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SwedenLife Expectancy at Birth

Category: PeopleSource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #15 of 217Updated April 2026
Latest Value
83.3 years
2023
YoY Change
+0.3%
20222023
Global Rank
#15
of 217 countries
Maximum
83.3 years
2023
Minimum
79.6 years
2000
CAGR
+0.2%
24 years
Last
83.3 years
Previous
83.1 years
Highest
83.3 years
Lowest
79.6 years
Unit
Years
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators

Sweden's life expectancy was 83.3 years in 2023, ranking #15 out of 217 countries. This represents a +0.3% change from 2022. Over the past 24 years, the highest recorded value was 83.3 years (2023) and the lowest was 79.6 years (2000). Data sourced from the World Bank World Development Indicators.

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
202383.3 years+0.3%
202283.1 years+0.0%
202183.1 years+0.8%
202082.4 years-0.9%
201983.1 years+0.7%
201882.6 years+0.2%
201782.4 years+0.1%
201682.3 years+0.1%
201582.2 years-0.1%
201482.3 years+0.4%
201382.0 years+0.3%
201281.7 years-0.1%
201181.8 years+0.4%
201081.5 years+0.1%
200981.4 years+0.3%
200881.1 years+0.2%
200780.9 years+0.2%
200680.7 years+0.3%
200580.5 years+0.1%
200480.5 years+0.5%
200380.1 years+0.3%
200279.8 years+0.1%
200179.8 years+0.2%
200079.6 years

Top Countries — Life Expectancy at Birth

#CountryValueYear
1Monaco86.4 years2023
2San Marino85.7 years2023
3Hong Kong SAR, China85.2 years2023
4Liechtenstein84.8 years2023
5French Polynesia84.1 years2023
6Switzerland84.1 years2023
7Japan84.0 years2023
8Andorra84.0 years2023
9Spain83.9 years2023
10Italy83.7 years2023
View all 217 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

Life expectancy at birth indicates the number of years a newborn infant would live if prevailing patterns of mortality at the time of its birth were to stay the same throughout its life. It is a key indicator of population health and development.

Methodology

Life expectancy is calculated from life tables, which are constructed using age-specific death rates derived from vital registration systems or sample surveys. The World Bank sources this data from the UN Population Division, which uses demographic estimation techniques when vital registration is incomplete. The calculation assumes that current age-specific mortality rates remain constant throughout a person's life.

Unit

Years

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsCoverage: 20002023View original source →