Here is the full list of world capital cities by country, arranged for easy scanning and quick lookup. For the small number of countries where capital status is more complicated, a short note explains the difference without getting in the way of the list.
The complete list of world capital cities is below, sorted alphabetically by country so you can find the answer quickly. This page uses the 193 UN member states and also includes the two UN observer states, with short notes only where a capital answer is not fully straightforward.
How to use this article: Jump to the A–Z lookup strip if you want the list fast, use multiple-capital cases for countries like South Africa and Bolivia, check political-status notes for Jerusalem, Palestine, Yemen, and Indonesia, or read what counts as a capital here after you finish the list.
Countries A–E
This list is alphabetized by country for quick search. It follows the 193 UN member states and also includes the two UN observer states, the Holy See and the State of Palestine.
A–Z lookup strip
| Country | Capital city | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Afghanistan | Kabul | — |
| Albania | Tirana | — |
| Algeria | Algiers | — |
| Andorra | Andorra la Vella | — |
| Angola | Luanda | — |
| Antigua and Barbuda | Saint John’s | — |
| Argentina | Buenos Aires | — |
| Armenia | Yerevan | — |
| Australia | Canberra | — |
| Austria | Vienna | — |
| Azerbaijan | Baku | — |
| Bahamas | Nassau | — |
| Bahrain | Manama | — |
| Bangladesh | Dhaka | — |
| Barbados | Bridgetown | — |
| Belarus | Minsk | — |
| Belgium | Brussels | — |
| Belize | Belmopan | — |
| Benin | Porto-Novo | Official capital; most government work is in Cotonou. |
| Bhutan | Thimphu | — |
| Bolivia | Sucre | Constitutional capital; La Paz is the seat of government. |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | Sarajevo | — |
| Botswana | Gaborone | — |
| Brazil | Brasília | — |
| Brunei | Bandar Seri Begawan | — |
| Bulgaria | Sofia | — |
| Burkina Faso | Ouagadougou | — |
| Burundi | Gitega | Bujumbura remains the main commercial city. |
| Cabo Verde | Praia | — |
| Cambodia | Phnom Penh | — |
| Cameroon | Yaoundé | — |
| Canada | Ottawa | — |
| Central African Republic | Bangui | — |
| Chad | N’Djamena | — |
| Chile | Santiago | — |
| China | Beijing | — |
| Colombia | Bogotá | — |
| Comoros | Moroni | — |
| Congo, Democratic Republic of the | Kinshasa | — |
| Congo, Republic of the | Brazzaville | — |
| Costa Rica | San José | — |
| Côte d’Ivoire | Yamoussoukro | Abidjan remains the main economic center. |
| Croatia | Zagreb | — |
| Cuba | Havana | — |
| Cyprus | Nicosia | — |
| Czechia | Prague | — |
| Denmark | Copenhagen | — |
| Djibouti | Djibouti | — |
| Dominica | Roseau | — |
| Dominican Republic | Santo Domingo | — |
| Ecuador | Quito | — |
| Egypt | Cairo | — |
| El Salvador | San Salvador | — |
| Equatorial Guinea | Ciudad de la Paz | Official capital from January 2026; Malabo still matters during the transfer. |
| Eritrea | Asmara | — |
| Eswatini | Mbabane | Administrative capital; Lobamba is the legislative and royal seat. |
| Estonia | Tallinn | — |
| Ethiopia | Addis Ababa | — |
Countries F–J
| Country | Capital city | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Fiji | Suva | — |
| Finland | Helsinki | — |
| France | Paris | — |
| Gabon | Libreville | — |
| Gambia | Banjul | — |
| Georgia | Tbilisi | — |
| Germany | Berlin | — |
| Ghana | Accra | — |
| Greece | Athens | — |
| Grenada | Saint George’s | — |
| Guatemala | Guatemala City | — |
| Guinea | Conakry | — |
| Guinea-Bissau | Bissau | — |
| Guyana | Georgetown | — |
| Haiti | Port-au-Prince | — |
| Holy See | Vatican City | UN observer state. |
| Honduras | Tegucigalpa | — |
| Hungary | Budapest | — |
| Iceland | Reykjavík | — |
| India | New Delhi | — |
| Indonesia | Jakarta | Current practical answer; the Nusantara capital transition is still in progress. |
| Iran | Tehran | — |
| Iraq | Baghdad | — |
| Ireland | Dublin | — |
| Israel | Jerusalem | Israel designates Jerusalem as its capital; the city’s status remains internationally disputed. |
| Italy | Rome | — |
| Jamaica | Kingston | — |
| Japan | Tokyo | — |
| Jordan | Amman | — |
Countries K–O
| Country | Capital city | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Kazakhstan | Astana | — |
| Kenya | Nairobi | — |
| Kiribati | South Tarawa | — |
| Kuwait | Kuwait City | — |
| Kyrgyzstan | Bishkek | — |
| Laos | Vientiane | — |
| Latvia | Riga | — |
| Lebanon | Beirut | — |
| Lesotho | Maseru | — |
| Liberia | Monrovia | — |
| Libya | Tripoli | — |
| Liechtenstein | Vaduz | — |
| Lithuania | Vilnius | — |
| Luxembourg | Luxembourg | — |
| Madagascar | Antananarivo | — |
| Malawi | Lilongwe | — |
| Malaysia | Kuala Lumpur | National capital; Putrajaya is the federal administrative center. |
| Maldives | Malé | — |
| Mali | Bamako | — |
| Malta | Valletta | — |
| Marshall Islands | Majuro | — |
| Mauritania | Nouakchott | — |
| Mauritius | Port Louis | — |
| Mexico | Mexico City | — |
| Micronesia, Federated States of | Palikir | — |
| Moldova | Chișinău | — |
| Monaco | Monaco | — |
| Mongolia | Ulaanbaatar | — |
| Montenegro | Podgorica | — |
| Morocco | Rabat | — |
| Mozambique | Maputo | — |
| Myanmar | Nay Pyi Taw | — |
| Namibia | Windhoek | — |
| Nauru | Yaren District | No official capital is formally designated; Yaren is the standard practical answer. |
| Nepal | Kathmandu | — |
| Netherlands | Amsterdam | Constitutional capital; The Hague is the seat of government. |
| New Zealand | Wellington | — |
| Nicaragua | Managua | — |
| Niger | Niamey | — |
| Nigeria | Abuja | — |
| North Korea | Pyongyang | — |
| North Macedonia | Skopje | — |
| Norway | Oslo | — |
| Oman | Muscat | — |
Countries P–T
| Country | Capital city | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Pakistan | Islamabad | — |
| Palau | Ngerulmud | — |
| Panama | Panama City | — |
| Papua New Guinea | Port Moresby | — |
| Paraguay | Asunción | — |
| Peru | Lima | — |
| Philippines | Manila | — |
| Poland | Warsaw | — |
| Portugal | Lisbon | — |
| Qatar | Doha | — |
| Romania | Bucharest | — |
| Russia | Moscow | — |
| Rwanda | Kigali | — |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | Basseterre | — |
| Saint Lucia | Castries | — |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Kingstown | — |
| Samoa | Apia | — |
| San Marino | San Marino | — |
| São Tomé and Príncipe | São Tomé | — |
| Saudi Arabia | Riyadh | — |
| Senegal | Dakar | — |
| Serbia | Belgrade | — |
| Seychelles | Victoria | — |
| Sierra Leone | Freetown | — |
| Singapore | Singapore | — |
| Slovakia | Bratislava | — |
| Slovenia | Ljubljana | — |
| Solomon Islands | Honiara | — |
| Somalia | Mogadishu | — |
| South Africa | Pretoria | Administrative capital; Cape Town is legislative and Bloemfontein judicial. |
| South Korea | Seoul | — |
| South Sudan | Juba | — |
| Spain | Madrid | — |
| Sri Lanka | Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte | Official capital; Colombo remains the main commercial city. |
| State of Palestine | East Jerusalem | Claimed capital; Ramallah is the main administrative center. |
| Sudan | Khartoum | — |
| Suriname | Paramaribo | — |
| Sweden | Stockholm | — |
| Switzerland | Bern | Federal city; commonly treated as the capital. |
| Syria | Damascus | — |
| Tajikistan | Dushanbe | — |
| Tanzania | Dodoma | Dar es Salaam remains the main commercial city. |
| Thailand | Bangkok | — |
| Timor-Leste | Dili | — |
| Togo | Lomé | — |
| Tonga | Nuku’alofa | — |
| Trinidad and Tobago | Port of Spain | — |
| Tunisia | Tunis | — |
| Turkey | Ankara | — |
| Turkmenistan | Ashgabat | — |
| Tuvalu | Funafuti | Vaiaku hosts most government offices on the atoll. |
Countries U–Z
| Country | Capital city | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Uganda | Kampala | — |
| Ukraine | Kyiv | — |
| United Arab Emirates | Abu Dhabi | — |
| United Kingdom | London | — |
| United States | Washington, D.C. | — |
| Uruguay | Montevideo | — |
| Uzbekistan | Tashkent | — |
| Vanuatu | Port Vila | — |
| Venezuela | Caracas | — |
| Vietnam | Hanoi | — |
| Yemen | Sana’a | Constitutional capital; Aden has served as a temporary government seat during conflict. |
| Zambia | Lusaka | — |
| Zimbabwe | Harare | — |
Capital-city cases that need a note
Most countries on this page have one clean answer. The note column exists for the smaller group where constitutional status, government location, diplomacy, or a still-unfinished transfer means the most honest answer needs one extra line instead of one extra word.
Multiple-capital and split-seat cases
South Africa is the clearest example of a split arrangement: Pretoria is administrative, Cape Town is legislative, and Bloemfontein is judicial, while the Constitutional Court sits in Johannesburg. Bolivia is another classic case: Sucre is the constitutional capital, but La Paz is the seat of government. The Netherlands also splits the headline answer from the practical seat of power, with Amsterdam as capital and The Hague as the seat of government.
Other entries use the same logic on a smaller scale. Eswatini, Benin, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, and Côte d’Ivoire all have a main capital answer that is still correct, but a second city remains important because parliament, ministries, commerce, or royal institutions sit elsewhere.
Political-status and transition notes
Jerusalem is the most sensitive capital entry on a global list. Israel designates Jerusalem as its capital, while Palestinians claim East Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Palestine; the UN recognizes Palestine as a non-member observer state, and in practice Palestinian administration is centered mainly in Ramallah.
Indonesia is a transition case rather than a disputed one. Jakarta remains the safest practical answer for a general reference list because current standard official and reference material still uses Jakarta while the Nusantara move continues in stages. Equatorial Guinea is a newer capital-change case: Ciudad de la Paz became the official capital in January 2026, though the institutional transfer is not instant. Yemen is different again: Sana’a remains the constitutional capital, but Aden has served as the base of the internationally recognized government during the war.
Nauru shows why a list sometimes needs a practical answer rather than a formal one. The country does not officially designate a capital, but Yaren is widely used because the main government offices are located there.
How this list works
What counts as a capital here
This article is designed as a practical world reference, not a debate over every sovereignty question on Earth. That is why it uses the 193 UN member states plus the two UN observer states and does not mix in dependent territories, constituent countries, or partially recognized states.
Where one city is clearly accepted as the capital, the table gives that answer directly. Where a country splits state functions, has no officially designated capital, has a transitional capital move, or has a politically disputed arrangement, the note column explains the difference instead of pretending the simple answer tells the full story.
If your goal is pure speed, use your browser’s find function and search the country name. If your goal is precision, read the note column for the handful of countries where the capital answer is legally or politically more complicated than it first looks.
FAQ
How many entries are in this list?
There are 195 entries here: the 193 UN member states plus the two UN observer states, the Holy See and the State of Palestine.
Why does South Africa not get just one neat capital answer?
Because South Africa formally splits national functions across different cities. Pretoria is the administrative capital, Cape Town is the legislative capital, and Bloemfontein is the judicial capital.
Is the capital of Bolivia Sucre or La Paz?
Sucre is the constitutional capital. La Paz is the seat of government, which is why many people casually give La Paz as the answer even though the constitutional answer is Sucre.
Why is Jakarta listed instead of Nusantara?
Because Jakarta is still the safest practical answer in current official and standard reference usage while the capital relocation process continues. A general reference article should not jump ahead of the transition.
Why is Yaren used for Nauru if Nauru has no official capital?
Because Yaren is where the government offices are located, so it functions as the practical answer even though the country does not formally designate an official capital.
Why is the State of Palestine included?
Because this page uses UN member states plus UN observer states for a complete modern-reference scope. That includes both the Holy See and the State of Palestine.
What Did We Learn Today?
For this topic, the best user experience is simple: show the full list first, keep it alphabetized, and add only the notes that protect the reader from misleading shortcuts. Most countries have one clear capital city, but a small number need context because law, government practice, or politics do not line up perfectly in one city name.
Sources & Data Notes
This article was prepared with AI assistance and editorial review, using standard reference sources for country-capital data together with United Nations membership resources, official government pages, and constitutional or country-profile material for entries where capital status is split, disputed, or still changing. Some names and arrangements can shift when governments complete a capital transfer or update formal designations, and a few note fields simplify complex political realities so the main list stays readable without losing accuracy.





