Gdoc/Admin
Daily Data InsightsNorway gives more foreign aid per capita than any other OECD country

Norway gives more foreign aid per capita than any other OECD country

A bar chart titled "Foreign aid given per capita in 2023" displays the amounts of foreign aid provided by various countries. Norway is indicated with a prominent green bar at $1,160, making it the highest contributor per capita. Other countries are represented with smaller blue bars, including Sweden at $515, the Netherlands at $370, the UK at $255, France at $225, the US at $190, Japan at $155, Australia at $122, Spain at $69, and Israel at $41. A note highlights that Norway is the only country giving over $1,000 per capita in foreign aid. The data source is cited as OECD 2024, with a copyright notice reading "CC BY."

In 2023, Norwegians gave $1,160 in foreign aid — more than twice the amount contributed by people in other large Western countries.

By comparison, people in countries like the United States and Japan gave much less, at $190 and $155 per person, respectively.

One factor behind Norway’s substantial foreign aid is its sovereign wealth fund, built from oil revenues. The fund is valued at around $1.8 trillion — about the size of the Australian economy — and provides financial resources that few nations can match.

Still, its generosity stands out: Norway also leads in foreign aid as a share of national income.

Explore foreign aid given per capita for more countries

Our latest Daily Data Insights

See all Daily Data Insights

Get Daily Data Insights delivered to your inbox

Receive an email from us when we publish a Daily Data Insight (every weekday).

By subscribing you are agreeing to the terms of our privacy policy.