North America Population Density (2026)

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The ultra-dense island territories of the Caribbean and the world’s largest island, Greenland, exist within the same continent of North America, creating one of the most extreme population density contrasts on Earth.

most densely populated country in north america is barbados
Barbados is the most densely populated country in North America (Gordon Leggett, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons)

North America provides a clear example of how land scale and population size do not directly determine population density.

What is population density?

Population density measures how many people live per square kilometer of land area. It shows how tightly a population is concentrated within a country’s territory, rather than total population size.

High population density reflects land pressure, urban concentration, infrastructure demand, and limited space for expansion.

Low population density reflects large land areas, environmental constraints, and dispersed settlement patterns.

Most densely populated countries in North America

These sovereign North American countries have the highest population density levels:

  • Barbados
  • Haiti
  • Grenada
  • El Salvador
  • Trinidad and Tobago

These areas are predominantly small island countries, where population density is driven by extreme land constraints rather than large population size.

Limited physical space, coastal settlement concentration, tourism-based urban development, and historic colonial settlement patterns compress populations into very small land areas, producing some of the highest population densities in the region despite relatively modest total populations.

Least densely populated countries and territories in North America

These North American countries have the lowest population density levels:

  • Canada
  • Belize
  • United States of America
  • Nicaragua
  • Panama

In these areas, settlement is concentrated in specific urban and economic corridors while vast land areas remain lightly inhabited.

Average population density of North America

North America’s population density is estimated at an average of approximately 20.5 people per square kilometer, placing it among the world’s lowest-density continents.

The figure is broadly similar to that of South America, which also has a low overall continental density.

Some of North America’s largest countries and territories by land area remain sparsely populated, including Canada (4.3 people per square kilometer) and Greenland (0.1).

Complete North America population density ranking

The table below ranks North American countries, selected territories and special administrative regions by population density, from highest to lowest.

Population density figures are based on United Nations World Population Prospects 2024 data and measured in people per square kilometer.

Country listings follow commonly used geographic conventions and may include transcontinental states.

Continent RankingCountryPopulation DensityGlobal Ranking
1Sint Maarten (Dutch part)1257.310
2Bermuda1198.111
3Barbados656.618
4Aruba599.720
5Saint Martin (French part)519.128
6Saint Barthélemy503.929
7Curaçao437.332
8Haiti422.134
9Puerto Rico373.037
10Grenada344.440
11Martinique326.443
12El Salvador304.547
13Cayman Islands303.148
14Trinidad and Tobago293.049
15Saint Lucia291.050
16Jamaica262.255
17Saint Vincent and the Grenadines259.856
18British Virgin Islands253.159
19United States Virgin Islands244.962
20Dominican Republic234.567
21Guadeloupe231.368
22Antigua and Barbuda212.173
23Saint Kitts and Nevis179.878
24Guatemala169.181
25Anguilla163.882
26Cuba103.2114
27Costa Rica100.0116
28Honduras97.6119
29Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba91.2126
30Dominica88.7127
31Bahamas74.6144
32Mexico66.2151
33Panama60.1158
34Nicaragua56.7162
35Turks and Caicos Islands48.6169
36Montserrat42.9175
37United States of America37.5180
38Saint Pierre and Miquelon24.7197
39Belize18.0209
40Canada4.3227
41Greenland0.1237

Why population density in North America matters

Population density in North America directly affects:

  • Housing availability
  • Urban development
  • Infrastructure pressure
  • Transport systems
  • Resource distribution
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Economic productivity
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Education writer at  | Website

Caitriona Maria is an education writer and owner of The Facts Institute. With seven years of teaching experience and a background in educational content, she specialises in creating clear reference resources about countries, geography and global topics.