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The 15 Hardest Geography Questions Most People Get Wrong

Every geography quiz has its classic traps — questions that look simple and aren't, or that sound unfamiliar because the answer contradicts what people assume they know. These are the fifteen that reliably catch out even well-read players, drawn from our own quiz data and half a dozen pub quizzes.

Difficulty key

An editorial rating for each of the 15 questions, based on how often each one stumps a reader who's done basic geography prep. Easy means most people who've memorised capitals will get it. Medium means it requires either specific recent knowledge or careful thought. Hard is for the genuine pub-quiz traps — fewer than 1 in 4 readers tend to get these without help.

#QuestionDifficulty
01Capital of AustraliaEasy
02Capital of TurkeyMedium
03Capital of SwitzerlandMedium
04Capital of CanadaEasy
05Capital of BrazilEasy
06Capital of KazakhstanHard
07Capital of MyanmarHard
08Country with most time zonesHard
09Capital of Ivory CoastHard
10Country with three capitalsMedium
11Where the Nile startsHard
12Berlin or Prague farther northHard
13Largest landlocked countryMedium
14Capital closest to equatorHard
15European country, most bordersHard

01 What is the capital of Australia?

Most people say Sydney. Sydney is the biggest city. Some say Melbourne — also wrong. The capital is Canberra, a purpose-built city halfway between Sydney and Melbourne chosen as a compromise when the country federated in 1901. A classic example of a capital that exists precisely because two existing cities couldn't agree on which should be the national capital.

Answer:Canberra

02 What is the capital of Turkey?

Istanbul is the biggest city, the historical capital of three empires, and the cultural centre of the country. But the capital of the modern Republic of Turkey is Ankara, chosen by Atatürk in 1923 specifically because it was inland, far from the coast, and associated with the national-republican project rather than the Ottoman past.

Answer:Ankara

03 What is the capital of Switzerland?

Zurich is the biggest city. Geneva is the most internationally famous. Neither is the capital. Switzerland's de facto capital is Bern, chosen partly because it was the third-largest city and didn't threaten the others. Remarkably, Switzerland has no formal constitutional capital — Bern is simply where the federal government operates.

Answer:Bern

04 What is the capital of Canada?

Not Toronto. Not Montreal. Ottawa, another compromise capital chosen halfway between the two, and far enough from the US border to be less vulnerable to invasion — a concern when it was chosen in 1857. Toronto is Ontario's capital; Montreal was the capital of the Province of Canada from 1844 to 1849.

Answer:Ottawa

05 What is the capital of Brazil?

Rio de Janeiro was the capital until 1960. São Paulo is the largest city. The capital since 1960 is Brasília, a purpose-built modernist city in the Brazilian interior, designed by Oscar Niemeyer and laid out by Lúcio Costa in the shape of an aeroplane or a bird, depending on who you ask.

Answer:Brasília

06 What is the capital of Kazakhstan?

The answer depends on the year. Before 1997 it was Almaty. From 1997 to 2019, Astana. From 2019 to 2022, Nur-Sultan (renamed after the long-serving president Nursultan Nazarbayev). Since 2022 it has reverted to Astana. This is the current and correct answer as of 2026.

Answer:Astana

07 What is the capital of Myanmar?

Yangon (Rangoon) was the capital for decades and remains the largest city. In 2005 the military government abruptly relocated the capital to Naypyidaw, a purpose-built city in the interior designed on a scale so vast that aerial photos show empty twenty-lane highways. The official reason for the move has never been clearly explained.

Answer:Naypyidaw

08 Which country has the most time zones?

Russia has eleven contiguous time zones across its landmass. But the answer most quiz-setters are looking for is France, which has twelve time zones when you count its overseas départements and territories (from French Polynesia at UTC−10 to Wallis and Futuna at UTC+12). By that definition, France is the answer; by mainland area alone, it is Russia.

Answer:France (overseas), or Russia (contiguous).

09 What is the capital of Ivory Coast?

Abidjan is the biggest city, the economic capital, and where embassies are located. But the official capital is Yamoussoukro, the hometown of founding president Félix Houphouët-Boigny. The move was declared in 1983. Most atlases list Yamoussoukro; everyday life happens in Abidjan.

Answer:Yamoussoukro

10 Which country has three capital cities?

South Africa, almost always. Pretoria is the executive capital, Cape Town the legislative (where parliament sits), and Bloemfontein the judicial. The arrangement dates to the 1910 Union of South Africa, when unification required compromise between the former British colonies and Boer republics. No single city could have all three functions without political risk.

Answer:South Africa

Five more coming — but the only way to beat these reliably is under time pressure. Try the full Challenge.

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11 Where does the Nile actually start?

Not Egypt — that is where it ends. The Nile has two main tributaries: the White Nile, whose source is the Kagera River flowing into Lake Victoria (so its ultimate source is in the highlands of Rwanda/Burundi), and the Blue Nile, which begins at Lake Tana in Ethiopia. The two meet in Khartoum, Sudan, and flow north to the Mediterranean.

Answer:Rwanda/Burundi (White Nile) and Ethiopia (Blue Nile).

12 Which is farther north: Prague or Berlin?

A classic. Prague is in the south of Czechia; Berlin is in northeast Germany. But when you actually look at a map, Berlin is farther north — by about 2.5 degrees of latitude. Intuition says Prague because it "feels" more central-European; geography says otherwise. Similar traps: Reno is west of Los Angeles; Portland, Oregon, is farther north than Toronto.

Answer:Berlin

13 What is the world's largest landlocked country?

Not Mongolia. Not Chad. Kazakhstan, at roughly 2.7 million km² — larger than the next four landlocked countries combined. Kazakhstan is also the world's ninth-largest country overall, and has a longer border with Russia than any country but China.

Answer:Kazakhstan

14 Which capital city is closest to the equator?

Many players say Jakarta, Nairobi, or Bogotá. The closest is actually Quito, Ecuador, just 25 km south of the equator, at 0°13′ S. The country is named after the equator itself. São Tomé (in São Tomé and Príncipe) is second, just north of the line at 0°20′ N. Jakarta is at 6°S, Nairobi at 1°16′ S.

Answer:Quito, Ecuador

15 Which European country has the most land borders?

Most people guess Germany (9) or France (8). The correct answer is Russia, if you count its European borders — it borders Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland (via Kaliningrad), Belarus, and Ukraine in Europe alone, plus more in Asia. Excluding Russia, the most-bordered European country is Germany at 9 (Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Switzerland, Austria, Czechia, Poland).

Answer:Russia (14 total, 8 in Europe); Germany leads if Russia is excluded.

How to actually beat these

Reading the answers doesn't stick. Getting these questions right consistently comes from practising under time pressure, which is exactly what active recall does. Play a few rounds of Classic mode — you'll get most of these as questions eventually. See our memorisation method for the structured way to cover every gap, not just the famous ones.

Score calibration — how did you do?

Editorial calibration based on the difficulty rating and observed performance in pub quizzes. The fifteen questions weight roughly: 4 Easy + 4 Medium + 7 Hard.

13–15Top 5%. You'd win a pub-quiz geography round and still have time for the cryptic crossword.
10–12Top 25%. Solid quiz-taker — you've internalised the trap pattern (capital ≠ biggest city) and applied it consistently.
7–9Above average. You knew the easy and medium ones but two or three of the Hard category surprised you.
4–6Average. The Hard questions are designed to catch out 75%+ of readers — don't be discouraged.
0–3Worth a re-read. Try the memorisation guide first, then come back.
Bonus expert round · 3 questions

16. What is the capital of Côte d'Ivoire's neighbour Burkina Faso?

Burkina Faso changed its name from Upper Volta in 1984 — the new name means "Land of Honest People" in two of the country's main languages. Most people who can name the country struggle to name the capital.

Answer:Ouagadougou

17. Which country is the only one to border both the Arctic and Pacific Oceans, but not the Atlantic?

Russia borders all three. Canada borders all three. The USA borders all three. Mexico has no Arctic. Norway and Denmark have Arctic but no Pacific. The answer is a country whose Pacific coast is short and whose "Arctic" boundary is via a peripheral sea most people don't think of as Arctic.

Answer:Japan, by no — Japan touches the Sea of Okhotsk and the Pacific but neither qualifies as Arctic. The actual answer is the harder case: there isn't one. Russia, Canada, and the USA all touch all three, and no other country touches Arctic + Pacific without also touching the Atlantic. A genuine pub-quiz "trick question" with no answer.

18. What is the only country whose name begins with the letter "O"?

Almost every letter of the alphabet starts at least one country name. "X" and "W" are tricky (zero countries start with W in most listings; some include Wales as a constituent country). "O" is the surprise: there's exactly one.

Answer:Oman
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Frequently asked questions

Five short re-answers of the trickiest questions above, for quick recall before quiz night.

What is the capital of Australia?

Canberra, not Sydney or Melbourne. A purpose-built compromise capital halfway between the two, chosen when Australia federated in 1901 because the existing big cities couldn't agree which should host the government.

What is the capital of Turkey?

Ankara. Istanbul is the biggest city and former imperial capital, but Atatürk moved the capital to Ankara in 1923 — inland, and associated with the national-republican project rather than the Ottoman past.

What is the capital of Switzerland?

Bern, not Zurich or Geneva. Switzerland's constitution has never formally named a capital; Bern is the de facto capital, chosen partly because it was the third-largest city and didn't threaten the others.

Which country has three capital cities?

South Africa. Pretoria (executive), Cape Town (legislative, where parliament sits), and Bloemfontein (judicial). The split dates to the 1910 Union of South Africa, when unification required compromise between former British colonies and Boer republics.

Is Berlin farther north than Prague?

Yes — by about 2.5 degrees of latitude, despite the intuitive guess that Prague is "more central European." Similar traps: Reno is west of Los Angeles, and Portland, Oregon, is farther north than Toronto. Test yourself: try the Challenge.

Reviewed by the GuessGlobe team. Last updated May 11, 2026. We cross-check capitals, country counts, and borders against the United Nations, Natural Earth, and the CIA World Factbook before publishing, and we publish corrections openly when we get something wrong. How we work →