If you’ve ever wondered which countries today are governed by authoritarian rule, you’re not alone. The list of countries identified by authoritarian rule has been a growing concern for human rights organizations, political scientists, and everyday citizens watching the global democracy index shift year after year.
According to the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index, more than half of the world’s population currently lives under some form of authoritarian or hybrid governance. That’s a striking figure and one that doesn’t get enough attention.

In this guide, you’ll find a comprehensive, up-to-date list of countries widely identified as authoritarian regimes, along with what defines them, how researchers measure authoritarianism, and what it means for the people living inside these systems.
What Is Authoritarian Rule?
Authoritarian rule refers to a system of government where political power is concentrated in the hands of a single leader, a party, or a small group, with little to no accountability to the public. Elections, when they exist, are typically manipulated. Opposition is suppressed. Civil liberties are restricted.
The key markers include:
- No free or fair elections — Leaders stay in power through coercion, fraud, or constitutional manipulation.
- Suppression of political opposition — Opposition parties are banned, jailed, or marginalized.
- Controlled media — Independent journalism is either state-owned or heavily censored.
- Restricted civil liberties — Freedom of speech, assembly, and religion are curtailed.
- Rule by decree — Laws are issued by the executive without meaningful legislative oversight.
Authoritarian regimes may still hold elections and maintain some formal institutions, but these structures exist largely for show. Real power sits elsewhere.
How Are Authoritarian Countries Identified?
Several globally respected indexes measure political freedom and democratic governance. The most commonly referenced include:
1. The EIU Democracy Index
Published annually by the Economist Intelligence Unit, this index scores countries across five categories: electoral process, civil liberties, government functioning, political participation, and political culture. Countries scoring below 4 out of 10 are classified as authoritarian regimes.
2. Freedom House: Freedom in the World
Freedom House rates countries as “Free”, “Partly Free”, or “Not Free” based on political rights and civil liberties. Countries rated “Not Free” are typically identified as authoritarian.
3. V-Dem Institute
The Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) project at the University of Gothenburg uses hundreds of indicators to classify governments across a detailed spectrum.
4. RSF Press Freedom Index
The Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index tracks media freedom — a key indicator of authoritarian control.
Countries consistently scoring poorly across two or more of these indexes are generally accepted as authoritarian states.
Full List of Countries Identified by Authoritarian Rule
The following countries have been widely and consistently identified as authoritarian regimes based on the EIU Democracy Index, Freedom House ratings, and V-Dem classifications (as of 2024-2025 reporting periods).
| Country | Region | EIU Score (2023) | Freedom House Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Korea | Asia-Pacific | 1.08 | Not Free |
| Myanmar | Asia-Pacific | 1.02 | Not Free |
| Afghanistan | South Asia | 0.32 | Not Free |
| Syria | Middle East | 1.43 | Not Free |
| Chad | Sub-Saharan Africa | 1.55 | Not Free |
| Central African Republic | Sub-Saharan Africa | 1.65 | Not Free |
| Turkmenistan | Central Asia | 1.66 | Not Free |
| Tajikistan | Central Asia | 1.72 | Not Free |
| Equatorial Guinea | Sub-Saharan Africa | 1.77 | Not Free |
| Saudi Arabia | Middle East | 2.08 | Not Free |
| Iran | Middle East | 2.20 | Not Free |
| China | Asia-Pacific | 2.21 | Not Free |
| Laos | Asia-Pacific | 2.23 | Not Free |
| Eritrea | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.25 | Not Free |
| Cuba | Latin America | 2.31 | Not Free |
| Yemen | Middle East | 2.33 | Not Free |
| Belarus | Eastern Europe | 2.50 | Not Free |
| Libya | North Africa | 2.63 | Not Free |
| Vietnam | Asia-Pacific | 2.63 | Not Free |
| Burundi | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.71 | Not Free |
| Cameroon | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.79 | Not Free |
| Eswatini | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.81 | Not Free |
| Russia | Eastern Europe | 2.22 | Not Free |
| Djibouti | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.86 | Not Free |
| Azerbaijan | Caucasus | 2.91 | Not Free |
| Kazakhstan | Central Asia | 2.93 | Not Free |
| Rwanda | Sub-Saharan Africa | 3.10 | Not Free |
| Zimbabwe | Sub-Saharan Africa | 3.11 | Not Free |
| Bahrain | Middle East | 2.93 | Not Free |
| UAE | Middle East | 2.95 | Not Free |
| Sudan | North Africa | 2.17 | Not Free |
| South Sudan | Sub-Saharan Africa | 1.86 | Not Free |
| Somalia | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.27 | Not Free |
| Haiti | Latin America | 1.67 | Partly Free |
| Nicaragua | Latin America | 2.10 | Not Free |
| Venezuela | Latin America | 2.25 | Not Free |
| Guinea-Bissau | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.23 | Partly Free |
| Comoros | Sub-Saharan Africa | 3.02 | Partly Free |
| Congo (DRC) | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.34 | Not Free |
| Gabon | Sub-Saharan Africa | 2.87 | Not Free |
| Cambodia | Asia-Pacific | 3.01 | Not Free |
| Uzbekistan | Central Asia | 2.12 | Not Free |
| Egypt | North Africa | 2.93 | Not Free |
| Jordan | Middle East | 3.19 | Not Free |
Note: This list represents countries that consistently score in the authoritarian range. Scores shift annually; always cross-reference with current index data for accuracy.
Authoritarian Regimes by Region
Middle East and North Africa (MENA)
The MENA region has one of the highest concentrations of authoritarian rule in the world. Countries like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, Syria, the UAE, Bahrain, and Jordan consistently score low on democratic indicators. Ruling families, theocratic governments, and military-backed regimes have maintained grip on power for decades.
Asia-Pacific
China, North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia represent authoritarian governance across East and Southeast Asia. China’s model — sometimes called “authoritarian capitalism” — has attracted attention globally as it demonstrates that economic growth doesn’t automatically lead to democratization.
Central Asia
Post-Soviet states like Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan have maintained authoritarian structures since independence, often under the same leaders (or successor dynasties) for decades. Turkmenistan, under the Berdimuhamedov family, is frequently ranked among the most repressive nations on earth.
Sub-Saharan Africa
Several countries in Sub-Saharan Africa — including Eritrea, Cameroon, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Chad, and the DRC — feature entrenched leaders, crackdowns on opposition, and restrictions on press freedom. Military coups in the Sahel region (Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger) have added new authoritarian governments to the picture in recent years.
Eastern Europe
Russia and Belarus stand out as the clearest authoritarian cases in Europe. Russia’s score has declined sharply since 2022, and Belarus under Alexander Lukashenko remains one of Europe’s most closed political systems.
Latin America and Caribbean
Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and, to a degree, Haiti represent authoritarian or near-authoritarian conditions in the Western Hemisphere. Venezuela’s trajectory under Nicolás Maduro has attracted significant international attention and criticism.
Key Characteristics of Authoritarian Countries
What ties this wide-ranging list of countries identified by authoritarian rule together? Despite geographic and cultural differences, common threads run through all of them:
- Leader Cult or Personality Worship — Portraits, statues, mandatory praise, and propaganda are tools used to manufacture legitimacy.
- Judicial Subservience — Courts and judges serve state interests rather than upholding rule of law.
- Restricted Internet and Press — Citizens cannot freely access information or publish dissenting views.
- Security State Apparatus — Large, well-funded secret police or surveillance agencies monitor and suppress dissent.
- Ethnic or Religious Minority Persecution — Many authoritarian states target specific groups, using them as scapegoats or instruments of internal division.
- Opaque Governance — Public finances, decision-making, and policy processes are hidden from citizens.
- International Isolation or Selective Engagement — Some authoritarian regimes operate in near-total isolation; others engage selectively with trade partners while ignoring human rights obligations.
Most Notable Authoritarian Regimes Today
North Korea
Arguably the world’s most closed society, North Korea under Kim Jong-un operates as a hereditary dictatorship. No independent media exists, international travel is essentially banned, and dissent is punishable by imprisonment in labour camps. The country scores at or near the bottom of every global index.
China
China’s Chinese Communist Party (CCP) maintains tight control over political life, media, internet access, and religious practice. The treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang and the dismantling of Hong Kong’s autonomy have drawn widespread condemnation. Despite being a major global economy, China ranks as a clear authoritarian regime.
Russia
Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the country’s low democratic scores have dropped even further. The independent media have been shut down, opposition leaders jailed or killed, and thousands of anti-war protesters are locked up.
Saudi Arabia
An absolute monarchy, Saudi Arabia controls nearly all aspects of public life. Despite some social reforms under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, political opposition remains criminalized and the execution rate is one of the highest in the world.
Iran
Governed by a Supreme Leader above the elected president, Iran combines theocratic rule with authoritarian repression. The 2022-2023 protests following Mahsa Amini’s death were met with a brutal crackdown.
Belarus
Alexander Lukashenko, in power since 1994, has turned Belarus into one of Europe’s last outright dictatorships. Mass protests in 2020 were suppressed with widespread arrests and torture.
Authoritarian vs. Totalitarian: What’s the Difference?
These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but they’re not the same.
| Feature | Authoritarian | Totalitarian |
|---|---|---|
| Scope of Control | Political life | All aspects of life (politics, culture, economy, family) |
| Ideology | Often lacks strong ideological basis | Built around a comprehensive ideology |
| Private Life | Generally tolerated | Aggressively intruded upon |
| Economy | May allow market elements | Often state-controlled |
| Examples | Saudi Arabia, Egypt | North Korea, Nazi Germany, Stalinist USSR |
Totalitarianism is an extreme form of authoritarianism. Most authoritarian regimes don’t reach the level of total social control that totalitarian systems aspire to — but that’s a matter of degree, not fundamental difference.
Impact of Authoritarian Rule on Citizens
The effects of living under an authoritarian regime are far-reaching and often devastating:
- Fear and Self-Censorship: Citizens learn quickly not to speak freely, especially in public or online.
- Brain Drain: Educated and skilled citizens often emigrate when possible, weakening domestic civil society and the economy.
- Economic Mismanagement: Without accountability, state resources are often captured by ruling elites, fueling corruption and poverty.
- Human Rights Abuses: Arbitrary detention, torture, extrajudicial killings, and forced labor are documented across numerous authoritarian states.
- Generational Trauma: Long-term authoritarian governance shapes cultural attitudes toward civic engagement, trust, and collective action — sometimes for generations after a regime end.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most authoritarian country in the world?
By most metrics, North Korea ranks as the world’s most authoritarian regime. It scores at the absolute bottom of the EIU Democracy Index, Freedom House’s Freedom in the World report, and the Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index.
How many countries are considered authoritarian in 2025?
Estimates vary slightly by methodology, but approximately 54 to 57 countries are classified as authoritarian regimes as of the most recent reporting. This represents roughly 28% of the world’s nations.
Is China an authoritarian country?
Yes. China is consistently classified as an authoritarian regime across major political freedom indexes. The Chinese Communist Party maintains a monopoly on political power, restricts political competition, and heavily regulates media and internet content.
What countries have recently become more authoritarian?
Recent years have seen increased authoritarianism in Russia, Tunisia, El Salvador, and several West African states following military coups. Analysts point to growing executive power, weakened institutional checks, and reduced political freedoms in these countries.
Can a country move from authoritarian to democratic rule?
Yes, although such transitions are often difficult and fragile. Historical examples include South Korea, Taiwan, Spain, and several Eastern European nations after 1989. Successful democratization typically requires strong civil society support and stable institutions.
What is the difference between authoritarian and dictatorial rule?
A dictatorship usually refers to rule by a single individual with near-absolute power. Authoritarianism is a broader category that can include one-party states, military juntas, monarchies, and theocracies. All dictatorships are authoritarian, but not all authoritarian governments are dictatorships.
Are there authoritarian governments in Europe?
Belarus is widely regarded as Europe’s most authoritarian regime. Russia is also classified as authoritarian by major democracy indexes. Some analysts describe countries such as Hungary and Serbia as competitive authoritarian or illiberal democracies, although these classifications remain debated.
Which regions have the most authoritarian countries?
Central Asia and the Middle East have the highest concentration of authoritarian regimes relative to the number of countries in those regions. Sub-Saharan Africa also contains a significant number of authoritarian governments alongside states undergoing democratic transitions.
Does economic development reduce authoritarianism?
Economic growth has historically been associated with democratization in many countries. However, examples such as China and several Gulf states show that rising wealth does not automatically lead to liberal democracy, especially when political elites retain strong control over institutions.
What can ordinary people do about authoritarianism?
Individuals can support human rights organizations, advocate for policies that promote democratic values, and help amplify the voices of independent journalists, activists, and dissidents. Public awareness and civic engagement remain important tools for defending political freedoms.
