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Official Religion (Pew)

Atheism

Buddhism

Catholicism

Christianity

Islam

Judaism

What Countries Have a National Religion / National Religion by Country 2024

  • While some countries founding documents clearly designate an official state religion, others are more vague. This can result in differences between a list created by one source and another.
  • For example, El Salvador's constitution specifically prohibits restrictions based on differences of nationality, race, sex, or religion, but also states that the country recognizes the Catholic Church and gives it legal preference.
  • Similarly, the Dominican Republic's constitution specifies that there is no state church, but the country also has an agreement with the Holy See that establishes Catholicism as the official religion.
  • A 2017 Pew Research poll separated countries into those with clear official religions, those with "preferred" religions that stopped just short of being official, and those which had no official or preferred religion.

101 countries

Country
Official Religion (Pew)
Preferred Religion (Pew)
Religion (Wiki)
Additional Details
IsraelJudaismOther/mixedIsrael is defined in several of its laws as a "Jewish and democratic state" (medina yehudit ve-demokratit). However, the term "Jewish" is a polyseme that can describe the Jewish people as either an ethnic or a religious group.
PakistanIslamIslam
BangladeshIslamIslam
EgyptIslamIslam
IranIslamIslam
AlgeriaIslamIslam
IraqIslamIslam
AfghanistanIslamIslam
YemenIslamIslam
MoroccoIslamIslam
MalaysiaIslamIslam
Saudi ArabiaIslamIslam
SomaliaIslamIslam
TunisiaIslamIslam
JordanIslamIslam
United Arab EmiratesIslamIslam
LibyaIslamIslam
PalestineIslamIslam
OmanIslamIslam
MauritaniaIslamIslam
KuwaitIslamIslam
QatarIslamIslam
BahrainIslamIslam
DjiboutiIslamIslam
ComorosIslamIslam
MaldivesIslamIslam
BruneiIslamIslam
United KingdomChristianityAnglicanism, CalvinismEngland - Anglicanism, Scotland - Calvinism
ZambiaChristianityChristianity
Dominican RepublicChristianityOther/mixedThe constitution of the Dominican Republic specifies that there is no state church and provides for freedom of religion and belief. However, a concordat with the Holy See designates Catholicism as the official religion.
GreeceChristianityEastern Orthodoxy
DenmarkChristianityLutheranism
NorwayChristianityLutheranism
Costa RicaChristianityCatholicism
ArmeniaChristianityOther/mixedArmenia's constitution explicity states that "The Republic of Armenia shall recognise the exclusive mission of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church, as a national church, in the spiritual life of the Armenian people, in the development of their national culture and preservation of their national identity."
MaltaChristianityCatholicism
IcelandChristianityLutheranism
LiechtensteinChristianityCatholicism
MonacoChristianityCatholicism
TuvaluChristianityCalvinism
Vatican CityCatholicismCatholicism
CambodiaBuddhismBuddhism
BhutanBuddhismBuddhism
ChinaAtheismOther/mixedChina's government is officially atheist, but officially recognizes and allows five religions: Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicism, and Protestantism. Official and unofficial limitations on religious expression and assembly exist, but religion is not banned.
IndonesiaMultipleOther/mixedIndonesia is officially a presidential republic and a unitary state that does not declare or designate a state religion. Officially, the government only recognizes six religions: Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Confucianism.
RussiaChristianityOther/mixedThough a secular state under the constitution, Russia is often said to have Russian Orthodoxy as the de facto national religion, despite other minorities.
VietnamOther/mixedVietnam is officially atheist (although sometimes also referred as atheist-Buddhist), but recognizes only 38 religious organizations and one dharma practice.
TurkeyIslamIslam
ThailandBuddhism
FranceOther/mixedWhile most of France has no official religion, the Alsace-Moselle region has four (Judaism, Roman Catholicism, Lutheranism and Calvinism) thanks to a political agreement established in 1801 that has yet to be fully abolished.
ItalyChristianityCatholicism
MyanmarBuddhismBuddhism
SpainChristianityCatholicism
ArgentinaChristianityCatholicism
PolandChristianityCatholicism
UzbekistanIslam
PeruChristianityCatholicism
SyriaIslamIslam
Sri LankaBuddhismBuddhism
RomaniaChristianitynone
GuatemalaChristianityCatholicism
HaitiChristianityOther/mixedWhile Catholicism has not been the state religion since 1987, a 19th-century concordat with the Holy See continues to confer preferential treatment to the Catholic Church, in the form of stipends for clergy and financial support to churches and religious schools.
HondurasChristianitynone
SwedenLutheranism
TajikistanIslam
Papua New GuineaChristianitynone
PortugalOther/mixedAlthough Church and State are formally separate, the Catholic Church in Portugal still receives certain privileges.
HungaryOther/mixedThe preamble to the Hungarian Constitution of 2011 describes Hungary as "part of Christian Europe" and acknowledges "the role of Christianity in preserving nationhood", while Article VII provides that "the State shall cooperate with the Churches for community goals."
TogoMultiplenone
BelarusChristianitynone
SwitzerlandOther/mixedSwitzerland is officially secular at the federal level but 24 of the 26 cantons support both the Swiss Reformed Church and the Roman Catholic Church in various ways.
LaosBuddhismBuddhism
TurkmenistanIslam
ParaguayCatholicism
NicaraguaChristianityOther/mixedThe Nicaraguan Constitution of 1987 states that the country has no official religion, but defines "Christian values" as one of the "principles of the Nicaraguan nation"
BulgariaChristianityEastern Orthodoxy
SerbiaMultiplenone
El SalvadorCatholicism
SingaporeOther/mixedOfficially a secular country and does not have a state religion, and has been named in one study as the "most religiously diverse nation in the world", with no religious group forming a majority. However, the government gives official recognition to ten different religions.
LebanonOther/mixedThere are 18 officially recognized religious groups in Lebanon, each with its own family law legislation and set of religious courts.
FinlandChristianityLutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy
LiberiaChristianitynone
PanamaChristianityCatholicism
GeorgiaChristianityEastern Orthodoxy
EritreaMultiplenone
MongoliaBuddhismnone
MoldovaChristianitynone
LithuaniaMultiplenone
Equatorial GuineaChristianitynone
CyprusEastern Orthodoxy
EswatiniChristianitynone
LuxembourgOther/mixedLuxembourg is a secular state, but the Grand Duchy recognizes and supports several denominations, including the Catholic Church, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, Romanian Orthodox, Serbian Orthodox, Anglican and some Protestantism denominations as well as to Jewish congregations.
Cape VerdeChristianitynone
SamoaChristianityChristianity
TongaMultiplenone
JerseyAnglicanism
Isle of ManAnglicanism
AndorraChristianityCatholicism
GuernseyAnglicanism
GreenlandLutheranism
Faroe IslandsLutheranism

How many countries have a National Religion?

There are 54 countries with a National Religion, although many of these countries have complex situations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources