One of the quieter victories in modern public health is finally getting the attention it deserves: the global suicide rate has fallen by close to 40% since the early 1990s C.E. That means fewer people per 100,000 are dying by suicide today than at any point in recent recorded history — a shift driven by better mental health care, crisis intervention, and policy reform across dozens of countries.
At a glance
- Global suicide rate: The age-standardized rate has declined from roughly 15 deaths per 100,000 people in the early 1990s C.E. to around nine per 100,000 by the early 2020s C.E. — a fall of nearly 40%.
- Absolute deaths: Despite population growth, the total number of annual suicide deaths has also declined — from over 800,000 per year to closer to 700,000 — though the toll remains deeply significant.
- Regional variation: The sharpest declines have occurred in East Asia and Europe; rates in some parts of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia have fallen more slowly, reflecting uneven access to mental health resources.
What’s driving the decline
No single intervention explains the drop. Instead, researchers point to a convergence of factors that began building momentum in the 1990s C.E.
Restricting access to lethal means — securing pesticides in agricultural communities, changing medication packaging, adding barriers to bridges — has proven one of the most effective tools. Studies consistently show that when a common method becomes harder to access, overall suicide rates fall without a compensating rise in other methods. The World Health Organization has made means restriction a cornerstone of its suicide prevention guidance for this reason.
Expanded mental health services have also played a role, particularly in high-income countries where depression and anxiety treatment became more widely available and less stigmatized. Crisis hotlines, community mental health centers, and school-based programs reached people who might otherwise have had nowhere to turn.
In China, one of the world’s most populous countries, the decline has been especially striking. In the 1990s C.E., China had one of the highest suicide rates globally. Urbanization, rising incomes, improved emergency care access, and changing gender dynamics — women in rural China had historically died by suicide at unusually high rates — all appear to have contributed to a dramatic fall over the following three decades. Research published in The Lancet Psychiatry has tracked this shift closely.
The numbers that still demand attention
Progress is real — but so is the remaining burden.
Around 700,000 people still die by suicide each year globally, according to WHO estimates. For every death, many more people survive attempts or live with serious suicidal distress. Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death among people aged 15 to 29 globally, a pattern that has proven harder to shift than rates in older age groups.
Low- and middle-income countries face particular challenges. More than 75% of global suicide deaths now occur in these countries, yet they receive a disproportionately small share of mental health funding. The Lancet Commission on Global Mental Health has repeatedly flagged this gap as one of the most urgent equity issues in modern medicine.
Men continue to die by suicide at roughly twice the rate of women in most countries — and in some regions, three to four times the rate. Understanding and addressing that disparity remains an open and sometimes underfunded area of research.
What’s still unresolved
The data tracking suicide globally is incomplete. Many deaths are misclassified or go unrecorded, particularly in countries with limited civil registration systems, which means the actual decline — or its true scope — may look different with better data. Stigma around suicide also means underreporting likely persists in places where the topic remains taboo, making it harder to allocate resources where they’re most needed.
Still, the broad direction of the trend is consistent across multiple independent data sources, including Our World in Data’s long-run analysis of WHO mortality records. The weight of evidence points to genuine progress — not just a measurement artifact.
A public health story worth telling
Mental health has long been the underfunded stepchild of global health policy. The slow but steady decline in suicide rates offers evidence that investment works — that hotlines, means restriction, access to treatment, and destigmatization campaigns are not just feel-good gestures but life-saving infrastructure.
The countries that have seen the steepest declines tend to be those that treated suicide prevention as a serious policy priority rather than a personal or family matter. That insight — that suicide is preventable at a population level — may be the most important thing this data tells us.
If the rate of decline seen since the 1990s C.E. continues, hundreds of thousands more lives could be saved over the coming decades. The challenge now is extending that progress to the communities and countries still being left behind.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Our World in Data
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on global health
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Global suicide rate has dropped nearly 40% since the 1990s
Global suicide rates have dropped nearly 40% since the early 1990s, falling from roughly 15 deaths per 100,000 people to around nine — one of modern public health’s most significant and underreported victories. This decline was driven by expanded mental health services, crisis intervention programs, and proven strategies like restricting access to lethal means. The progress spans dozens of countries, with especially sharp declines in East Asia and Europe. Critically, this trend demonstrates that suicide is preventable at a population level — making the case for sustained investment in mental health infrastructure worldwide.

