Highest child marriage prevalence worldwide by country
Global DataUNICEF 2026Human RightsDemographics

Countries with the highest share of married girls 2026

Niger has the world's highest child marriage rate — 76% of girls are married before their 18th birthday. Globally, approximately 12 million girls are married as children every year, that is roughly 40,000 per day. An estimated 650 million women alive today were married as children. Without accelerated action, a further 150 million girls will be married before age 18 by 2030. The Sahel region — Niger, Chad, Mali, Burkina Faso — records the world's most extreme rates. South Asia, led by Bangladesh (51%) and India (23%), accounts for approximately 45% of all child brides globally by absolute numbers. This page presents every country ranking, regional breakdown, trend data, and key driver — all from UNICEF, UNFPA, and World Bank official sources.

BS
BusinessStats Research Desk
Global Demographics & Human Development Statistics Division
30 min readUpdated April 2026
76%Niger — World's Highest Rate
12MGirls Married Per Year
650MWomen Who Were Child Brides
40KChild Marriages Per Day
21%Global Child Marriage Rate
−15%Global Decline Since 2010
76%Niger Rate
12MGirls/Year
650MWomen Affected
21%Global Rate
−15%Since 2010

Countries with the Highest Child Marriage Rate as of 2026

Child marriage — defined as a formal marriage or informal union where at least one party is under 18 years of age — remains one of the most pervasive human rights violations in the world. The data below ranks countries by the percentage of women aged 20–24 who were first married or in union before age 18, the standard UNICEF measurement methodology. Niger leads the world at approximately 76%, meaning 3 in 4 girls in Niger are married as children. The concentration in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia reflects deep structural links between child marriage, poverty, and girls' limited access to education. The global economic context is analyzed in our global GDP analysis.

Top 20 Countries — Child Marriage Rate
Countries with Highest Share of Married Girls — % Married Before Age 18 (2024/25)
UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024 · UNFPA · World Bank · BusinessStats Research · April 2026
76%Niger — Highest
52%CAR / Chad / Mali
51%Bangladesh
46%Guinea / Mozambique
21%Global Average
1%Lowest Rates (Europe)

Child Marriage Rate by Country — Sortable Full Data Table 2026

The table below covers 40 countries with significant child marriage rates. Click any column to sort. Sorting by Under-15 rate reveals the countries where very young girls — below the age of 15 — are married, the most extreme form of child marriage. Sorting by Trend shows where progress is being made and where rates are worsening. The link between child marriage and national income levels is clear: every country in the top 20 ranks among the world's poorest nations on the global GDP per capita rankings.

Child Marriage Rate by Country — UNICEF Data 2024/25 Click column to sort ↕
Rank Country Region % Married <18 % Married <15 Trend HDI Rank
1NigerWest Africa76%28%Slow decline189th
2Central African RepublicCentral Africa52%29%Stagnant188th
3ChadCentral Africa52%30%Slow decline190th
4MaliWest Africa52%17%Slow decline186th
5BangladeshSouth Asia51%15%Declining129th
6GuineaWest Africa46%19%Stagnant182nd
7MozambiqueSouthern Africa46%14%Slow decline185th
8Burkina FasoWest Africa52%10%Declining184th
9South SudanEast Africa45%9%Stagnant191st
10Sierra LeoneWest Africa42%13%Declining181st
11EthiopiaEast Africa40%14%Declining175th
12SomaliaEast Africa45%8%StagnantN/A
13NepalSouth Asia40%9%Declining143rd
14SudanNorth Africa38%9%Worsening172nd
15MalawiSouthern Africa42%9%Declining174th
16MadagascarSouthern Africa41%12%Slow decline173rd
17NigeriaWest Africa43%16%Declining163rd
18ZambiaSouthern Africa29%5%Declining154th
19MauritaniaWest Africa36%14%Slow decline164th
20TanzaniaEast Africa31%5%Declining162nd
21LiberiaWest Africa36%10%Declining177th
22UgandaEast Africa34%5%Declining166th
23AngolaSouthern Africa30%6%Declining148th
24IndiaSouth Asia23%5%Strong decline134th
25PakistanSouth Asia21%3%Slow decline164th
26HondurasLatin America22%6%Slow decline132nd
27NicaraguaLatin America35%10%Slow decline126th
28Dominican RepublicCaribbean36%12%Slow decline94th
29BangladeshSouth Asia51%15%Declining129th
30KenyaEast Africa18%4%Strong decline152nd
countries highest child marriage rate 2026 Niger Chad CAR Mali Bangladesh map rankings UNICEF data
Countries with Highest Child Marriage Rate 2026 (BusinessStats Research · UNICEF): Niger #1 (76%) · CAR/Chad/Mali (~52%) · Bangladesh (51%) · Guinea/Mozambique (~46%) · South Sudan (45%) · Nigeria (43%) · Global rate 21% · 12M girls/year · 650M women alive today were child brides. Source: UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024 · UNFPA · April 2026.

Child Marriage by World Region — Where It Is Most and Least Common

Sub-Saharan Africa has the world's highest child marriage rates by percentage, with the West African Sahel region recording the most extreme figures. However, South Asia — primarily India and Bangladesh — accounts for the largest absolute number of child brides due to the region's massive population. India alone is estimated to account for approximately one-third of all child brides worldwide despite having a national rate of "only" 23%. The contrast illustrates a critical distinction in global child marriage data: rate versus absolute burden. Countries with the highest economic development consistently show the lowest rates, as tracked in our GDP and human development analysis and financial markets report.

Child Marriage — Global Distribution by Region
Share of World's Child Brides by Region — 2024 (Total: ~650M Women)
UNICEF · UNFPA Global Programme to End Child Marriage · BusinessStats Research · April 2026
Child Marriage Rate by Region
Child Marriage Rate by World Region — % of Women Aged 20–24 Married Before 18
UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024 · BusinessStats Research · April 2026

Why Does Child Marriage Happen? Key Drivers and Root Causes

Child marriage is not caused by a single factor but by an intersecting web of poverty, gender inequality, cultural norms, insecurity, and limited access to education. Understanding the drivers is essential for designing effective interventions. The economic dimensions of child marriage connect to the wealth and poverty patterns documented in our wealth inequality analysis and global development data.

  • Poverty: Girls from the poorest households are 2× as likely to marry early as those from the wealthiest. Families may view marriage as reducing household expenses or receiving a bride price.
  • Gender inequality: Societies that value girls primarily as wives and mothers create structural pressure for early marriage. Limited female autonomy, property rights, and economic independence reinforce the cycle.
  • Limited girls' education: Only 17% of girls in Niger complete secondary school. Each additional year of secondary education reduces early marriage probability by 5–10%. Schools provide safe spaces and delay marriage.
  • Cultural and social norms: In many communities, early marriage is seen as protecting family honor, avoiding premarital sex, or securing social alliances. Community-wide norms can make individual families feel unable to deviate.
  • Insecurity and conflict: Armed conflict and humanitarian crises dramatically increase child marriage risk. Families in conflict zones see marriage as protection for daughters from rape or abduction. COVID-19 increased risk through school closures.
  • Weak legal frameworks: Many countries have minimum marriage ages with broad exceptions for parental or judicial consent, or have customary law that overrides statutory law in practice.
  • High fertility pressure: In contexts with high desired family size and limited contraception, early marriage leads to early and frequent childbirth, sustaining cycles of poverty and low human capital.
Key Data Point
COVID-19 Reversed Progress: Up to 10 Million Additional Child Marriages

The COVID-19 pandemic threatened to undo years of hard-won progress against child marriage. UNICEF estimated that school closures affecting 1.6 billion students at peak, combined with economic hardship and disruption of social services, could result in up to 10 million additional child marriages over the following decade beyond pre-pandemic projections. School closures removed one of the most effective protective factors for girls. Economic shocks pushed more families into the poverty that drives child marriage decisions. The pandemic's impact on human development and economic inequality is documented in our global economic analysis. Progress has resumed since 2022, but the pandemic-era setback highlights the fragility of gains in high-burden countries.


Consequences of Child Marriage — Health, Education, and Economic Impact

Child marriage has severe, well-documented, and often irreversible consequences for girls, their children, their families, and their national economies. The World Bank estimates that child marriage costs economies between 1.7% and 9% of GDP annually in lost earnings and productivity. Globally, the lifetime earnings losses from child marriage total approximately $500 billion per year. The economic case for ending child marriage is compelling: every $1 invested in girls' education and empowerment generates approximately $7 in economic benefit (World Bank). The broader global economic patterns are tracked in our retail and economic growth analysis.

Health Consequences — Key Statistics
Child Marriage Health Impact — Key Statistics (Girls Married Under 18 vs Over 18)
WHO · UNICEF · World Bank · Lancet Global Health · BusinessStats Research · April 2026
  • Maternal mortality: Girls under 15 are 5× more likely to die in childbirth than women in their 20s. Pregnancy complications are the leading cause of death among girls aged 15–19 globally.
  • Obstetric fistula: A devastating childbirth injury causing chronic incontinence — almost entirely preventable with proper care — occurs overwhelmingly in girls who give birth before their bodies are fully developed.
  • Infant mortality: Children born to mothers under 18 have a 60% higher risk of dying in infancy than children born to mothers aged 19–23.
  • Domestic violence: Married girls face significantly higher rates of intimate partner violence than women who marry as adults. The power imbalance is structural, not incidental.
  • Education loss: Girls who marry early almost always drop out of school, with lasting impacts on their earning capacity, autonomy, and their children's educational outcomes.
  • Mental health: Rates of depression, anxiety, and PTSD are significantly elevated among women who were married as children — with effects that persist throughout their lifetimes.

Global Progress in Reducing Child Marriage — Trends and Forecasts

The global child marriage rate has declined from approximately 25% in 2010 to approximately 21% in 2024/25 — the largest single-decade reduction in recorded history. South Asia has led the world in progress: India reduced its rate from approximately 47% to 23% — the largest absolute reduction in any country in history. Despite this progress, the global total of child brides has not fallen proportionally because population growth in high-burden Sub-Saharan African countries means more girls are at risk each year. At the current pace of change, the UN Sustainable Development Goal of ending child marriage by 2030 will not be achieved. The progress data connects to broader human development trends tracked in our social and demographic statistics and digital education data.

Global Trend 2000–2025
Global Child Marriage Rate — % of Women 20–24 Married Before 18 (2000–2025)
UNICEF Child Marriage Database · World Bank · BusinessStats Research · April 2026
21%
2024/25 Global Rate
Source: UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024 · World Bank Gender Data Portal · BusinessStats Research · April 2026
  • Global rate 2024/25: ~21% of women 20–24 were married before 18 (UNICEF) — down from ~25% in 2010
  • India — biggest single reduction: From ~47% (2005–06) to ~23% (2021) — lifting ~25M girls out of child marriage in 15 years
  • Bangladesh: From ~68% (2000) to ~51% (2024) — still very high but measurable progress
  • Ethiopia: From ~49% to ~40% — significant absolute decline
  • Sub-Saharan Africa: Rates declining slowly but absolute numbers rising due to population growth
  • SDG target: End child marriage by 2030 (SDG 5.3) — will not be met at current pace
  • Forecast 2030: Without accelerated action, ~150M additional girls will marry as children between 2025 and 2030
What Works
Proven Interventions: Education, Cash Transfers, and Community Programs

Research has identified several interventions that measurably reduce child marriage rates. Keeping girls in school is the single most effective intervention — each year of secondary education reduces marriage probability by 5–10%. Conditional cash transfer programs that pay families to keep daughters enrolled have demonstrated success in Bangladesh (Kishori Abhijan), India (Apni Beti Apna Dhan), and Ethiopia. Community-based behavior change programs engaging men, boys, religious leaders, and community elders are essential since legal change alone does not shift norms. Economic empowerment of women and girls reduces the economic drivers of child marriage. The UNICEF-UNFPA Global Programme to End Child Marriage is funded at approximately $1.5 billion for 2020–2030 and operates in 12 high-burden countries. The challenge is scaling proven interventions to reach the tens of millions of at-risk girls — a governance and funding challenge linked to broader development financing tracked in our global economic analysis.

child marriage global progress decline trend 2026 countries reducing child marriage India Ethiopia Rwanda statistics
Global Child Marriage Progress 2026 (BusinessStats Research · UNICEF): Rate declined from 25% (2010) to 21% (2024) · India: 47% to 23% (world's largest reduction, ~25M girls lifted) · Bangladesh: 68% to 51% · COVID-19 risk: up to 10M additional marriages projected · SDG 2030 target will not be met at current pace · 150M more girls at risk by 2030 without accelerated action. Source: UNICEF · UNFPA · April 2026.

Child Marriage — Key Statistics & Facts 2026

76%
Niger — World's Highest Child Marriage Rate
3 in 4 girls in Niger marry before age 18. 28% marry before 15. Niger consistently ranks last or near-last on the Human Development Index. Legal minimum marriage age: 15 (girls), 18 (boys) — though customary marriages often occur much younger. Only ~17% of Niger's girls complete secondary school.
12M
Girls Married as Children Per Year
12 million girls married before 18 every year — ~40,000 per day, ~28 per minute. Without accelerated action, 150 million additional girls will marry as children by 2030. Boys affected too: ~115 million men alive today were married before 18, though at much lower rates.
650M
Women Alive Today Who Were Married as Children
650 million women alive today were married before 18 (UNICEF 2024). Approximately 1 in 5 women worldwide. Of these, approximately 250 million were married before age 15. South Asia accounts for ~45% of this total; Sub-Saharan Africa ~35%.
21%
Global Child Marriage Rate 2024/25
Down from ~25% in 2010 — a 15% relative reduction. UNICEF measures as % of women aged 20–24 who were first married/in union before age 18. Global rate would be higher if boys included. Rate declining in most regions but absolute numbers rising in Sub-Saharan Africa due to population growth.
Higher Maternal Mortality Risk (Girls Under 15)
Girls under 15 are 5× more likely to die in childbirth than women in their 20s (WHO). Pregnancy complications are the leading cause of death among girls 15–19 globally. Obstetric fistula — a devastating preventable injury — occurs overwhelmingly in adolescent girls.
$500B
Annual Economic Cost of Child Marriage
World Bank estimates $500B in annual global lifetime earnings losses from child marriage. Countries pay 1.7–9% of GDP per year. Every $1 invested in girls' education and empowerment returns approximately $7 in economic benefit. Child marriage is both a cause and consequence of poverty.
−47%→23%
India — World's Largest Absolute Progress
India reduced child marriage from ~47% (2005–06) to ~23% (2021) — the largest absolute reduction in any country in history, lifting ~25 million girls out of child marriage. Driven by girls' education expansion, conditional cash transfers, and community programs. India still accounts for ~1/3 of all child brides globally.
30%
CAR/Chad — Girls Married Before Age 15
In the Central African Republic and Chad, approximately 29–30% of girls are married before their 15th birthday — among the world's highest rates of marriage of very young girls. This represents the most extreme form of child marriage, with the most severe health and developmental consequences.
45%
South Asia's Share of Global Child Brides
Despite having lower rates than Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia accounts for ~45% of all child brides globally due to its massive population. India alone (~1.4B people) accounts for ~1/3 of the global total. Bangladesh (51%), Nepal (40%), Pakistan (21%) remain significant contributors.
5–10%
Marriage Risk Reduction per Year of School
Each additional year of secondary education reduces a girl's probability of marrying early by approximately 5–10% (World Bank). Education is the single most effective intervention. Girls not in school are the most vulnerable. Only 17% of Niger's girls complete secondary school — lowest in the world.
60%
Higher Infant Mortality for Children of Child Brides
Children born to mothers under 18 face a 60% higher risk of dying in infancy compared to children of mothers aged 19–23 (UNICEF). They also face higher rates of low birth weight, stunting, wasting, and lower vaccination coverage. The intergenerational consequences perpetuate cycles of poverty and poor health.
2030
SDG Target — Will Not Be Met at Current Pace
UN SDG 5.3 targets ending child marriage by 2030. At current rates of progress, this goal will not be met. UNICEF projects that without accelerated action, 150M additional girls will marry as children between 2025 and 2030. Current pace would not eliminate child marriage globally until 2100.

Frequently Asked Questions — Child Marriage Statistics 2026

Niger has the world's highest child marriage rate, with approximately 76% of girls married before their 18th birthday (UNICEF 2024). Niger is followed by the Central African Republic (~52%), Chad (~52%), Mali (~52%), Bangladesh (~51%), Guinea (~46%), Mozambique (~46%), and Burkina Faso (~52%). The Sahel region of West Africa — Niger, Chad, Mali, Burkina Faso — records the world's most extreme concentrations of child marriage. Niger also has a very high rate of marriage before age 15 (approximately 28% of girls).

Approximately 12 million girls are married before age 18 every year — roughly 40,000 per day, or about 28 every minute. According to UNICEF, approximately 650 million women alive today were married as children. Child marriage also affects boys — approximately 115 million men alive today were married before age 18 — though at much lower rates and with less severe consequences. Without accelerated progress, an estimated 150 million additional girls will marry as children by 2030.

The global child marriage rate stands at approximately 21% of women aged 20–24 who were first married or in union before age 18 (UNICEF 2024). This represents a decline from approximately 25% in 2010 — a relative decline of about 15% over 15 years. Progress has been uneven: South Asia has seen the largest absolute decline, while Sub-Saharan Africa's share of global child marriages is increasing due to rapid population growth. At the current pace, the SDG 5.3 target of ending child marriage by 2030 will not be achieved.

Niger's ~76% child marriage rate reflects multiple intersecting factors: extreme poverty (Niger consistently ranks last on the Human Development Index); deeply entrenched cultural norms that view early marriage as protective and honorable; very low girls' education (only ~17% complete secondary school, lowest globally); food insecurity that leads families to see daughters' marriage as economic relief; high fertility rates (Niger has the world's highest total fertility rate at ~7 children per woman); and weak enforcement of the legal minimum marriage age (15 for girls, 18 for boys). Customary marriages routinely occur below even the legal minimum.

Child marriage has severe and well-documented consequences: Girls under 15 are 5× more likely to die in childbirth than women in their 20s; children born to child brides face 60% higher infant mortality; married girls almost universally drop out of school, with permanent impacts on earnings and autonomy; rates of domestic violence are significantly higher; and mental health consequences including depression, anxiety, and PTSD are widespread. Economically, child marriage costs countries 1.7–9% of GDP annually in lost productivity, with global lifetime earnings losses of approximately $500 billion per year (World Bank).

Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest child marriage rates — West and Central Africa recording the most extreme figures. However, South Asia — particularly India and Bangladesh — has the largest absolute number of child brides due to massive populations. India alone accounts for approximately one-third of all child brides worldwide despite a national rate of 23%. Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for approximately 35% of the global total. South Asia ~45%. The Sahel region (Niger, Chad, Mali, Burkina Faso) has the world's most extreme rates at 52–76%.

Yes — the global child marriage rate declined from approximately 25% in 2010 to approximately 21% in 2024/25, the largest single-decade reduction in history. South Asia led progress: India's rate fell from ~47% to ~23%, Bangladesh from ~68% to ~51%. However, COVID-19 reversed some gains — an estimated 10 million additional child marriages may have occurred due to school closures and economic hardship. In Sub-Saharan Africa, while rates are declining slowly, absolute numbers continue to rise due to rapid population growth. At current pace, the SDG 2030 target will not be met.

Child marriage has a devastating economic impact. The World Bank estimates it costs countries 1.7–9% of GDP annually. Globally, lifetime earnings losses total approximately $500 billion per year. Countries with the highest child marriage rates also rank among the world's poorest — child marriage is both a cause and consequence of poverty. Every $1 invested in girls' education and empowerment generates approximately $7 in economic benefit. Ending child marriage would add approximately 1.5% to affected countries' annual GDP growth rates.

Education and child marriage have an inverse relationship — girls in school are less likely to marry early, and girls who marry early almost always leave school. Each additional year of secondary education reduces early marriage probability by approximately 5–10%. Only 17% of Niger's girls complete secondary school — the world's lowest. In contrast, countries with near-universal secondary education for girls (Rwanda, Kenya) have seen dramatic child marriage declines. Schools provide safe spaces, delay marriage, and expand girls' life choices. Girls' education is the single most effective intervention against child marriage.

Legal minimum marriage ages in high-burden countries: Niger: 15 (girls), 18 (boys) — customary marriages often occur below the legal minimum; Chad: 15 (girls), no statutory minimum for boys; CAR: 18 (both) — widely unenforced; Mali: 16 (girls), 18 (boys); Bangladesh: 18 (girls), 21 (boys) — but a 2017 special provision allows exceptions with no lower limit; Nigeria: Varies by state — 18 in southern states, no minimum in northern states under customary/religious law. Many countries have a minimum age but allow exceptions that effectively nullify the protection.

Child marriage has profound health consequences: Girls under 15 face a 5× higher risk of dying in childbirth than women in their 20s; pregnancy complications are the leading cause of death among girls 15–19 globally; obstetric fistula — a devastating preventable injury — occurs overwhelmingly among girls who give birth before their bodies are mature; children born to child brides have 60% higher infant mortality; married girls face significantly higher rates of HIV/AIDS (less power to negotiate safe sex); and mental health impacts including depression, anxiety, and PTSD are widespread.

Countries with the greatest progress since 2000: India — rate fell from ~47% to ~23% (largest absolute reduction in history, ~25 million girls); Ethiopia — from ~49% to ~40%; Bangladesh — from ~68% to ~51%; Rwanda — from ~31% to ~19%; Kenya — from ~24% to ~18%. Common factors: girls' education expansion, conditional cash transfer programs linking school attendance to payments, community-based behavior change, legal reform with enforcement, and economic development. Ethiopia's Amhara region remains an outlier despite national progress.

Poverty and child marriage reinforce each other in a vicious cycle. Girls from the poorest households are 2× as likely to marry early as girls from the wealthiest. Globally, the child marriage rate among girls from the poorest quintile is approximately 40%, compared to approximately 10% among the wealthiest quintile. Families in extreme poverty may see daughters' marriages as reducing household costs or receiving bride payments. Child marriage then perpetuates poverty by ending girls' education and limiting their economic participation — ensuring the next generation faces the same pressures.

Key global initiatives: the UNICEF-UNFPA Global Programme to End Child Marriage operates in 12 high-burden countries with a $1.5B budget (2020–2030); the UN SDG 5.3 explicitly targets ending child marriage by 2030; the African Union Campaign to End Child Marriage operates across 55 AU member states; conditional cash transfer programs in Bangladesh, India, and Ethiopia have demonstrated measurable effectiveness; and community-based programs engaging men, boys, religious leaders, and elders are changing norms at the local level. The critical challenge is scaling effective interventions to reach tens of millions of at-risk girls.

South Asia has seen the world's most dramatic child marriage progress. Current rates (% married before 18): Bangladesh ~51%, Nepal ~40%, India ~23%, Pakistan ~21%, Sri Lanka ~10%. India's reduction from approximately 47% (2005–06) to approximately 23% (2021) is the single largest absolute reduction in any country in history, lifting approximately 25 million girls out of child marriage. Despite progress, South Asia still accounts for approximately 45% of all child brides globally due to its massive population. Bangladesh, with a 51% rate, remains one of the world's highest even after significant progress from ~68% in 2000.

Data Sources & References

Primary: UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024 — Country-level data on % of women 20–24 married before 18 and before 15

Primary: UNFPA — Child Marriage Data & Global Programme to End Child Marriage 2020–2030

Supporting: World Bank — Economic Costs of Child Marriage: Global Synthesis Report · GDP impact, earnings losses, ROI of interventions

Supporting: Girls Not Brides — Global Partnership · Country profiles, intervention data, SDG tracking

Child marriage rates from UNICEF Child Marriage Database 2024, measured as the percentage of women aged 20–24 who were first married or in union before age 18. Country rankings reflect the most recently available survey data (DHS, MICS, national surveys) as compiled by UNICEF. Some country data may be from surveys conducted 2019–2023 due to data availability constraints. Global figures (12M/year, 650M women) from UNICEF 2024. Economic impact data from World Bank 2023 analysis. Progress trend data from UNICEF and World Bank Gender Data Portal. All 2025–2026 figures represent BusinessStats Research estimates based on trend extrapolation where 2025 official data is not yet available.