Ranked: The World’s Most Spoken Languages in 2025

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Ranked: The World’s Most Spoken Languages in 2025

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Key Takeaways

  • English is the most spoken language in 2025 with 1.5 billion total speakers.
  • About 25% (390 million) speak English as a first language, but a staggering 1.1 billion use it as their second language.
  • Second-ranked Mandarin has 1.2 billion speakers but the first and second language split is reversed.

The world has never been more connected, and our linguistic map reflects that reality.

This visualization ranks the 25 languages with the largest total number of speakers in 2025, combining first and and second-language usage.

The data for this visualization comes from Ethnologue.

Ethnologue lists dialects separately instead of grouping them under a “macrolanguage.” This can lower totals for languages with many subdivisions (e.g., Chinese, Arabic, Punjabi, Swahili).

ℹ A “macrolanguage” is a group of closely related languages or dialects that are sometimes treated as a single language for certain purposes, like in library cataloging, while being treated as separate languages in other contexts, like in linguistic research.

English’s Global Reach Relies as a Second Language

English remains the undisputed lingua franca, but its lead is built on adoption rather than birth.

Rank Language Total Speakers
(In millions)
First Language Share of
First Language
Second Language
1 🇺🇸🇬🇧🇨🇦🇦🇺 English 1,528 390 25.52% 1,138
2 🇨🇳🇹🇼🇸🇬 Mandarin 1,184 990 83.61% 194
3 🇮🇳 Hindi 609 345 56.65% 264
4 🇪🇸🇲🇽 Spanish 558 484 86.74% 74
5 🇸🇦🇦🇪 Standard Arabic 335 0* 0% 335
6 🇫🇷🇨🇦 French 312 74 23.72% 238
7 🇧🇩🇮🇳 Bengali 284 242 85.21% 43
8 🇧🇷🇵🇹 Portuguese 267 250 93.63% 17
9 🇷🇺 Russian 253 145 57.31% 108
10 🇮🇩 Indonesian 252 75 29.76% 177
11 🇵🇰🇮🇳 Urdu 246 78 31.71% 168
12 🇩🇪 German 134 76 56.72% 58
13 🇯🇵 Japanese 126 124 98.41% 2
14 🇳🇬 Nigerian Pidgin 121 5 4.13% 116
15 🇪🇬 Egyptian Arabic 119 84 70.59% 35
16 🇮🇳 Marathi 99 83 83.84% 16
17 🇻🇳 Vietnamese 97 86 88.66% 11
18 🇮🇳 Telugu 96 83 86.46% 13
19 🇳🇬🇳🇪 Hausa 94 58 61.70% 36
20 🇹🇷 Turkish 91 85 93.41% 6
21 🇵🇰 Western Punjabi 90 Not reported n/a Not reported
22 🇹🇿🇰🇪 Swahili 87 4 4.60% 83
23 🇵🇭 Tagalog 87 33 37.93% 54
24 🇮🇳 Tamil 86 79 91.86% 8
25 🇭🇰🇲🇴 Yue Chinese 86 85 98.84% 1


Note: *Standard Arabic is taught in schools, after a child has learnt their local Arabic dialect.

Only one in four English speakers learn it as a first language. The remaining 1.14 billion learned it for business, education, or entertainment.

This 75% share of second-language speakers illustrates how institutional support—from universities to social media platforms—keeps expanding English’s footprint.

In short, proficiency in English unlocks global opportunities, so demand feeds on itself.

Mandarin and Spanish Dominate Language Lists

By contrast, Mandarin’s 990 million first-language speakers make up 84% of its total. This Reflects China’s enormous population and Mandarin’s comparatively limited diffusion abroad.

Spanish follows a similar pattern: 87% of its 558 million speakers learned it at home, concentrated across Latin America and Spain.

These figures underscore that large population bases, not international adoption, anchor Mandarin and Spanish near the top of the rankings.

The Rise of South Asian and African Languages

Also on the list of most spoken languages in 2025: Hindi (609 million speakers) and Bengali (284 million) highlight South Asia’s demographic boom, while Urdu’s 246 million users span Pakistan, India, and a far-flung diaspora.

Meanwhile, Swahili and Nigerian Pidgin showcase Africa’s linguistic dynamism. Each has fewer than 10 million first-language speakers, yet exceeds 80 million total thanks to regional trade and media.

ℹ As Swahili is a macrolanguage, this number is for Tanzanian Swahili speakers only.

As these economies grow, their languages may follow English’s path—moving from local bridge tongues to global assets.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Which Language Every Country Wants to Learn on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

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