People with basic handwashing facilities including soap and water (% of population) - Country Ranking

Definition: The percentage of people living in households that have a handwashing facility with soap and water available on the premises. Handwashing facilities may be fixed or mobile and include a sink with tap water, buckets with taps, tippy-taps, and jugs or basins designated for handwashing. Soap includes bar soap, liquid soap, powder detergent, and soapy water but does not include ash, soil, sand or other handwashing agents.

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 Turkmenistan 100.00 2020
2 Kyrgyz Republic 99.85 2020
3 North Macedonia 99.67 2020
4 Montenegro 99.24 2020
5 Kazakhstan 99.01 2019
6 Serbia 98.13 2014
7 Oman 97.40 2020
8 Iraq 97.39 2020
9 Bosnia and Herzegovina 97.26 2016
10 Armenia 94.72 2020
11 Indonesia 94.11 2020
12 Cuba 92.20 2020
13 Georgia 91.70 2020
14 Bhutan 91.69 2020
15 El Salvador 90.70 2018
16 Belize 90.28 2020
17 Trinidad and Tobago 90.06 2015
18 Mexico 89.84 2019
19 Egypt 89.83 2020
20 Azerbaijan 89.30 2017
21 Barbados 88.47 2016
22 St. Lucia 87.33 2016
23 Ecuador 87.17 2020
24 Moldova 86.98 2016
25 Mongolia 86.36 2020
26 Vietnam 86.07 2020
27 Costa Rica 85.92 2020
28 Thailand 84.97 2020
29 Algeria 84.63 2020
30 Honduras 84.17 2016
31 Tunisia 84.11 2020
32 Syrian Arab Republic 82.82 2020
33 Philippines 81.71 2020
34 Paraguay 80.15 2020
35 Pakistan 80.06 2020
36 Samoa 78.80 2020
37 Guyana 77.42 2018
38 Guatemala 76.77 2019
39 Myanmar 74.51 2020
40 Cambodia 73.87 2020
41 Tajikistan 72.87 2020
42 Suriname 72.10 2020
43 Tonga 69.54 2020
44 Colombia 68.03 2020
45 India 67.79 2020
46 Jamaica 66.65 2015
47 Nepal 62.14 2020
48 Bangladesh 58.40 2020
49 Lao PDR 55.63 2020
50 Kiribati 55.58 2020
51 São Tomé and Principe 55.44 2020
52 Mauritania 52.73 2019
53 Yemen 48.61 2017
54 Tanzania 48.44 2020
55 Congo 48.19 2019
56 Dominican Republic 46.90 2020
57 Namibia 44.60 2017
58 South Africa 44.37 2020
59 Zimbabwe 42.43 2020
60 Ghana 41.54 2020
61 Solomon Islands 38.64 2019
62 Afghanistan 38.12 2020
63 Cameroon 36.42 2020
64 Nigeria 33.20 2020
65 Papua New Guinea 29.77 2020
66 Timor-Leste 28.41 2020
67 Angola 27.09 2020
68 Bolivia 26.94 2020
69 Kenya 26.76 2020
70 Madagascar 26.57 2020
71 Chad 25.30 2020
72 Vanuatu 25.21 2017
73 Somalia 24.95 2020
74 Eswatini 24.31 2020
75 Equatorial Guinea 24.22 2015
76 Niger 23.49 2020
77 Uganda 22.59 2020
78 Haiti 22.37 2020
79 Senegal 22.01 2020
80 Côte d'Ivoire 21.62 2020
81 Central African Republic 21.51 2020
82 Sierra Leone 21.10 2020
83 Guinea 20.48 2020
84 Dem. Rep. Congo 19.17 2020
85 Guinea-Bissau 18.11 2020
86 Zambia 17.93 2020
87 The Gambia 17.84 2020
88 Togo 17.15 2020
89 Mali 17.03 2020
90 Comoros 15.57 2016
91 Sudan 12.51 2020
92 Mozambique 12.23 2015
93 Benin 12.03 2020
94 Burkina Faso 9.01 2020
95 Malawi 8.26 2020
96 Ethiopia 8.17 2020
97 Burundi 6.20 2020
98 Lesotho 5.51 2020
99 Rwanda 4.65 2020
100 Liberia 1.19 2017

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Development Relevance: Hygiene is closely correlated with human health. Target 6.2 of the Sustainable Development Goals recognizes that access to facilities allowing good hygiene and sanitation should be universal, and especially important to women and girls, and those in vulnerable situations. Of the range of hygiene behaviors considered important for health, hand washing with soap and water is a top priority in all settings, and is considered one of the most cost-effective interventions to prevent diarrheal diseases. The availability of a basic handwashing facility is a prerequisite for basic hygiene facilities on premises, and is a useful proxy for hygienic behavior.

Limitations and Exceptions: Presence of a handwashing station with soap and water does not guarantee that household members consistently wash hands at key times, but is accepted as the most suitable proxy. Data on handwashing facilities are available for a growing number of low- and middle-income countries after hygiene questions were standardized in international surveys. However, this type of information is not available from most high-income countries, where access to basic handwashing facilities is assumed to be nearly universal.

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 basic handwashing facility as a device to contain, transport or regulate the flow of water to facilitate handwashing with soap and water in the household.

Periodicity: Annual