Daily per capita protein supply, 2022

Average daily per capita protein supply, measured in grams of total protein per day.

Total daily supply of protein per person grams of protein per day per capita
Country/area
2022
Afghanistan
61.86 g
Albania
120.12 g
Algeria
94.49 g
Angola
49.09 g
Antigua and Barbuda
97.15 g
Argentina
120.89 g
Armenia
105.82 g
Australia
116.40 g
Austria
110.31 g
Azerbaijan
98.17 g
Bahamas
102.82 g
Bahrain
102.80 g
Bangladesh
67.26 g
Barbados
110.41 g
Belarus
116.97 g
Belgium
116.47 g
Belize
85.42 g
Benin
70.34 g
Bermuda
Bhutan
77.04 g
Bolivia
80.06 g
Bosnia and Herzegovina
110.14 g
Botswana
73.98 g
Brazil
103.74 g
Brunei
Bulgaria
89.92 g
Burkina Faso
94.01 g
Burundi
38.94 g
Cambodia
60.05 g
Cameroon
71.86 g
Canada
114.72 g
Cape Verde
88.59 g
Central African Republic
67.69 g
Chad
74.27 g
Chile
101.86 g
China
128.49 g
Colombia
81.26 g
Comoros
65.86 g
Congo
56.23 g
Costa Rica
88.81 g
Cote d'Ivoire
61.76 g
Croatia
111.72 g
Cuba
88.78 g
Cyprus
95.36 g
Czechia
96.10 g
Czechoslovakia
Democratic Republic of Congo
28.87 g
Denmark
112.40 g
Djibouti
71.21 g
Dominica
108.97 g
Dominican Republic
83.37 g
East Timor
62.42 g
Ecuador
68.48 g
Egypt
90.83 g
El Salvador
85.77 g
Estonia
108.65 g
Eswatini
58.79 g
Ethiopia
76.69 g
Ethiopia (former)
Fiji
83.82 g
Finland
124.73 g
France
116.45 g
French Polynesia
115.19 g
Gabon
85.21 g
Gambia
60.44 g
Georgia
91.30 g
Germany
107.40 g
Ghana
68.59 g
Greece
107.77 g
Grenada
103.37 g
Guatemala
72.17 g
Guinea
55.90 g
Guinea-Bissau
48.55 g
Guyana
106.91 g
Haiti
45.05 g
Honduras
63.41 g
Hong Kong
127.17 g
Hungary
91.00 g
Iceland
147.25 g
India
71.97 g
Indonesia
75.56 g
Iran
81.56 g
Iraq
63.33 g
Ireland
136.23 g
Israel
137.66 g
Italy
114.78 g
Jamaica
92.76 g
Japan
93.76 g
Jordan
71.57 g
Kazakhstan
109.18 g
Kenya
54.56 g
Kiribati
84.62 g
Kuwait
106.72 g
Kyrgyzstan
89.33 g
Laos
79.82 g
Latvia
106.96 g
Lebanon
78.21 g
Lesotho
48.20 g
Liberia
45.40 g
Libya
91.82 g
Lithuania
125.08 g
Luxembourg
116.88 g
Macao
113.09 g
Madagascar
38.71 g
Malawi
65.40 g
Malaysia
93.34 g
Maldives
101.71 g
Mali
72.76 g
Malta
101.43 g
Marshall Islands
118.43 g
Mauritania
84.45 g
Mauritius
101.69 g
Mexico
100.18 g
Micronesia (country)
75.55 g
Moldova
77.12 g
Mongolia
135.88 g
Montenegro
131.22 g
Morocco
98.30 g
Mozambique
44.34 g
Myanmar
79.48 g
Namibia
60.31 g
Nauru
113.61 g
Nepal
84.05 g
Netherlands
115.27 g
Netherlands Antilles
New Caledonia
104.06 g
New Zealand
106.54 g
Nicaragua
75.82 g
Niger
91.59 g
Nigeria
57.52 g
North Korea
North Macedonia
105.48 g
Norway
126.93 g
Oman
85.69 g
Pakistan
67.84 g
Panama
94.82 g
Papua New Guinea
62.87 g
Paraguay
73.95 g
Peru
89.54 g
Philippines
77.87 g
Poland
120.04 g
Portugal
119.95 g
Qatar
110.41 g
Romania
111.38 g
Russia
116.85 g
Rwanda
56.07 g
Saint Kitts and Nevis
96.27 g
Saint Lucia
108.22 g
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
116.73 g
Samoa
105.09 g
Sao Tome and Principe
56.79 g
Saudi Arabia
105.73 g
Senegal
69.66 g
Serbia
134.13 g
Serbia and Montenegro
Seychelles
98.92 g
Sierra Leone
55.78 g
Slovakia
81.62 g
Slovenia
99.17 g
Solomon Islands
53.91 g
Somalia
39.85 g
South Africa
77.98 g
South Korea
110.04 g
South Sudan
74.02 g
Spain
116.40 g
Sri Lanka
67.67 g
Sudan
70.49 g
Sudan (former)
Suriname
72.35 g
Sweden
113.84 g
Switzerland
103.77 g
Syria
68.88 g
Taiwan
102.32 g
Tajikistan
82.17 g
Tanzania
59.02 g
Thailand
67.90 g
Togo
55.38 g
Tonga
126.31 g
Trinidad and Tobago
88.81 g
Tunisia
104.40 g
Turkey
113.58 g
Turkmenistan
89.09 g
Tuvalu
103.06 g
USSR
Uganda
52.58 g
Ukraine
87.35 g
United Arab Emirates
106.08 g
United Kingdom
107.94 g
United States
121.64 g
Uruguay
103.14 g
Uzbekistan
104.86 g
Vanuatu
74.99 g
Venezuela
64.00 g
Vietnam
96.92 g
Yemen
50.94 g
Yugoslavia
Zambia
48.25 g
Zimbabwe
57.83 g
Other
Africa
65.16 g
Africa (FAO)
66.10 g
Americas (FAO)
103.91 g
Asia
92.76 g
Asia (FAO)
93.12 g
Belgium-Luxembourg (FAO)
Caribbean (FAO)
74.78 g
Central America (FAO)
93.75 g
Central Asia (FAO)
103.23 g
China (FAO)
127.96 g
Eastern Africa (FAO)
59.49 g
Eastern Asia (FAO)
123.76 g
Eastern Europe (FAO)
109.34 g
Europe
111.67 g
Europe (FAO)
112.28 g
European Union (27)
112.47 g
European Union (27) (FAO)
112.92 g
High-income countries
112.79 g
Land Locked Developing Countries (FAO)
76.22 g
Least Developed Countries (FAO)
62.22 g
Low Income Food Deficit Countries (FAO)
62.86 g
Low-income countries
59.12 g
Lower-middle-income countries
71.66 g
Micronesia (FAO)
85.65 g
Middle Africa (FAO)
46.12 g
Net Food Importing Developing Countries (FAO)
67.48 g
North America
109.67 g
Northern Africa (FAO)
91.00 g
Northern America (FAO)
122.10 g
Northern Europe (FAO)
113.48 g
Oceania
100.70 g
Oceania (FAO)
100.73 g
Small Island Developing States (FAO)
73.35 g
South America
96.41 g
South America (FAO)
95.02 g
South-eastern Asia (FAO)
79.60 g
Southern Africa (FAO)
78.73 g
Southern Asia (FAO)
71.97 g
Southern Europe (FAO)
115.77 g
Upper-middle-income countries
108.79 g
Western Africa (FAO)
65.28 g
Western Asia (FAO)
92.56 g
Western Europe (FAO)
113.31 g
World
90.67 g

Data source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2024)Learn more about this data

Note: Data measures the availability delivered to households but does not necessarily indicate the quantity of protein actually consumed (food may be wasted at the consumer level).

Data

Total daily supply of protein per person

What you should know about this indicator

Item: Grand Total

Metric: Protein supply quantity (g/capita/day)

Total daily supply of protein per person
Quantity that is available for consumption at the end of the supply chain. It does not account for consumer waste, so the quantity that is actually consumed may be lower. This is the total of all agricultural produce, both crops and livestock.
Source
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2024) – processed by Our World in Data
Last updated
March 17, 2025
Next expected update
March 2026
Date range
1961–2022
Unit
grams of protein per day per capita

Sources and processing

This data is based on the following sources

Food Balance Sheet presents a comprehensive picture of the pattern of a country's food supply during a specified reference period.

The food balance sheet shows for each food item - i.e. each primary commodity and a number of processed commodities potentially available for human consumption - the sources of supply and its utilization. The total quantity of foodstuffs produced in a country added to the total quantity imported and adjusted to any change in stocks that may have occurred since the beginning of the reference period gives the supply available during that period. On the utilization side a distinction is made between the quantities exported, fed to livestock, used for seed, put to manufacture for food use and non-food uses, losses during storage and transportation, and food supplies available for human consumption.

The per caput supply of each such food item available for human consumption is then obtained by dividing the respective quantity by the related data on the population actually partaking of it. Data on per caput food supplies are expressed in terms of quantity and - by applying appropriate food composition factors for all primary and processed products - also in terms of caloric value and protein and fat content.

Retrieved on
March 17, 2025
Citation
This is the citation of the original data obtained from the source, prior to any processing or adaptation by Our World in Data. To cite data downloaded from this page, please use the suggested citation given in Reuse This Work below.
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - Food Balances: Food Balances (-2013, old methodology and population) (2023).

Food Balance Sheet presents a comprehensive picture of the pattern of a country's food supply during a specified reference period.

The food balance sheet shows for each food item - i.e. each primary commodity and a number of processed commodities potentially available for human consumption - the sources of supply and its utilization. The total quantity of foodstuffs produced in a country added to the total quantity imported and adjusted to any change in stocks that may have occurred since the beginning of the reference period gives the supply available during that period. On the utilization side a distinction is made between the quantities exported, fed to livestock, used for seed, put to manufacture for food use and non-food uses, losses during storage and transportation, and food supplies available for human consumption.

The per caput supply of each such food item available for human consumption is then obtained by dividing the respective quantity by the related data on the population actually partaking of it. Data on per caput food supplies are expressed in terms of quantity and - by applying appropriate food composition factors for all primary and processed products - also in terms of caloric value and protein and fat content.

Retrieved on
March 17, 2025
Citation
This is the citation of the original data obtained from the source, prior to any processing or adaptation by Our World in Data. To cite data downloaded from this page, please use the suggested citation given in Reuse This Work below.
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - Food Balances: Food Balances (2010-) (2024).

How we process data at Our World in Data

All data and visualizations on Our World in Data rely on data sourced from one or several original data providers. Preparing this original data involves several processing steps. Depending on the data, this can include standardizing country names and world region definitions, converting units, calculating derived indicators such as per capita measures, as well as adding or adapting metadata such as the name or the description given to an indicator.

At the link below you can find a detailed description of the structure of our data pipeline, including links to all the code used to prepare data across Our World in Data.

Read about our data pipeline
Notes on our processing step for this indicator
  • Per-capita values were obtained by dividing total figures by Our World in Data's population.
  • For regions defined by FAOSTAT, per-capita values were calculated using FAOSTAT's original population data, if available.
  • This data was originally given per-capita by FAOSTAT. We converted this data into total figures by multiplying by FAOSTAT's population.

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Citations

How to cite this page

To cite this page overall, including any descriptions, FAQs or explanations of the data authored by Our World in Data, please use the following citation:

“Data Page: Total daily supply of protein per person”. Our World in Data (2025). Data adapted from Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Retrieved from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily-per-capita-protein-supply [online resource]
How to cite this data

In-line citationIf you have limited space (e.g. in data visualizations), you can use this abbreviated in-line citation:

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2024) – processed by Our World in Data

Full citation

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2024) – processed by Our World in Data. “Total daily supply of protein per person” [dataset]. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, “Food Balances: Food Balances (-2013, old methodology and population)”; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, “Food Balances: Food Balances (2010-)” [original data]. Retrieved April 26, 2025 from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily-per-capita-protein-supply