How Much Money Exists? — It Depends on What You Count
The question "how much money is in the world?" is deceptively simple. The answer can range from $8.9 trillion to $471 trillion — a 53-fold difference — depending entirely on what you define as "money." At the narrowest end, M0 counts only physical coins and banknotes: the tangible currency you can hold in your hand. At the broadest end, global wealth includes every real estate property, stock certificate, bond, gold bar, cryptocurrency token, and private business on Earth. Between these extremes lie the monetary aggregates that economists, central bankers, and policymakers actually use to measure the health of the global financial system: M1 (the money you can spend instantly), M2 (the money that's accessible within days), and M3 (the widest pool of financial liquidity).
Understanding these distinctions matters because money supply directly affects everything from the prices you pay at the grocery store to the interest rate on your mortgage. When central banks increase the money supply — through quantitative easing, lowering interest rates, or direct stimulus payments — the additional liquidity can stimulate economic growth but also fuel inflation if it outpaces productive capacity. The unprecedented monetary expansion during 2020-2021 (when the US M2 money supply surged 27% in a single year) demonstrated this dynamic viscerally: the stimulus prevented economic collapse but contributed to the highest inflation in four decades. By 2026, central banks worldwide are navigating the aftermath — attempting to reduce the excess liquidity without triggering recession. The relationship between money supply growth and inflation is one of the most fundamental dynamics in the global economy.
Perhaps the most striking fact about modern money is this: over 90% of it exists only as digital entries in computer systems. The physical cash in the world ($8.9 trillion) represents less than 10% of the liquid money supply (M2 of $98.6 trillion). Most money is created not by central banks printing banknotes, but by commercial banks issuing loans — when a bank approves a mortgage or business loan, it creates new digital money by crediting the borrower's account. This "credit creation" mechanism means that the total money supply is determined more by lending activity and bank regulation than by government printing presses. The shift toward digital money is accelerating: China's digital yuan (e-CNY) has already been integrated into official M0 statistics, and over 100 countries are exploring central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) that could fundamentally reshape how money is created, distributed, and tracked.

Money Supply Definitions — M0, M1, M2, M3 Explained
Economists categorise money into layers based on liquidity — how quickly and easily it can be converted into spending power. Each layer includes everything in the narrower layer plus additional, less liquid forms of money. Think of it as concentric circles: M0 is the core (physical cash), and each successive "M" adds broader categories of financial assets that function like money but cannot be spent as instantly.
M0 (Monetary Base / Physical Cash): ~$8.9 trillion. This is the most tangible form of money: coins, banknotes, and bills physically in circulation, plus the reserves that commercial banks hold at central banks. When people picture "money," they usually picture M0. The US dollar accounts for approximately $2.3 trillion of global M0, with the Federal Reserve estimating that about half of all US currency is held outside the United States (primarily $100 bills used as store of value in developing economies). The euro accounts for approximately €1.6 trillion (~$1.7T) across 30.4 billion banknotes. Japan has approximately ¥111 trillion (~$750 billion) in circulation. China's M0 reached 10.47 trillion yuan (~$1.45 trillion), now including the digital yuan.
M1 (Narrow Money): ~$50 trillion. M1 includes all of M0 plus demand deposits (checking accounts), traveller's checks, and other deposits that can be spent immediately without conversion. This represents the money that is truly "ready to use" — the balance in your checking account is M1 because you can swipe your debit card or write a check at any moment. US M1 stood at approximately $18.4 trillion as of mid-2025. M1 has expanded dramatically since 2020 as the Federal Reserve reclassified savings deposits as part of M1 (reflecting the reality that savings accounts now offer instant digital transfers).
M2 (Broad Money): ~$98.6 trillion. M2 is the most widely tracked monetary aggregate globally and the number most economists reference when discussing "the money supply." It includes M1 plus savings deposits, small time deposits (CDs under $100,000), and retail money market fund balances. M2 represents the total pool of money that is reasonably accessible — you might need a day or two to access a savings account or money market fund, but it's still "your money" in a meaningful sense. As of early February 2026, global M2 was approximately $98.6 trillion, with the "Big Four" economies (US, China, Eurozone, Japan) accounting for approximately $100 trillion of broad money combined. The connection between M2 growth and interest rate policy is direct: when central banks cut rates, lending increases, deposits grow, and M2 expands.
M3 (Widest Money): ~$150 trillion. M3 adds large time deposits, institutional money market funds, repurchase agreements, and other large liquid assets to M2. These are financial instruments used primarily by corporations, banks, and institutional investors rather than households. The US Federal Reserve stopped publishing M3 data in 2006, arguing that all economically useful information was already captured in M2. However, some economists and central banks (including the European Central Bank) continue to track M3, and global estimates suggest approximately $150 trillion when including these institutional liquidity pools.
Global Money Supply by Category — 2026
Global Breakdown — From $8.9T Cash to $471T Total Wealth
To fully answer "how much money is in the world," we need to look beyond monetary aggregates to the entire spectrum of value that humanity has created and accumulated. The financial system exists in layers, and each layer represents a different answer to the question.
| Category | Value ($T) | What It Includes |
|---|---|---|
| M0 — Physical Cash | $8.9T | Coins, banknotes worldwide — tangible currency |
| M1 — Narrow Money | ~$50T | M0 + checking accounts — instantly spendable |
| M2 — Broad Money | $98.6T | M1 + savings, money markets — accessible liquidity |
| M3 — Widest Money | ~$150T | M2 + large institutional deposits |
| Stock Markets | $126T | All publicly traded securities globally |
| Real Estate | ~$380T | Global property value — largest asset class |
| Gold (All Mined) | $25-28T | ~212,582 tonnes at current prices |
| Cryptocurrency | $3.96T | Bitcoin $2.2T (55%), Ethereum $534B |
| Global Personal Wealth | $471T | UBS — all assets minus liabilities across 56 markets |
| Global GDP (PPP) | $219T | Total annual economic output — IMF 2026 estimate |
The gap between M2 (~$98.6 trillion) and global wealth (~$471 trillion) reveals a fundamental insight: most value in the world exists not as spendable money but as illiquid assets — primarily real estate ($380 trillion, more than the value of all stocks and bonds combined), equity investments ($126 trillion in publicly traded securities), and private businesses. When asset prices rise faster than M2, it creates "wealth inflation" — the perception of growing prosperity that may not translate into increased purchasing power for ordinary consumers. This dynamic is particularly relevant in the current era, where the global financial markets have appreciated significantly while real wages in many economies have stagnated.
Money Supply by Country — China #1, US #2, Eurozone #3
China has the world's largest M2 money supply at approximately $45.7 trillion (as of mid-2025) — more than double the United States' $22.4 trillion. This dominance reflects China's rapid credit growth over the past two decades: Chinese banks have created enormous amounts of money through aggressive lending to fuel infrastructure development, real estate construction, and industrial expansion. China's M2 is now approximately 46% of the estimated global total — meaning that nearly half of the world's broad money circulates within the Chinese financial system. The massive scale of China's money supply has global implications: when the People's Bank of China tightens or loosens monetary policy, it affects liquidity conditions worldwide.
The United States ranks second with an M2 of approximately $22.4 trillion (December 2025). US M2 experienced an unprecedented 27% surge between 2020 and 2021 — driven by pandemic stimulus payments, enhanced unemployment benefits, and Federal Reserve quantitative easing — before stabilising and slightly contracting as the Fed raised interest rates aggressively through 2022-2023. The US dollar remains the world's reserve currency, with approximately $2.3 trillion in physical US banknotes in circulation (55.4 billion notes), roughly half of which are held outside the United States. This international demand for dollars — driven by global trade invoicing, commodity pricing, and reserve holdings — gives the US extraordinary monetary influence. For context on how the US monetary position affects growth, see our analysis of US GDP.
The Eurozone ranks third with M2 of approximately €15.74 trillion (~$18.6 trillion), with over 30.4 billion euro banknotes worth approximately €1.6 trillion in circulation. Japan has M2 of approximately ¥1.268 quadrillion (~$8.5 trillion), reflecting decades of ultra-loose monetary policy. The United Kingdom has M2 of approximately £3.123 trillion (~$3.9 trillion). Together, these five monetary zones account for approximately $99-100 trillion in broad money — roughly 65-80% of the estimated global total, with the remainder spread across emerging markets and smaller economies. The money supply dynamics in European economies are closely linked to the inflation trends shaping the continent.
M2 Money Supply by Country — Top Economies

Global Wealth — $471T Total, Real Estate $380T, Stocks $126T
Moving beyond money supply to total global wealth fundamentally changes the scale of the answer. According to UBS's Global Wealth Report 2025, total personal wealth across 56 markets reached approximately $471 trillion, growing 4.6% in 2024. This figure includes all assets (financial and non-financial) minus all liabilities — encompassing real estate, equities, bonds, pensions, savings, and physical assets like vehicles and valuables, net of mortgages, loans, and other debts.
Real estate is the world's largest asset class at approximately $380 trillion — more than the value of all stocks and bonds combined. This figure represents the total value of all residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural land and structures globally. The dominance of real estate in global wealth reflects a fundamental human reality: land and shelter are the most universally held and valued assets across all cultures and economic systems. Stock markets collectively represent approximately $126 trillion in market capitalisation, with the US alone accounting for over $63 trillion (50%+ of the global total). Other major stock markets include China ($11.9 trillion), Japan ($6.3 trillion), and India ($5.3 trillion). For context on how the largest economies create and concentrate wealth, see our analysis of the countries with the largest GDP worldwide.
Gold occupies a unique position between money and wealth — it is not a liability of any issuer, functions as a reserve asset during periods of monetary uncertainty, and has served as a store of value for millennia. Total above-ground gold (approximately 212,582 tonnes) is worth approximately $25-28 trillion at current prices. Central banks collectively hold approximately 36,000 tonnes (~$7+ trillion) as monetary reserves. Cryptocurrency, the newest asset class, had a total market capitalisation of approximately $3.96 trillion as of 2025, with Bitcoin alone accounting for $2.2 trillion (55% market share) and Ethereum at $534 billion. While volatile, crypto represents a growing share of global wealth and is increasingly being institutionalised through products like BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust ($81 billion in assets).
Global Wealth Breakdown — Where the Money Is
Per Person — $15,108 If Divided Equally, $8,000 Median Reality
The most sobering perspective on global money comes from dividing it per person. With approximately 8.16 billion people on Earth and M2 broad money of approximately $123 trillion (CEIC end-2024 figure), an equal division would give every human being approximately $15,108. Using the more conservative February 2026 estimate of $98.6 trillion, the figure drops to approximately $12,000 per person. Either way, the amount is strikingly small — barely covering 3-4 months of rent in a major US city, or less than one year of living expenses in most developed economies.
But even this theoretical equal split is a fantasy. In reality, wealth distribution is extraordinarily unequal: the top 1% of adults control nearly half of all financial wealth, while the bottom 50% own less than 1%. The median global adult wealth (the midpoint where half the world has more and half has less) is estimated at approximately $8,000 — far below the $15,000 theoretical equal split. Regional disparities are equally dramatic: North America and Europe hold nearly two-thirds of total household wealth, while Africa and India combined account for under 3%. This means that in practical terms, billions of people have little to no access to the world's $98.6 trillion in liquid money — it is concentrated in the banking systems of wealthy nations and in the accounts of a relatively small global elite.
At $123 trillion in M2 and 8.16 billion people, each person would receive $15,108. But consider: in New York or San Francisco, that covers just 3-4 months of rent. In Lagos or Dhaka, it might sustain a family for 2-3 years. The median adult globally holds approximately $8,000 — half the theoretical equal share. The richest 1% (approximately 81 million people) hold more financial wealth than the remaining 99% combined. The bottom 50% of humanity — over 4 billion people — collectively own less than 1% of global wealth. These numbers illustrate why monetary policy, inflation, and interest rate decisions affect different populations in dramatically different ways.
Digital Money & Crypto — 90%+ Digital, $3.96T Crypto, CBDCs Rising
One of the most remarkable facts about modern money is that over 90% of it has no physical form. The vast majority of the world's money supply exists only as electronic entries in banking databases — numbers on screens, not paper in wallets. When you receive your salary, it arrives as a digital credit to your bank account. When you pay with a credit card, digital debits and credits move between banks. Even when you "withdraw cash" from an ATM, you're merely converting digital money into its physical form. This digital dominance has profound implications: it means the money supply can expand (through bank lending) and contract (through loan repayment) without any physical currency ever being printed or destroyed.
Cryptocurrency represents an entirely new form of digital money that operates outside the traditional banking system. The total crypto market capitalisation reached approximately $3.96 trillion in 2025, with Bitcoin at $2.2 trillion (55%) and Ethereum at $534 billion. While crypto is not included in official M1 or M2 figures (central banks view it more as a speculative asset than a monetary instrument), its growing institutionalisation — through products like BlackRock's IBIT ($81 billion), regulated exchanges, and futures markets — is blurring the line between "crypto" and "money." China has taken the most aggressive approach to digital sovereign currency: the digital yuan (e-CNY) has been integrated into official M0 statistics, with 13.61 billion digital yuan in circulation. Over 100 countries are exploring CBDCs, which could fundamentally change how money is created, distributed, and monitored globally.
US M2 Money Supply Growth — 2015 to 2026

Global Asset Classes — Comparative Size
Global Money — Key Statistics at a Glance
Outlook 2027 — $140-185T Broad Money, CBDCs, Continued Inequality
Looking ahead, the global money supply is expected to continue growing. Estimates for global broad money by end of 2027 range from $140 trillion to $185 trillion, with the path determined by three key variables: inflation (which increases nominal money supply even if real purchasing power stays flat), credit creation (driven by economic growth and bank lending activity), and central bank policy (whether monetary authorities maintain tight conditions or loosen into slower growth). The most likely scenario — "steady but divergent" growth — implies a slow grind higher in broad money rather than an explosive surge or dramatic contraction.
The most transformative development on the horizon is the potential launch of major CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies). China's digital yuan is already operational. The European Central Bank is developing the digital euro. The Bank of England is exploring a "digital pound." If these projects reach full deployment, they could restructure how money flows through economies — enabling real-time settlement, programmable money (where governments can attach conditions to how currency is spent), and potentially bypassing the commercial banking system's role in money creation. The implications for monetary policy, financial privacy, and economic control are profound and hotly debated.
Frequently Asked Questions — Global Money Supply
Depends on definition: M0 (cash): $8.9T. M1 (liquid): $50T. M2 (broad): $98.6T. M3 (widest): $150T. Global wealth (all assets): $471T. The most cited figure is M2 at ~$98.6 trillion.
$12,000-15,108 if divided equally. But median reality: ~$8,000. Top 1% controls ~50%. Bottom 50% owns < 1%. North America + Europe hold ~66% of household wealth.
China: $45.7T M2 — 2x the US. US: $22.4T. Eurozone: $18.6T. Japan: $8.5T. UK: $3.9T. Big Four = ~$100T (65-80% of global total).
~$8.9 trillion (M0). USD: $2.3T (half held outside US). Euro: €1.6T. 90%+ of money is digital — bank deposits, not physical cash. China's digital yuan included in M0.
$471T (UBS 2025). Real estate: $380T (largest). Stocks: $126T. Gold: $25-28T. Crypto: $3.96T. Very different from M2 ($98.6T) — most wealth is illiquid property and investments.
Primary: IMF World Economic Outlook — Global GDP & Monetary Data
Primary: Federal Reserve — US Money Supply (M1, M2) Statistical Release
Primary: UBS Global Wealth Report 2025 — $471T Global Personal Wealth
BusinessStats: All money supply aggregates, per-capita calculations, country-level comparisons, wealth distribution data, and crypto market data are based on BusinessStats proprietary research combining central bank publications (Fed, ECB, PBOC, BOJ, BOE), CEIC global M2 data, UN population statistics, UBS wealth reports, and cryptocurrency market data.
