When will Pakistan overtake United States in population?
The crossover
Population, 2000β2100
What this means
Pakistan is projected to overtake United States in total population around 2053. At the crossover, both countries sit at roughly 383 million people. Today United States is still larger, but the trend lines are converging and the order is set to flip within a generation.
The reason is a tale of two trajectories. Pakistan is on course to more than double over the century, moving from about 249 million in 2024 toward 511 million by 2100. United States, by contrast, is projected to keep growing, going from roughly 344 million to 421 million over the same period. Differences in fertility and age structure (Pakistan's median age near 20 versus United States's near 38 today) explain much of the divergence.
Crossovers like this one are how the global population ranking is quietly rewritten. As faster-growing populations climb the table and slower-growing or shrinking ones slip down, the list of the world's largest countries in 2100 will look markedly different from today's. The 2053 crossing is one of the clearer signals of that shift.
As with all long-range projections, the exact year carries uncertainty. Under the UN's high and low fertility scenarios the crossover could arrive earlier or later, and the figures here follow the medium variant. Still, the direction of travel, Pakistan rising relative to United States, is robust across the plausible range of outcomes.
Decade by decade
Medium-variant projection, millions
| Year | Pakistan | United States | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2030 | 275 million | 355 million | β80.3 million |
| 2040 | 323 million | 370 million | β47.0 million |
| 2050 | 370 million | 380 million | β10.8 million |
| 2060 | 412 million | 389 million | +23.9 million |
| 2070 | 450 million | 398 million | +51.9 million |
| 2080 | 479 million | 407 million | +71.8 million |
| 2090 | 498 million | 414 million | +84.3 million |
| 2100 | 511 million | 421 million | +89.6 million |