Fixed telephone subscriptions (per 100 people) - Country Ranking

Definition: Fixed telephone subscriptions refers to the sum of active number of analogue fixed telephone lines, voice-over-IP (VoIP) subscriptions, fixed wireless local loop (WLL) subscriptions, ISDN voice-channel equivalents and fixed public payphones.

Source: International Telecommunication Union, World Telecommunication/ICT Development Report and database.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Monaco 111.38 2020
2 Malta 58.76 2020
3 France 57.85 2020
4 Cayman Islands 54.78 2020
5 Hong Kong SAR, China 52.03 2020
6 Andorra 51.77 2020
7 Portugal 51.12 2020
8 Japan 49.00 2020
9 Greece 48.24 2020
10 United Kingdom 47.19 2020
11 San Marino 47.15 2020
12 Belarus 46.63 2020
13 Korea 46.54 2020
14 Germany 45.71 2020
15 Barbados 44.54 2020
16 Palau 44.21 2020
17 Luxembourg 42.83 2020
18 Austria 42.04 2020
19 Spain 41.61 2020
20 Israel 38.93 2020
21 Mauritius 37.64 2020
22 Serbia 37.43 2020
23 Switzerland 35.49 2020
24 Canada 35.35 2020
25 Uruguay 35.25 2020
26 Cyprus 35.07 2020
27 Iran 34.64 2020
28 Ireland 34.00 2020
29 Slovenia 33.91 2020
30 Liechtenstein 33.06 2020
31 Italy 32.43 2020
32 Singapore 32.32 2020
33 Croatia 31.65 2020
34 Iceland 31.37 2020
35 Belgium 31.36 2020
36 Hungary 30.75 2020
37 United States 30.67 2020
38 Montenegro 30.53 2020
39 Netherlands 28.81 2020
40 St. Kitts and Nevis 28.20 2020
41 Antigua and Barbuda 27.57 2020
42 Moldova 25.48 2020
43 Puerto Rico 24.87 2020
44 Australia 24.31 2020
45 United Arab Emirates 24.07 2020
46 Brunei 23.75 2020
47 Trinidad and Tobago 23.14 2020
48 The Bahamas 23.14 2020
49 Malaysia 23.07 2020
50 Estonia 22.97 2020
51 Libya 22.94 2020
52 Bosnia and Herzegovina 21.52 2020
53 St. Lucia 20.69 2020
54 Lao PDR 20.49 2020
55 North Macedonia 19.94 2020
56 Seychelles 19.20 2020
57 Mexico 19.00 2020
58 Venezuela 18.47 2020
59 New Zealand 17.79 2020
60 Russia 17.74 2020
61 Suriname 17.60 2020
62 Tuvalu 16.96 2020
63 Macao SAR, China 16.94 2020
64 Saudi Arabia 16.51 2020
65 Kazakhstan 16.46 2020
66 Syrian Arab Republic 16.33 2020
67 Azerbaijan 16.30 2020
68 Argentina 16.28 2020
69 New Caledonia 16.11 2020
70 Bahrain 16.11 2020
71 Guyana 15.89 2020
72 Qatar 15.78 2020
73 Romania 15.72 2020
74 Poland 15.27 2020
75 Panama 15.04 2020
76 Turkey 14.76 2020
77 Jamaica 14.73 2020
78 Sweden 14.64 2020
79 Armenia 14.43 2020
80 Brazil 14.42 2020
81 Colombia 14.24 2020
82 Grenada 14.22 2020
83 El Salvador 13.78 2020
84 Kuwait 13.66 2020
85 Chile 13.43 2020
86 Cuba 13.26 2020
87 Tunisia 12.97 2020
88 Lebanon 12.83 2020
89 Guatemala 12.68 2020
90 Denmark 12.68 2020
91 Oman 12.68 2020
92 China 12.64 2020
93 Bulgaria 12.56 2020
94 Czech Republic 12.47 2020
95 Sri Lanka 12.18 2020
96 Turkmenistan 11.89 2020
97 Slovak Republic 11.88 2020
98 Lithuania 11.83 2020
99 Ecuador 11.69 2020
100 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 11.25 2020
101 Latvia 11.23 2020
102 Greenland 11.19 2020
103 Costa Rica 10.99 2020
104 Algeria 10.91 2020
105 Dominican Republic 10.65 2020
106 Uzbekistan 10.61 2020
107 Cabo Verde 10.37 2020
108 Georgia 9.72 2020
109 Egypt 9.63 2020
110 Ukraine 7.94 2020
111 Albania 7.77 2020
112 Peru 7.49 2020
113 Thailand 7.17 2020
114 Iraq 6.71 2020
115 Tonga 6.62 2020
116 Norway 6.43 2020
117 Morocco 6.39 2020
118 Botswana 5.95 2020
119 Namibia 5.52 2020
120 Fiji 5.41 2020
121 Honduras 5.37 2020
122 Tajikistan 5.26 2020
123 Bolivia 5.12 2020
124 Mongolia 4.89 2020
125 Belize 4.78 2020
126 Kyrgyz Republic 4.58 2020
127 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 4.58 2020
128 Philippines 4.32 2020
129 Yemen 4.16 2020
130 Finland 4.06 2020
131 Djibouti 3.93 2020
132 Jordan 3.84 2020
133 Cameroon 3.63 2020
134 South Africa 3.54 2020
135 Indonesia 3.53 2020
136 Paraguay 3.49 2020
137 Eswatini 3.36 2020
138 Vietnam 3.29 2020
139 Nicaragua 3.18 2020
140 Samoa 3.02 2020
141 Bhutan 2.98 2020
142 Nepal 2.49 2020
143 The Gambia 2.48 2020
144 Eritrea 1.86 2020
145 Papua New Guinea 1.86 2020
146 Zimbabwe 1.70 2020
147 India 1.45 2020
148 Mali 1.39 2020
149 Dominica 1.39 2020
150 Senegal 1.37 2020
151 Mauritania 1.34 2020
152 Pakistan 1.30 2020
153 São Tomé and Principe 1.27 2020
154 Gabon 1.14 2020
155 Vanuatu 1.13 2020
156 Ethiopia 1.09 2020
157 Solomon Islands 1.02 2020
158 Côte d'Ivoire 1.00 2020
159 Ghana 0.99 2020
160 Myanmar 0.96 2020
161 Comoros 0.87 2020
162 Bangladesh 0.84 2020
163 Equatorial Guinea 0.78 2020
164 Somalia 0.57 2020
165 Togo 0.56 2020
166 Lesotho 0.54 2020
167 Zambia 0.39 2020
168 Afghanistan 0.37 2020
169 Angola 0.36 2020
170 Burkina Faso 0.36 2020
171 Cambodia 0.33 2020
172 Congo 0.31 2020
173 Sudan 0.30 2020
174 Mozambique 0.28 2020
175 Benin 0.27 2020
176 Madagascar 0.25 2020
177 Niger 0.24 2020
178 Uganda 0.20 2020
179 Burundi 0.15 2020
180 Timor-Leste 0.15 2020
181 Kenya 0.12 2020
182 Tanzania 0.12 2020
183 Liberia 0.12 2020
184 Rwanda 0.09 2020
185 Malawi 0.07 2020
186 Haiti 0.05 2020
187 Nigeria 0.05 2020
188 Central African Republic 0.04 2020
189 Chad 0.03 2020
190 Kiribati 0.03 2020
191 Sierra Leone 0.00 2020
192 Nauru 0.00 2014
192 Guinea 0.00 2018
192 Guinea-Bissau 0.00 2018
192 Dem. Rep. Congo 0.00 2020

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Development Relevance: The quality of an economy's infrastructure, including power and communications, is an important element in investment decisions for both domestic and foreign investors. Government effort alone is not enough to meet the need for investments in modern infrastructure; public-private partnerships, especially those involving local providers and financiers, are critical for lowering costs and delivering value for money. In telecommunications, competition in the marketplace, along with sound regulation, is lowering costs, improving quality, and easing access to services around the globe. Access to telecommunication services rose on an unprecedented scale over the past two decades. This growth was driven primarily by wireless technologies and liberalization of telecommunications markets, which have enabled faster and less costly network rollout. Fixed telephone lines are those that connect a subscriber's terminal equipment to the public switched telephone network and that have a port on a telephone exchange. This term is synonymous with the term main station or Direct Exchange Line (DEL) that is commonly used in telecommunication documents. Integrated services digital network channels and fixed wireless subscribers are included. A fixed line also refers to a phone which uses a solid medium telephone line such as a metal wire or fiber optic cable for transmission as distinguished from a mobile cellular line which uses radio waves for transmission. Over the past decade new financing and technology, along with privatization and market liberalization, have spurred dramatic growth in telecommunications in many countries. With the rapid development of mobile telephony and the global expansion of the Internet, information and communication technologies are increasingly recognized as essential tools of development, contributing to global integration and enhancing public sector effectiveness, efficiency, and transparency.

Limitations and Exceptions: Operators have traditionally been the main source of telecommunications data, so information on subscriptions has been widely available for most countries. This gives a general idea of access, but a more precise measure is the penetration rate - the share of households with access to telecommunications. During the past few years more information on information and communication technology use has become available from household and business surveys. Also important are data on actual use of telecommunications services. Ideally, statistics on telecommunications (and other information and communications technologies) should be compiled for all three measures: subscriptions, access, and use. The quality of data varies among reporting countries as a result of differences in regulations covering data provision and availability. Discrepancies between global and national figures may arise when countries use a different definition than the one used by ITU. For example, some countries do not include the number of ISDN channels when calculating the number of fixed telephone lines. Discrepancies may also arise in cases where the end of a fiscal year differs from that used by ITU, which is the end of December of every year. A number of countries have fiscal years that end in March or June of every year. Data are usually not adjusted but discrepancies in the definition, reference year or the break in comparability in between years are noted in a data note. For this reason, data are not always strictly comparable. Missing values are estimated by ITU.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: A fixed telephone line (previously called main telephone line in operation) is an active line connecting the subscriber's terminal equipment to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) and which has a dedicated port in the telephone exchange equipment. This term is synonymous with the terms main station or Direct Exchange Line (DEL) that are commonly used in telecommunication documents. It may not be the same as an access line or a subscriber. This should include the active number of analog fixed telephone lines, ISDN channels, fixed wireless, public payphones and VoIP subscriptions. Active lines are those that have registered an activity in the past three months. Data on fixed telephone lines are derived using administrative data that countries (usually the regulatory telecommunication authority or the Ministry in charge of telecommunications) regularly, and at least annually, collect from telecommunications operators. Data are considered to be very reliable, timely, and complete. Data for this indicator are readily available for approximately 90 percent of countries, either through ITU's World Telecommunication Indicators questionnaires or from official information available on the Ministry or Regulator's website. For the rest, information can be aggregated through operators' data (mainly through annual reports) and complemented by market research reports. Telephone lines (per 100 people) indicator is derived by all telephone lines divided by the country's population and multiplied by 100. For additional/latest information on sources and country notes, please also refer to: https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Pages/stat/default.aspx

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: Please cite the International Telecommunication Union for third-party use of these data.