List of newspapers by circulation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This is a list of paid daily newspapers in the world by average circulation. Worldwide newspaper circulation figures are compiled by the International Federation of Audit Bureaux of Circulations and World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers. This list shows the latest figures that are publicly available through either organisation.

Some figures are disputed; the numbers for Japanese newspapers have been subjected to claims of "oshigami" (exaggeration by over-supplying papers to businesses).[1] Free newspapers are not counted.

Top newspapers by circulation

This list below shows paid newspaper dailies by circulation worldwide. The data is compiled from WAN-IFRA's World Press Trends 2016 report.[2][3][note 1]

Position Newspaper Country Language Circulation
(thousands)
1 The Yomiuri Shimbun Japan Japanese 9 101
2 The Asahi Shimbun Japan Japanese 6 622
3 USA Today USA English 4 139
4 Dainik Bhaskar India Hindi 3 818
5 Dainik Jagran India Hindi 3 308
6 The Mainichi Newspapers Japan Japanese 3 166
7 Cankao Xiaoxi China Chinese 3 073
8 Amar Ujala India Hindi 2 935
9 The Times of India India English 2 836
10 The Nikkei Japan Japanese 2 729
11 People's Daily China Chinese 2 603
12 The Chunichi Shimbun Japan Japanese 2 452
13 Hindustan India Hindi 2 410
14 Malayala Manorama India Malayalam 2 343
15 The Wall Street Journal USA English 2 276
16 Bild Germany German 2 220
17 The New York Times USA English 2 134
18 Guangzhou Daily China Chinese 1 880
19 Nanfang City News China Chinese 1 853
20 Rajasthan Patrika India Hindi 1 812

Historical data

Worldwide circulation figures for previous years can be seen from WAN-IFRA and IFABC here.

  • WAN-IFRA World Press Trends 2014 (Figures available for 2014)[4]
  • World Press Trends Database (Figures available from 2010 to 2017)[5]
  • IFABC National Newspapers Total Circulation 2013 (Figures available from 2008 to 2012)[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some figures are disputed; the numbers for Japanese newspapers have been subjected to claims of "oshigami" or exaggeration by over-supplying papers to businesses.

References

  1. ^ The Australian: Omens from the shrinking Japanese newspaper business
  2. ^ Milosevic, Mira (2016). "World Press Trends 2016" (PDF). WAN-IFRA. p. 58. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-01-15. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  3. ^ "World Press Trends 2016: Facts and Figures". wptdatabase.org. WAN-IFRA. Archived from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  4. ^ Milosevic, Mira; Chishlom, Jim; Kilman, Larry; Teemu, Henriksson (2014). "World Press Trends 2014" (PDF). WAN-IFRA. p. 37. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  5. ^ "Summaries | World Press Trends Database". wptdatabase.org. WAN-IFRA. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  6. ^ "National Newspapers Total Circulation" (XLS). ifabc.org. International Federation of Audit Bureaux of Certification. December 20, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2018.