Loneliness Statistics 2026: The Data Behind the Epidemic
Loneliness is no longer treated as a private mood. Public health bodies now describe it as an epidemic with measurable costs to health, economies, and lives. This page gathers the most cited loneliness statistics as of 2026, with sources, so you can see the scale of the problem clearly and use the numbers responsibly.
A quick note on the data. Loneliness is self-reported and measured differently across studies, so figures vary by definition, country, and year. Treat the numbers below as well-sourced estimates that point to a consistent picture rather than precise constants. Sources are listed at the end.
If loneliness is weighing on you right now, you are not just a statistic. In the US you can call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). In the UK & Ireland, call Samaritans on 116 123. Elsewhere, findahelpline.com lists free, confidential lines by country. Reaching out is a strength, not a weakness.
Headline numbers
A few figures capture the scale. In a 2023 global survey conducted across 142 countries, Meta and Gallup found that roughly 24% of people aged 15 and older, close to one in four, reported feeling very or fairly lonely. In the United States, Gallup polling has found that around one in five adults reports feeling lonely "a lot of the previous day."
| Statistic | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Adults worldwide feeling very or fairly lonely | About 24% (roughly 1 in 4) | Meta-Gallup, 2023 |
| US adults lonely "a lot of the previous day" | About 1 in 5 | Gallup, 2024 |
| Increased risk of premature death from social disconnection | Comparable to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day | US Surgeon General, 2023 |
| Deaths globally linked to loneliness and isolation | Estimated 100 per hour, over 871,000 a year | World Health Organization, 2025 |
Who is most affected
Loneliness is not spread evenly. Counter to the common image of the isolated older person, several large surveys find that young adults report some of the highest rates. In the Meta-Gallup data, people aged 19 to 29 were among the loneliest age groups. Other recurring patterns in the research include:
- Young adults and teens consistently report loneliness at or above the rates of older groups, despite being the most digitally connected generation.
- Older adults remain at serious risk, especially after retirement, bereavement, or loss of mobility, where loneliness is strongly tied to health decline.
- Remote and hybrid workers frequently cite isolation as a leading downside of working from home.
- People in life transitions, such as a move, a breakup, new parenthood, or migration, show elevated situational loneliness.
The health and economic costs
Public health bodies treat loneliness so seriously because the effects are physical as well as emotional. The 2023 US Surgeon General advisory summarized decades of research showing that lacking social connection raises the risk of premature death by a margin comparable to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. It is also associated with a roughly 29% higher risk of heart disease, a 32% higher risk of stroke, and, in older adults, around a 50% increased risk of developing dementia.
The costs scale up to whole economies through healthcare use and lost productivity. In 2023 the World Health Organization launched a Commission on Social Connection and, in its later reporting, described loneliness as a global health threat linked to hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. Put plainly, connection behaves like a determinant of health, on par with diet and exercise.
What is driving the rise
No single cause explains the trend, but researchers point to a cluster of shifts that reinforce one another:
- The decline of "third places." Cafés, clubs, places of worship, and community spaces that once produced casual contact have thinned out in many places.
- Changing work. Remote and hybrid work removed much of the incidental, in-person socializing of the office.
- Digital substitution. Screens often replace face-to-face and voice contact with lower-quality, passive interaction, which can leave people feeling more alone, not less.
- Mobility and smaller households. People move more and live alone more often, loosening long-standing local ties.
For a deeper look at root causes, the US Surgeon General's analysis is a useful companion read: causes of loneliness.
What the research says helps
The encouraging part of the data is that loneliness is responsive. It is a signal, like hunger or thirst, and it can be answered. Evidence and expert guidance converge on a few things:
- Frequent, small, real interactions matter more than occasional big social events. Consistency beats intensity.
- Quality of connection matters more than the number of contacts. A few people who truly know you outperform a large, shallow network.
- Voice and in-person contact tend to relieve loneliness more than passive scrolling or text alone, because tone and presence carry warmth.
- Rebuilding routines and structures that create repeated contact, such as classes, groups, and standing calls, is more reliable than waiting to feel motivated.
This is the thinking behind Bubblic. It lowers the barrier to one small, genuine, voice-first interaction a day, the kind of repeated contact the research keeps pointing to. For practical guidance, see the Surgeon General's framework for how to foster social connections.
Turn the data into one small step
Statistics describe a problem. Connection answers it, one conversation at a time. Bubblic gives you a daily prompt and real people to talk to by voice, with no photos and no pressure.
Sources
- US Surgeon General (2023), Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation: hhs.gov (PDF)
- Meta-Gallup (2023), The State of Social Connections: news.gallup.com
- Gallup (2024), US loneliness polling: news.gallup.com
- World Health Organization (2023 onward), Commission on Social Connection: who.int
Figures are drawn from publicly reported studies and are presented as estimates. Definitions and measurement of loneliness vary across sources and over time.
FAQ
How many people are lonely worldwide?
A 2023 Meta-Gallup survey across 142 countries found that about 24% of people aged 15 and older, roughly one in four, reported feeling very or fairly lonely.
Which age group is the loneliest?
Multiple surveys find that young adults, often those aged around 19 to 29, report some of the highest loneliness rates, despite being the most digitally connected generation. Older adults also remain at high risk.
How bad is loneliness for your health?
The US Surgeon General reported that social disconnection raises the risk of premature death comparably to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day, and is associated with higher risks of heart disease, stroke, and dementia.
What actually helps reduce loneliness?
Research points to frequent small interactions over occasional big ones, quality of connection over quantity, voice or in-person contact over passive scrolling, and rebuilding routines that create repeated contact.