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Last Updated:June 25, 2026, 22:00 IST
Here are the top 10 countries ranked by cubic meters of internal freshwater resources available per person each year.
According to data from Statranker.org, freshwater availability per person varies wildly across the globe. The highest-ranked nations combine massive annual environmental precipitation (like rain, glacial melt, or major river systems) with exceptionally small localized human populations.

Iceland (498,179 m3/capita): Iceland tops the global list due to its staggering combination of massive glaciers, active volcanic water tables, and a tiny population. Heavy subarctic precipitation continually recharges its pristine, hyper-abundant rivers and underground aquifers safely out of reach from heavy pollution. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Guyana (344,542 m3/capita): Situated in northern South America, Guyana thrives under heavy tropical rainfall and an immense network of powerful rivers like the Essequibo. Its dense, untouched rainforest interiors hold massive internal water volumes, split among a very sparse coastal human population. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Suriname (168,760 m3/capita): Suriname features a remarkably low population density alongside nearly 90% primary rainforest coverage. The country receives continuous, heavy tropical downpours that consistently feed a vast, sprawling web of pristine internal rivers, creating a massive per-capita surplus. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Republic of the Congo (150,777 m3/capita): Dominating central Africa's wet equatorial belt, this nation benefits directly from the immense Congo River basin system. Continuous heavy rain over the dense jungle ensures vast, renewable surface water reserves that vastly outpace the country’s current domestic population size. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Bhutan (101,088 m3/capita): As Asia's sole entry in the top ten, landlocked Bhutan reaps the benefits of high-altitude Himalayan glaciations. Massive seasonal snowmelt and heavy monsoon rains feed steep, roaring river valleys, creating an incredible freshwater wealth for its small mountain population. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Papua New Guinea (89,527 m3/capita): This southwestern Pacific island nation is defined by rugged mountainous terrain and an intense tropical monsoon climate. Frequent, heavy downpours saturate the landscape, creating massive, rapid river networks that flow unchecked through largely unpopulated, heavily forested indigenous territories. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Gabon (74,582 m3/capita): Located on Africa's Atlantic coast, Gabon’s small population lives alongside a landscape covered almost entirely by dense rainforests. The Ogooué River basin, fed by torrential equatorial rains, ensures a massive, reliable yearly renewal of internal surface water and aquifers. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Canada (73,469 m3/capita): Canada holds a massive share of the planet's surface freshwater, contained in millions of pristine lakes and vast river networks. While its overall water volume is enormous, its low population density spreads this liquid wealth generously per resident. (Representative Image: Pexels)

Norway (72,493 m3/capita): Norway’s steep, dramatic topography is filled with thousands of high-altitude glacial lakes, fjords, and snow-fed streams. Constant Atlantic weather fronts drop heavy snow and rain across the mountains, continuously replenishing a vast hydrological network for a modest population. (Representative Image: Pexels)

New Zealand (67,811 m3/capita): Rounding out the top ten, New Zealand features massive mountain ranges, high-altitude alpine glaciers, and consistent maritime rainfall. Its clean rivers and deep lakes provide an exceptional abundance of renewable water resources relative to its isolated, small island population. (Representative Image: Pexels)
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