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Visualizing Global Wealth Inequality in 2025
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Key Takeaways
- Brazil, Russia, and South Africa have the highest levels of wealth inequality globally.
- Slovakia, Belgium, and Qatar are among the most equal countries in terms of wealth distribution in the ranking.
- Global wealth equality has declined slightly by 0.4% since the turn of the millennium.
- Millionaires own nearly half of the world’s personal wealth, according to UBS’s 2025 report.
This visualization compares countries by wealth inequality in 2024 using the Gini coefficient, a standard measure where 0 represents perfect equality and 1 represents maximum inequality.
The data for this graphic comes from the UBS Global Wealth Report 2025, which analyzes wealth levels and distribution across more than 50 markets.
Where Inequality Is Highest
Brazil, Russia, and South Africa top the list for wealth inequality, each posting Gini coefficients around the low 0.8s.
These scores imply a highly concentrated distribution of assets relative to the rest of the population. Several energy-rich economies—such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia—also rank high, reflecting significant concentrations of financial and real assets among upper tiers of wealth holders.
| Country | Gini Coefficient 2024 |
|---|---|
Brazil |
0.82 |
Russia |
0.82 |
South Africa |
0.81 |
United Arab Emirates |
0.81 |
Saudi Arabia |
0.78 |
Sweden |
0.75 |
United States |
0.74 |
India |
0.74 |
Türkiye |
0.73 |
Mexico |
0.72 |
Singapore |
0.70 |
Germany |
0.68 |
Switzerland |
0.67 |
Israel |
0.66 |
Netherlands |
0.65 |
Hong Kong SAR |
0.63 |
Mainland China |
0.62 |
Portugal |
0.61 |
Greece |
0.60 |
Taiwan |
0.60 |
France |
0.59 |
United Kingdom |
0.58 |
South Korea |
0.57 |
Poland |
0.57 |
Italy |
0.57 |
Spain |
0.56 |
Australia |
0.55 |
Luxembourg |
0.55 |
Japan |
0.54 |
Qatar |
0.47 |
Belgium |
0.47 |
Slovakia |
0.38 |
Where Wealth Is Most Evenly Shared
On the other end of the spectrum, Slovakia and Belgium post the lowest Gini readings in this dataset. These countries tend to combine robust social safety nets, relatively high savings among households, and policy frameworks that diffuse asset ownership more broadly.
Global Context Since 2000
Globally, wealth equality has decreased slightly since 2000 (–0.4%). At the same time, UBS estimates that millionaire households account for nearly half of all personal wealth worldwide.
Learn More on the Voronoi App 
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Brazil
Russia
South Africa
United Arab Emirates
Saudi Arabia
Sweden
United States
India
Türkiye
Mexico
Singapore
Germany
Switzerland
Israel
Netherlands
Hong Kong SAR
Mainland China
Portugal
Greece
Taiwan
France
United Kingdom
South Korea
Poland
Italy
Spain
Australia
Luxembourg
Japan
Qatar
Belgium
Slovakia












