Countries with the Highest Military Spending Worldwide in 2026 | Statistics & Facts
Industry Report Defense & Security Global 2025 – 2026

Countries with the Highest Military Spending Worldwide in 2026

Global defence expenditure reached $2.63 trillion in 2025 — the largest peacetime military build-up since the Cold War. Driven by the ongoing Russia–Ukraine war, rising Indo-Pacific tensions, and a landmark NATO pledge to spend 5% of GDP by 2035, every world region increased defence budgets. This report covers the top spending nations, regional breakdowns, GDP share rankings, structural drivers, and forecasts through 2030.

18 min read Updated March 2026 Industry Report
$2.63TGlobal Spend 2025
$980BUS Budget 2025
$314BChina Spend 2024
+12.6%Europe Growth 2025
32/32NATO Members at 2%
5%NATO Target by 2035
Sources: SIPRI IISS Military Balance 2026 NATO World Bank Statista Visual Capitalist UK MOD

$2.63 Trillion — The World Enters a New Era of Military Rearmament

The world is rearming at a pace not seen since the Cold War. According to the IISS Military Balance 2026, global defence expenditure reached $2.63 trillion in 2025, up from $2.48 trillion a year earlier — a 2.5% real-terms increase. The preceding year was even more dramatic: SIPRI recorded a 9.4% surge in 2024 to $2.718 trillion — the steepest year-on-year rise since at least the end of the Cold War, with military spending increasing in all five world regions simultaneously for the first time in decades.

The United States remains the world's undisputed top military spender, with a 2025 defence budget of approximately $980 billion — more than the next 10 largest spenders combined and accounting for roughly 37% of total global military expenditure. China holds second place with an estimated $314 billion, representing three decades of consecutive spending growth. Germany made history in 2024 by overtaking the UK to become Western Europe's largest defence spender for the first time since reunification, while Russia's wartime budget surged 38% in 2024 to reach $149 billion, doubling its 2015 level. Against this backdrop, NATO allies made a transformational commitment at the 2025 Hague Summit: every member must reach 5% of GDP on core defence requirements by 2035 — more than doubling the previous 2% benchmark.

This report draws on the latest data from SIPRI's Trends in World Military Expenditure 2024 fact sheet, the IISS Military Balance 2026, NATO's official expenditure data, and supplementary research from the UK Ministry of Defence's International Defence Expenditure Bulletin 2025 to provide the most comprehensive and current country-by-country ranking available.

Top 15 Countries by Military Spending — 2024 / 2025 Data
#CountrySpending (USD Billion)% of GDPYoY Change
1🇺🇸 United States$980B (2025 est.)~3.4%+5%
2🇨🇳 China$314B (2024)~1.7%+7.0%
3🇷🇺 Russia$161B (2025)~6.7%+3%
4🇩🇪 Germany$109B (2025 est.)~2.1%+18%
5🇮🇳 India$86B (2024)~2.4%+4.2%
6🇬🇧 United Kingdom$84.2B (2024)2.33%+2.3%
7🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia$78B (2025)~5.5%+5%
8🇺🇦 Ukraine~$65B (2025)~26%+Rising
9🇫🇷 France$61B (2025)~2.1%+5%
10🇯🇵 Japan$55B (2025)~1.3%+12%
11🇰🇷 South Korea$50B (2025)~2.8%+4%
12🇵🇱 Poland$38B (2024)4.2%+31%
13🇮🇱 Israel$37B (2025)~8.3%+High
14🇦🇺 Australia$34B (2025)~2.0%+8%
15🇨🇦 Canada~$28B (2025)~1.4%+Rising

Sources: SIPRI 2025, IISS Military Balance 2026, Visual Capitalist 2025. Some 2025 figures are estimates pending final official releases.


The United States — $980 Billion and Counting

No country comes close to the United States in absolute military expenditure. The US defence budget for 2025 stands at approximately $980 billion — a figure that exceeds Switzerland's entire GDP and dwarfs the spending of the next ten largest military powers combined. According to Visual Capitalist's NATO spending analysis, the US accounts for roughly 62% of NATO's total defence budget and approximately 37% of all global military expenditure. The US military budget encompasses Department of Defense regular activities, war spending, the nuclear weapons program administered by the Department of Energy, international military assistance, and broader Pentagon-related spending.

The 2026 defense budget approved by Congress reached $901 billion, and President Trump has proposed a record $1.5 trillion military budget for 2027 — representing roughly a 50% increase above current levels aimed at accelerating modernisation, expanding naval capacity, and reinforcing deterrence against China in the Indo-Pacific. In inflation-adjusted 2025 dollars, US defence spending is now more than $400 billion higher than in the late 1990s, with the long-term trajectory firmly upward across administrations of both parties.

$980BUS Budget 2025
62%of NATO Total
37%of Global Spend
$901B2026 Budget
$1.5TProposed 2027
~3.4%of US GDP
Military aircraft and defence spending — the United States spends $980 billion on defence in 2025, representing 37% of total global military expenditure and more than the next 10 largest spenders combined
The United States accounts for approximately 37% of all global military expenditure — a structural dominance that has persisted for decades and is projected to intensify further with the proposed $1.5 trillion 2027 defence budget.
⚡ Record US Defence Proposal

Trump's $1.5 Trillion 2027 Budget — A 50% Jump

President Trump's proposed $1.5 trillion military budget for fiscal year 2027 would represent the largest single-year defence appropriation in US history in nominal terms. The proposal prioritises naval expansion, missile defence, hypersonic weapons development, and next-generation air combat systems. It also reflects intensifying US-China strategic competition, with the Pentagon explicitly identifying China as the "pacing threat" driving procurement priorities across all service branches. Congress will determine the final figure, but even a partial approval would accelerate the global arms build-up significantly.


China — $314 Billion and Three Decades of Consecutive Growth

China is the world's second-largest military spender and has recorded consecutive spending increases for three full decades. SIPRI's 2025 press release confirmed China's 2024 military expenditure reached an estimated $314 billion — a 7.0% increase that maintained its established pattern of above-GDP-growth defence investment. China's official defence budget for 2025 included a further 7.2% hike, keeping pace with economic growth while expanding procurement of advanced naval vessels, hypersonic missile systems, stealth aircraft, and space-based military capabilities.

Beijing's share of regional Asia-Pacific defence spending has grown from 39% in 2017 to nearly 44% in 2025, according to IISS data. Despite this massive absolute figure, China's military spending represents only around 1.7% of GDP — well below the US ratio — suggesting significant fiscal headroom for further increases. Independent analysts widely believe China's actual military-related expenditure, including paramilitary forces, defence research, and nuclear weapons programs, substantially exceeds official figures. China accounts for roughly 12% of global military expenditure and is universally identified as the primary strategic driver of US, Japanese, Australian, and South Korean defence investment growth.


Russia at $161 Billion — Europe Hits Record Spending Levels

Russia's official defence budget reached $161.2 billion in 2025, a 3% increase over 2024, according to Stars & Stripes reporting on the IISS Military Balance 2026. SIPRI had estimated Russia's 2024 military expenditure at $149 billion — a 38% year-on-year surge and double the 2015 level — reflecting the full-scale mobilisation for the Ukraine war, which entered its fourth year with no resolution in sight. Russia now dedicates an estimated 6.7% of GDP to military spending — the highest proportion among major economies and nearly double the next-highest NATO member.

The European response has been transformational. European military spending rose 12.6% in 2025, according to the IISS, following a 17% surge in 2024. Germany has been the main driver, with spending up 18% in 2025 — a remarkable reversal for a country long criticised as NATO's most prominent defence budget laggard. Other major European movers include Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, whose combined spending reached $53.7 billion in 2025 — more than double their 2020 levels. For the first time since the Cold War, European allies collectively exceeded East Asia as the second-highest-spending region. The landmark 2025 NATO Hague Summit sealed the transformation: all 32 members committed to reaching 5% of GDP by 2035, up from the 2% benchmark that itself had only just been universally met for the first time.

$161BRussia 2025
+12.6%Europe YoY 2025
$109BGermany 2025
$38BPoland 2024
4.2%Poland % of GDP
32/32NATO at 2%+

Key Country Profiles — The Top Spenders in Detail

🇺🇸 United States
~$980B — 37% of Global Total
World's largest military spender by a vast margin. Budget covers DoD operations, nuclear programs, international military aid. 2026 budget at $901B; $1.5T proposed for 2027. Approximately 1.37M active-duty personnel. Indo-Pacific and NATO commitments drive procurement priorities including aircraft carriers, hypersonics, and F-35s.
🇨🇳 China
~$314B — 3 Decades of Growth
Second-largest spender globally. Official budget understates actual military-related expenditure. 7.2% increase in 2025 budget. Focuses on naval expansion (world's largest navy by vessel count), J-20 stealth fighters, DF-series missiles, and space warfare capabilities. 44% share of Asia-Pacific regional defence spend.
🇷🇺 Russia
$161.2B — 6.7% of GDP
Third-largest global spender. Wartime mobilisation drove a 38% spending jump in 2024 — the fastest growth rate among major powers. Official budget of $161.2B in 2025. High GDP share reflects a war economy orientation. Spending dominated by personnel costs, munitions production, and armoured vehicle replacement following heavy Ukraine losses.
🇩🇪 Germany
~$109B — Western Europe's #1
Historic reversal: Germany overtook the UK in 2024 as Western Europe's top military spender for the first time since reunification. Its €100B special defence fund, launched in 2022, drives procurement of F-35A fighters, Leopard 2 tanks, and IRIS-T air defence systems. Spending up 18% in 2025. Target: 3.5% of GDP.
🇮🇳 India
~$86B — Asia's #3
Fifth-largest global spender and the largest in South Asia. India's defence budget grew 4.2% in 2024, focused on naval expansion, indigenous aircraft carrier programs, and procurement of advanced fighter jets amid persistent border tensions with both Pakistan and China. The world's third-largest armed forces by active personnel (1.46M).
🇵🇱 Poland
$38B — NATO's GDP Leader at 4.2%
Poland leads all NATO members in defence spending as a share of GDP at 4.2% in 2024 and an estimated 4.48% in 2025 — the only member already meeting the new 3.5% interim NATO benchmark. Spending grew 31% in 2024 driven by border security, HIMARS procurement, hundreds of Abrams and K2 tanks, and F-35A fighters.

Over 100 countries around the world raised their military spending in 2024. As governments increasingly prioritise military security, often at the expense of other budget areas, the economic and social trade-offs could have significant effects on societies for years to come.

— Xiao Liang, Researcher, SIPRI Military Expenditure and Arms Production Programme, April 2025

All Five World Regions Increased Spending — A Historic First

The 2024 SIPRI data marked a watershed moment: all five of the world's geographical regions increased military expenditure simultaneously for the second consecutive year — an unprecedented global pattern that reflects the breadth of geopolitical tension driving rearmament. Europe and the Middle East recorded the steepest absolute increases, while Asia-Pacific sustained its long-running upward trajectory. Even regions historically less engaged in large-scale military investment — Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America — saw spending increases driven by domestic security challenges and regional instability.

1
Europe (including Russia) — $693 Billion, +17% in 2024
European military spending (including Russia) surged 17% to $693 billion in 2024 — the single largest regional contributor to global spending growth and a level that pushed Europe beyond its Cold War peak. NATO's transformation is the core driver: the full implementation of the 2% GDP pledge, combined with emergency national rearmament programs in Germany, Poland, Finland, and the Baltic states, has created the most rapid European security build-up since the 1980s. In 2025, European spending rose a further 12.6%, cementing the continent's new position as the world's second most expensive military theatre after Asia-Pacific.
2
Asia-Pacific — Led by China, Japan, and South Korea
Asia-Pacific remains the world's most expensive military region by total expenditure when China's spending is factored in. China's 7.2% 2025 budget increase sustains Beijing's share at nearly 44% of regional spending. Japan has embarked on its most dramatic post-war defence expansion, with spending rising 12% in 2025 as Tokyo moves toward its 2% GDP target — a profound shift from its post-war pacifist constitution framework. Australia accelerated long-range strike and submarine programmes under AUKUS, while South Korea continues expanding its advanced indigenous defence industry. The region is defined by China-centred security competition and a proliferation of contested maritime boundaries.
3
Middle East — Israel and Saudi Arabia Drive Record Spending
Despite widespread expectations of broad-based increases following the Gaza conflict, SIPRI noted that major spending rises in the Middle East were concentrated in Israel and Lebanon. Israel's military expenditure surged to an estimated $37 billion in 2025 — representing roughly 8.3% of GDP — as procurement for air defence, precision strike, and ground combat systems accelerated. Saudi Arabia's $78 billion defence budget reflects continued investment in advanced air defence and precision strike capabilities. Iran's spending fell 10% in real terms to $7.9 billion in 2024, with severe sanctions limiting its capacity to respond to regional escalation despite proxy entanglements across multiple theatres.
4
North America — US Dominance and Canada's Pressure to Spend
The United States continues to anchor global military power with $980 billion in 2025 spending. Canada faces significant pressure from both the Trump administration and other NATO allies to dramatically increase its defence budget from a current ~1.4% of GDP — one of the lowest proportions among NATO members. President Trump has repeatedly singled out Canada's defence spending gap as a transatlantic friction point. Canadian government proposals in 2025 outlined a path toward 2% of GDP, but the timeline and funding mechanisms remain politically contested.
5
Africa & Latin America — Modest Budgets, Growing Security Pressures
Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America account for a small share of global military expenditure but are experiencing rising pressures. Several Sub-Saharan African nations have increased spending in response to Sahel instability, jihadist insurgencies, and intra-regional tensions — with Ethiopia, Nigeria, and several Sahel states among the most active spenders. Latin America's military budgets are dominated by Brazil ($19B) and Colombia, with most countries maintaining proportionally modest defence commitments relative to GDP. The region's security spending dynamics are shaped more by organised crime and internal security than great-power competition.

Military Spending as a Share of GDP — Who Bears the Greatest Burden?

While absolute spending rankings are dominated by wealthy large economies, GDP-share rankings reveal which nations are making the greatest proportional commitment to military expenditure relative to their economic size. This metric is particularly significant for NATO burden-sharing debates and for understanding the true fiscal strain of defence investment. According to the UK Ministry of Defence's International Defence Expenditure Bulletin 2025, Ukraine's military spending as a percentage of GDP now exceeds any other nation in measured data — at an estimated 26%+ of GDP — reflecting a total-war economy orientation that is structurally unsustainable without sustained allied support.

Military Spending as % of GDP — Selected Countries 2024 / 2025
Country% of GDPContext
🇺🇦 Ukraine~26%+Wartime economy — highest measured globally
🇷🇺 Russia~6.7%Full wartime mobilisation level
🇮🇱 Israel~8.3%Multi-front conflict and expanded procurement
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia~5.5%Regional tensions drive procurement expansion
🇵🇱 Poland4.48%NATO's highest GDP share among established members
🇱🇹 Lithuania~4.0%Eastern flank security imperatives
🇱🇻 Latvia~3.73%Targets 5% as existential deterrence
🇺🇸 United States~3.4%Structural superpower commitment
🇬🇷 Greece~2.9%Bilateral tensions with Turkey sustain high GDP share
🇬🇧 United Kingdom2.33%Met 2% every year since 2006; targeting 2.5%
🇫🇷 France~2.1%European strategic autonomy driver; targeting 3.5%
🇩🇪 Germany~2.1%First year meeting 2% target; €100B special fund

Six Forces Reshaping Global Military Spending in 2026

🇺🇦
The Ukraine War — Europe's Permanent Rearmament Catalyst

Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 is the single most significant driver of the European and global military spending surge. Now in its fourth year, the conflict has shattered post-Cold War assumptions about European security, triggered NATO enlargement with Finland and Sweden, and forced previously reluctant spenders like Germany to commit to sustained high-level defence investment that will persist regardless of when or how the conflict concludes.

🤝
NATO's 5% GDP Target — A Generational Shift

The 2025 Hague Summit commitment to 5% of GDP by 2035 — driven primarily by US pressure from the Trump administration — represents a generational shift in NATO's financial architecture. All 32 members met the 2% threshold in 2025 for the first time. The 5% target, if met, would add trillions of dollars to annual global military expenditure, fundamentally reshaping defence procurement markets, industrial capacity requirements, and fiscal priorities across the alliance.

🌏
Indo-Pacific Arms Race — China, Japan, Australia

China's three-decade military build-up has catalysed parallel build-ups among its neighbours. Japan's defence spending doubled from ~1% to ~2% of GDP — a post-war constitutional landmark. Australia accelerated AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine procurement and long-range strike programs. South Korea expanded its indigenous defence exports while growing its own budget. The Indo-Pacific is now the most dynamic arms procurement region globally, with no clear resolution to the underlying territorial and political disputes driving investment.

🚀
Technology-Driven Procurement — Drones, AI & Hypersonics

The Ukraine war has demonstrated the transformational battlefield impact of drone warfare, electronic warfare, and precision strike — reshaping procurement priorities globally. Nations are investing heavily in unmanned systems at every scale, AI-enabled command-and-control, directed energy weapons, and hypersonic missiles. These technology investments are often categorised separately from traditional force structure spending, meaning official budget figures understate the true pace of capability investment in leading militaries.

🏭
Defence Industrial Capacity — The New Constraint

Across NATO and allied nations, the binding constraint on military build-up is no longer budget commitment but industrial manufacturing capacity. Artillery shell production, missile inventories, shipyard capacity, and combat vehicle production lines — many scaled back during the post-Cold War peace dividend — cannot be rapidly expanded. The EU's European Defence Industry Programme and multiple national industrial mobilisation plans reflect the recognition that spending commitments alone cannot deliver combat readiness without sustained multi-year industrial investment.

🌍
Middle East & Africa — Regional Conflicts Sustain Demand

Beyond the top-tier spenders, Middle Eastern and African regional conflicts sustain persistent demand for military equipment, training, and base infrastructure. Israel's multi-front posture, Saudi–Iran proxy competition, and a proliferation of Sahel instability zones have created durable military procurement requirements across a tier of mid-sized regional military powers that are not captured in top-15 rankings but collectively account for a significant share of global arms import demand.


The Path to $3 Trillion — Global Military Spending Forecasts to 2030

The structural forces driving the current military spending surge show no signs of reversal. The Russia–Ukraine war continues without resolution; China's defence modernisation trajectory is institutionally embedded; the NATO 5% target commits European and North American allies to sustained above-GDP spending growth for a decade; and the Indo-Pacific security competition is intensifying rather than stabilising. Analysts broadly project global military expenditure will cross $3 trillion before 2030 — a level that would represent a 60% increase from the 2020 baseline in just one decade.

Global Defence Outlook
Military Spending — Key Projections to 2030
$3T+Global by 2030
$1.5TUS Proposed 2027
5%NATO GDP Target 2035
+18%Germany Growth 2025
44%China APAC Share
100+Countries Raised 2024

Key Drivers of Growth Through 2030

NATO 5% Commitment — Trillions in New European and Canadian Spending
If all NATO members achieve the 5% GDP target by 2035, the collective increase from current 2025 spending levels would add more than $1 trillion per year to annual alliance defence expenditure. Even a partial pathway toward 3.5% across all 32 members would represent one of the largest sustained military build-ups in peacetime history, creating enormous demand for defence industrial capacity, personnel, and new capabilities.
China's Continued Modernisation Trajectory
China has increased military spending in every single year since the early 1990s and shows no policy signal of departing from this pattern. With Taiwan tensions unresolved, maritime disputes in the South and East China Sea ongoing, and a broader great-power competition with the US institutionally embedded in Chinese strategic planning, Beijing's defence investment will continue at or above the pace of GDP growth through the decade, potentially pushing Chinese spending toward $400–450 billion by 2030.
Japan's Defence Revolution — From 1% to 2% and Beyond
Japan's decision to double defence spending to 2% of GDP by 2027 — and the political and constitutional shifts that made this possible — will add approximately $30–40 billion per year to Japanese defence outlays. Japan is simultaneously developing long-range strike capabilities that were previously considered politically impossible, including Tomahawk cruise missile procurement and domestically developed stand-off missiles, fundamentally transforming its role in Indo-Pacific security architecture.
Global Defence Technology Investment — A New R&D Race
Beyond traditional force structure spending, leading militaries are investing unprecedented sums in next-generation technologies: artificial intelligence for autonomous systems, directed energy weapons, hypersonic strike, quantum sensing, space-based ISR, and cyber warfare capabilities. These investments are often budgeted through research and development appropriations rather than core military personnel or equipment lines — meaning published spending figures increasingly understate the true scope of the global defence technology competition underway.
Middle East Structural Tensions — Sustained High-Level Regional Demand
The Middle East's structural security architecture — defined by Saudi–Iran rivalry, Israeli multi-front deterrence requirements, Gulf state sovereign security investments, and the proliferation of non-state armed groups — will sustain regional military spending at elevated levels through the decade. Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 defence localisation agenda and Gulf Cooperation Council rearmament programs will drive sustained procurement demand for advanced air defence, naval systems, and cyber capabilities regardless of short-term oil price cycles.

Frequently Asked Questions

The United States has the highest military spending of any country in the world. In 2025, the US defence budget reached approximately $980 billion — more than the next 10 largest defence spenders combined — representing roughly 3.4% of US GDP and about 37% of total global military expenditure. The 2026 US defence budget was approved at $901 billion, with a proposal for a record $1.5 trillion in 2027 under President Trump.

Global military spending reached $2.63 trillion in 2025, up from $2.48 trillion in 2024, representing a 2.5% real-terms year-on-year increase, according to the IISS Military Balance 2026. The 2024 increase was even sharper: SIPRI recorded a 9.4% surge — the steepest single-year rise since at least the end of the Cold War — driven by Europe's rearmament response to the Ukraine war and Middle East escalation.

China spent an estimated $314 billion on its military in 2024 — a 7.0% increase marking three consecutive decades of growth — according to SIPRI data. The 2025 official Chinese defence budget included a further 7.2% hike. China is the world's second-largest military spender, accounting for roughly 12% of global defence expenditure. Independent analysts believe actual military-related spending exceeds official figures when paramilitary forces, defence R&D, and nuclear programs are included.

At the 2025 NATO Summit in The Hague, allies committed to a new target of 5% of GDP on core defence requirements by 2035 — an increase from the previous 2% benchmark. An interim target of at least 3.5% of GDP under the agreed NATO definition was also set. All 32 NATO members now meet the 2% threshold for the first time. Poland currently leads all NATO members at 4.48% of GDP, with Baltic states also exceeding 3.5%.

Germany became the biggest military spender in Western Europe for the first time since reunification in 2024, with spending of $88.5 billion after a 28% annual increase driven by its €100 billion special defence fund. In 2025, Germany's spending rose a further 18%, bringing its combined core budget and special modernisation fund to approximately €100 billion (~$109 billion). By proportion of GDP, Poland leads all NATO members at 4.48%.

Russia's official defence budget reached $161.2 billion in 2025, a 3% increase over 2024, according to the IISS Military Balance 2026. SIPRI estimated Russia's 2024 military expenditure at $149 billion — a 38% surge from 2023 and double the 2015 level — driven by wartime mobilisation for the Ukraine conflict. Russia now allocates an estimated 6.7% of GDP to military spending — the highest proportion among major economies.

Military Spending Global Defence 2025–2026 NATO SIPRI United States China Russia Germany Defence Budget Arms Expenditure Industry Report

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