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World’s Largest Militaries, Ranked by Active Troops

While the US military has pursued ambitious technological advances, manpower remains one of its core pillars.

From high-ranking generals to soldiers on the field, human troops remain a key way to assess the reach and power of the world’s militaries.

Using data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies’ 2025 Military Balance report, Business Insider ranked countries by the size of their active armed forces and listed their defense budgets, based on 2024 figures.

Active-duty force size is a tally of a country’s uniformed troops: airmen, soldiers, sailors, special operators, and Marines. Armies, in particular, depend on size to gain and occupy ground. Militaries can also be a tool of domestic repression, a focus that undercuts its capabilities against an external foe. North Korea, for example, is one of the world’s most repressive states, led by a dictator who has repeatedly threatened neighboring South Korea.

The number of active-duty military personnel is far from the only factor that matters when comparing military power between countries, but it shows latent power that could be augmented via conscription and calling up reservists.

“Numbers have value, but there’s a lot more to military capability,” said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington, DC-based foreign policy and national security think tank.

IISS, a London-headquartered think tank, counts active armed forces, reservists, and paramilitaries as separate categories in its analysis, showing a fuller picture of each nation’s manpower.

Some countries have significantly higher numbers of reservists than others — Vietnam has the largest number in the world, estimated at 5 million.

But while reservists can aid militaries when needed, the quality and longevity of their expertise can vary between conscription- and volunteer-based systems, Cancian told Business Insider.

“When you look at some countries’ reserve numbers, you’re often looking at people who haven’t trained in 10 or 20 years,” he said. “It gives you a big number, but their military value is questionable.”

And while paramilitaries can be effective at enforcing internal security and party strength, Cancian says that “as a military force, they have essentially zero value.”

Even when accounting for all of a military’s manpower, personnel is only one of the various factors that can qualify a nation’s military strength, which also include equipment and readiness.

There’s also the role of technologies in global warfare, the size and sophistication of air forces and naval fleets, amphibious capabilities to land assault forces, command and control systems, or nuclear forces, which all shape military power. Larger and more advanced forces require higher state expenditures.

Still, comparing global manpower offers insight into how countries prioritize military power.

See how the world’s largest militaries stack up.

25. Iraq


Iraqi soldiers



The Iraqi Ground Forces had an estimated 193,000 active servicemembers in 2024.

Khalil Dawood/Xinhua via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 193,000

Defense budget: $12.7 billion

24. Morocco




The Royal Moroccan Army has an estimated 196,000 active servicemembers.

ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 196,000

Defense budget: $6.6 billion

23. France




The French Army has a defense budget of $64 billion.

Ludovic MARIN / AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 202,000

Defense budget: $64 billion

22. Japan




The Japan Self-Defense Forces have an estimated 247,000 active servicemembers.

STR/JIJI Press/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 247,000

Defense budget: $53 billion

21. Saudi Arabia




The Saudi Arabian Armed Forces have a defense budget of $71.7 billion.

YASSER AL-ZAYYAT/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 257,000

Defense budget: $71.7 billion

20. Sri Lanka




The Sri Lanka Armed Forces have an estimated 263,000 active servicemembers.

Pushpa Kumara/Anadolu via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 263,000

Defense budget: $1.4 billion

19. Colombia




The Military Forces of Colombia count an estimated 269,000 active servicemembers.

RAUL ARBOLEDA/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 269,000

Defense budget: $7.7 billion

18. Mexico




The Mexican Armed Forces have an estimated 287,000 active servicemembers.

Daniel Cardenas/Anadolu via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 287,000

Defense budget: $10.2 billion

17. Eritrea




The country of Eritrea counts 302,000 active servicemembers in its military.

credit should read STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 302,000

Defense budget: Not reported

16. Turkey




The Turkish Armed Forces have an estimated 379,000 reservists as of 2024.

Samir Jordamovic/Anadolu via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 355,000

Defense budget: $14.3 billion

15. Thailand




The Royal Thai Armed Forces count on an estimated 361,000 active servicemembers.

MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 361,000

Defense budget: $5.7 billion

14. Brazil




The Brazilian Armed Forces have an estimated 1,415,000 reservists as of 2024.

Fabio Teixeira/Anadolu via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 375,000

Defense budget: $24.4 billion

13. Indonesia




The Indonesian National Armed Forces have 405,000 active servicemembers.

Claudio Pramana/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 405,000

Defense budget: $10.9 billion

12. Egypt




The Egyptian Armed Forces has an estimated 479,000 reserve servicemembers.

KEROLOS SALAH/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 439,000

Defense budget: $2.8 billion

11. Vietnam




The Vietnam People’s Army has the world’s largest number of reservists, with approximately 5 million of them.

NHAC NGUYEN/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 450,000

Defense budget: $7.8 billion

10. South Korea




The Republic of Korea Army has the second-largest reserve force, with approximately 3.1 million reservists.

Chris Jung/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 500,000

Defense budget: $43.9 billion

9. Ethiopia




The Ethiopian National Defense Force has 503,000 active servicemembers.

AMANUEL SILESHI/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 503,000

Defense budget: $623 million

8. Iran




The Islamic Republic of Iran Army has about 350,000 reserve servicemembers.

ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 610,000

Defense budget: $8 billion

7. Pakistan




Pakistan has about 291,000 gendarmerie and paramilitary members.

Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP

Active armed forces: 660,000

Defense budget: $8.4 billion

6. Ukraine




Ukraine has about 260,000 gendarmerie and paramilitary members. Its forces have swelled to battle the invasion Russia launched in 2022.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Active armed forces: 730,000

Defense budget: $28.4 billion

5. Russia




The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation has roughly 1.5 million reservists.

NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 1,134,000

Defense budget: $120.3 billion

4. North Korea




North Korea, a country of about 25 million, has an active force equivalent in size to the US, which is thirteen times more populous.

Alain Nogues/Corbis via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 1,280,000

Defense budget: Not reported

3. United States




The US has the world’s largest defense budget at $968 billion in 2024.

Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Active armed forces: 1,316,000

Defense budget: $968 billion

2. India




The Indian Armed Forces have the world’s second-largest number of active servicemembers. India has a population of over 1.4 billion, more than four times that of the US.

Vishal Bhatnagar/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 1,476,000

Defense budget: $74.4 billion

1. China




China has the world’s most active servicemembers and the second-largest defense budget at $235 billion in 2024. China is a communist state that has a population of 1.4 billion.

VCG/VCG via Getty Images

Active armed forces: 2,035,000

Defense budget: $235 billion

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