2.88 billion

Total doses administered

Dec. 2

June 25

0.5

1

1.5

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2.5 billion

More than 2.88 billion vaccine doses have been administered worldwide, equal to 38 doses for every 100 people. There is already a stark gap between vaccination programs in different countries, with some yet to report a single dose.

Doses administered per 100 people

No data

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Source: Vaccinations data from local governments via Our World in Data.

Vaccinations by country

Doses administered Pct. of population
Per 100 people Total Vaccinated Fully vaccinated
World 38 2,882,319,837
U.A.E. 153 14,940,031
Malta 129 650,411 71% 61%
Bahrain 122 2,009,717 64% 58%
Israel 118 10,692,079 61% 57%
Aruba 118 125,289 63% 55%
Chile 116 21,981,255 65% 52%
Mongolia 114 3,672,281 60% 53%
U.K. 114 75,963,777 66% 48%
Uruguay 109 3,759,264 64% 45%
Iceland 107 386,715 72% 49%
Qatar 106 2,989,246 59% 47%
Curaçao 105 165,936 56% 49%
United States 97 321,199,379 54% 46%
Hungary 95* 9,249,943* 56% 48%
Show all

Note: Some countries do not provide data for the number of doses or the number of people who have been partially or fully vaccinated. Table shows countries with at least 100,000 people. Use the search feature to find data for countries with smaller populations. Numbers marked with an asterisk * were last reported more than two weeks ago.

The data is compiled from government sources by the Our World in Data project at the University of Oxford. A vaccinated person refers to someone who has received at least one dose of a vaccine, and a fully vaccinated person has received all required doses of a vaccine. For the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, a person who is “fully vaccinated” has received two doses.

While vaccine doses remain relatively scarce globally, most countries have focused their early vaccination efforts on priority groups like the clinically vulnerable; people in their 60s, 70s and older; and front-line workers, like doctors and nurses.

Tracking vaccination rates by country

Charts show countries with at least 100,000 people

There is also a striking divide between continents. Africa has the slowest vaccination rate of any continent, with some countries yet to start mass vaccination campaigns.

Vaccination rates by continent

Doses administered per 100 people

Less wealthy countries are relying on a vaccine-sharing arrangement called Covax, which aims to provide two billion doses by the end of the year.

85 percent of shots that have gone into arms worldwide have been administered in high- and upper-middle-income countries. Only 0.3 percent of doses have been administered in low-income countries.

Vaccination rates by country income level

Doses administered per 100 people. Circles sized by country population. Some countries may have started to administer doses, but have not yet reported data.

No dosesreported
<0.1
1
10
100High income countriesUpper middleLower middleLow

Note: Countries with no reported vaccinations either have not started a widespread vaccination campaign or aren’t regularly reporting data on the number of doses administered. Doses administered are plotted on a log scale.

Most of the vaccines currently in use require two doses for a patient to be fully vaccinated. In February the Food and Drug Administration authorized a one-shot vaccine by pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson for emergency use in the United States.

Where each vaccine is being used

Oxford-AstraZeneca

178 countries

Pfizer-BioNTech

106 countries

Gamaleya (Sputnik V)

45 countries

Sinopharm-Beijing

38 countries

Johnson&Johnson

27 countries

Bharat Biotech (Covaxin)

6 countries

Sinopharm-Wuhan

2 countries

Vector Institute (EpiVacCorona)

2 countries

Sinopharm/HayatVax

1 country

Note: The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is known as Covishield in India. Only countries that report doses administered are shown. Other countries may have approved vaccines but have not administered them yet.·Source: Our World in Data

Tracking the Coronavirus