Nearly half of the entire world's adult population has never drunk alcohol.
Nearly Half the World Has Never Touched Alcohol
When you think about global drinking culture, you might picture wine with dinner in France, beer gardens in Germany, or sake in Japan. But here's the reality check: 44.5% of the world's adult population has never consumed alcohol in their entire lives. Not a sip of champagne at a wedding, not a beer at a barbecue, nothing.
That's 3.1 billion people who abstained from drinking in 2016 alone, according to the World Health Organization. We're not just talking about people who quit drinking or took a temporary break—these are lifetime abstainers who've never experienced what all the fuss is about.
Where Nobody's Drinking
The statistics get even more dramatic when you zoom into specific regions. In the Eastern Mediterranean Region, nearly 95% of adults aged 15 and older are lifetime abstainers. Across North Africa and the Middle East, most countries see the majority of their adult populations choosing to never drink.
This isn't random. Religious and cultural factors play a massive role. Islamic traditions prohibit alcohol consumption, which explains why Muslim-majority regions have the highest abstinence rates. But it's not just about religion—economic factors, availability, and local customs all contribute to these patterns.
The Drinking Minority
Flip the map to high-income Western countries, and the picture looks completely different. Countries in Europe and the Americas have abstinence rates below 40%, meaning most adults have at least tried alcohol. The WHO European Region leads global consumption at 9.2 liters of pure alcohol per person annually, while the Americas follow at 7.5 liters.
Here's the irony: the global minority who drink alcohol consume it at rates that make it seem like everyone's doing it. If you live in the U.S., U.K., or Australia, you're surrounded by drinking culture—but you're actually in the statistical minority on a global scale.
The Shifting Tide
Recent data suggests attitudes are changing even in traditionally alcohol-friendly countries. In the United States, 25% of adults over 21 didn't drink any alcohol in 2024, and nearly half of Americans planned to drink less in 2025. The "sober curious" movement is gaining momentum.
So next time someone offers you a drink and seems surprised when you decline, remember: globally speaking, not drinking is actually the norm. The world's teetotalers aren't the exception—they're nearly half the population.