Herzegovina 88.87 2020
59 Azerbaijan 88.32 2020
60 Grenada 87.12 2017
61 Armenia 86.91 2020
62 Brazil 85.77 2020
63 Jordan 85.70 2020
64 Montenegro 85.07 2020
65 Croatia 82.14 2007
66 Romania 81.99 2020
67 Costa Rica 80.52 2020
68 Morocco 79.95 2020
69 Tunisia 79.29 2020
70 North Macedonia 76.83 2020
71 Russia 76.10 2020
72 Serbia 75.04 2020
73 Moldova 74.07 2020
74 Colombia 73.01 2020
75 Algeria 72.38 2020
76 Albania 70.67 2020
77 Kyrgyz Republic 70.09 2020
78 Ecuador 66.83 2020
79 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 66.38 2020
80 Georgia 66.35 2020
81 Paraguay 64.08 2020
82 Iraq 59.66 2020
83 Myanmar 58.83 2020
84 Uzbekistan 58.83 2020
85 Bangladesh 58.51 2020
86 Guatemala 55.83 2020
87 Suriname 55.76 2020
88 Nicaragua 55.52 2020
89 Tajikistan 55.24 2020
90 Peru 51.26 2020
91 Lebanon 47.70 2020
92 Philippines 47.46 2020
93 Samoa 46.23 2020
94 Congo 45.90 2020
95 The Gambia 44.72 2020
96 Mexico 43.03 2020
97 Ghana 41.41 2020
98 Bhutan 36.65 2020
99 São Tomé and Principe 36.17 2020
100 Pakistan 35.84 2020
101 Côte d'Ivoire 35.20 2020
102 Mongolia 30.06 2020
103 Zimbabwe 29.54 2020
104 Tonga 29.50 2020
105 Lesotho 28.91 2020
106 Cambodia 27.76 2020
107 Afghanistan 27.59 2020
108 Guinea-Bissau 24.33 2020
109 Nigeria 21.67 2020
110 Madagascar 20.54 2020
111 Togo 19.56 2020
112 Dem. Rep. Congo 18.99 2020
113 Lao PDR 17.68 2020
114 Nepal 17.58 2020
115 Uganda 16.65 2020
116 Kiribati 14.69 2020
117 Ethiopia 12.58 2020
118 Rwanda 12.10 2020
119 Sierra Leone 10.62 2020
120 Central African Republic 6.18 2020
121 Chad 5.59 2020

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Development Relevance: Water is considered to be the most important resource for sustaining ecosystems, which provide life-supporting services for people, animals, and plants. Global access to safe water and proper hygiene education can reduce illness and death from disease, leading to improved health, poverty reduction, and socio-economic development. However, many countries are challenged to provide these basic necessities to their populations, leaving people at risk for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH)-related diseases. Because contaminated water is a major cause of illness and death, water quality is a determining factor in human poverty, education, and economic opportunities. Lack of access to adequate drinking water services contributes to deaths and illness, especially in children. Water based disease transmission by drinking contaminated water is responsible for significant outbreaks of diseases such as cholera and typhoid and includes diarrheal diseases, viral hepatitis A, cholera, dysentery and dracunculiasis (Guineaworm disease). Improving access to clean drinking water is a crucial element in the reduction of under-five mortality and morbidity and there is evidence that ensuring higher levels of drinking water services has a greater impact. Women and children spend millions of hours each year fetching water. The chore diverts their time from other important activities (for example attending school, caring for children, participating in the economy). When water is not available on premises and has to be collected, women and girls are almost two and a half times more likely than men and boys to be the main water carriers for their families. Many international organizations use access to safe drinking water and hygienic sanitation facilities as a measure for progress in the fight against poverty, disease, and death. Access to safe drinking water is also considered to be a human right, not a privilege, for every man, woman, and child. Economic benefits of safe drinking water services include higher economic productivity, more education, and health-care savings.

Limitations and Exceptions: In order to meet the criteria for a safely managed drinking water service, an improved water source should meet three criteria: it should be accessible on the premises (accessibility), water should be available when needed (availability), and the water supplied should be free from contamination (quality). Many countries lack data on one or more elements of safely managed drinking water. The WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (JMP) provide national estimates only when data are available on drinking water quality and at least one of the other criteria (accessibility and availability). Regional and income group estimates are made when data are available for at least 30 percent of the population.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data on drinking water, sanitation and hygiene are produced by the Joint Monitoring Programme of the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) based on administrative sources, national censuses and nationally representative household surveys. WHO/UNICEF defines a safely managed drinking water as an improved water source that is accessible on premises, available when needed and free from faecal and priority chemical contamination. Improved water sources include: piped water, boreholes or tubewells, protected dug wells, protected springs, and packaged or delivered water.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual