World Bank 2026 GDP data is not yet released. The World Bank typically publishes full-year figures 12–18 months after the year ends — 2026 data is expected around mid-to-late 2027.
The most recent confirmed actual data is for 2024. For 2026 projections, the IMF World Economic Outlook is the standard source. Both options below:
Top 10 from the most recent actual data. See full ranking →
| 1 | South Africa | $401.1B | 0.36% |
| 2 | Nigeria | $252.3B | 0.23% |
| 3 | Ethiopia | $149.7B | 0.13% |
| 4 | Kenya | $120.3B | 0.11% |
| 5 | Angola | $101.0B | 0.09% |
| 6 | Cote d'Ivoire | $87.1B | 0.08% |
| 7 | Ghana | $82.3B | 0.07% |
| 8 | Tanzania | $78.8B | 0.07% |
| 9 | Congo, Dem. Rep. | $71.0B | 0.06% |
| 10 | Uganda | $53.9B | 0.05% |
The World Bank typically publishes full-year GDP figures 12–18 months after the year ends. For 2026, expect the release around mid-to-late 2027. We rebuild this page automatically as soon as the data is available.
We only publish confirmed actual data from official sources we can redistribute (the World Bank, under CC BY 4.0). IMF projection data has different licensing terms, so we link you directly to IMF where you can access their forecasts in their official format — with no risk of outdated or miscopied figures.
Actual data is measured after the year ends, from each country's national statistics. Projections are forecasts made before or during the year, based on models — they're revised regularly. For published rankings, citations, and analysis of past performance, actual data (what we publish) is the standard.