Every World Capital Explained: The Complete Guide
There are 195 capitals on Earth, and exactly zero of them were chosen at random. Every capital is a negotiation — between history and geography, between rival cities, between the country you are and the country you want to become. This guide walks you through all of them, continent by continent.
What counts as a "capital"?
The short answer is that a capital is wherever the national government sits. The long answer is messier. Countries split capital functions more often than you might think: South Africa has three capitals (executive in Pretoria, legislative in Cape Town, judicial in Bloemfontein), the Netherlands has a constitutional capital (Amsterdam) that is not where the government actually works (The Hague), and Bolivia's constitutional capital Sucre is not where its president lives (La Paz). When you play GuessGlobe, we list the most widely-recognised capital — usually the seat of the executive — but most atlases acknowledge the split cases.
The second wrinkle is that "capital" and "largest city" are often different places. Brasília, Canberra, Ottawa, Abuja, Islamabad, Astana, and Naypyidaw were all chosen precisely because they were not the largest city. In each case a smaller, often purpose-built capital was carved out to avoid giving too much power to an existing metropolis, or to relocate the government toward a new strategic centre.
Common capital-pair confusions
- Slovakia (Bratislava) vs Slovenia (Ljubljana) — different countries, similar names. Slovakia is north on the Danube; Slovenia is south in the Alps.
- Niger (Niamey) vs Nigeria (Abuja) — both in West Africa, different countries. Nigeria is much larger; Niamey rhymes with "Niger."
- Iran (Tehran) vs Iraq (Baghdad) — neighbours but distinct. Iran has Persian heritage; Iraq is Arab.
- Mauritania (Nouakchott) vs Mauritius (Port Louis) — Mauritania is West African desert; Mauritius is an Indian Ocean island.
- Austria (Vienna) vs Australia (Canberra) — completely different continents. The 1-letter difference catches everyone at least once.
- Sudan (Khartoum) vs South Sudan (Juba) — they were one country until 2011.
- Dominica (Roseau) vs Dominican Republic (Santo Domingo) — different Caribbean countries on different islands.
- The four Guineas — Guinea (Conakry), Guinea-Bissau (Bissau), Equatorial Guinea (Malabo), Papua New Guinea (Port Moresby). Three are in West Africa; one is in Oceania.
Africa — 54 capitals, old and brand new
Africa has the most countries of any continent, and therefore the most capitals. They range from Cairo (founded in 969 CE and continuously inhabited ever since) to Gitega, which became Burundi's capital only in 2019. A few common surprises:
- Ivory Coast — Abidjan is the economic capital and by far the largest city, but the official capital is Yamoussoukro, hometown of founding president Félix Houphouët-Boigny.
- South Africa — three capitals, as noted above.
- Benin — Porto-Novo is the official capital, but Cotonou hosts the government. Most atlases list Porto-Novo.
- Eswatini (formerly Swaziland) — split between Mbabane (administrative) and Lobamba (legislative/royal).
- Tanzania — Dodoma replaced Dar es Salaam in 1974 as the official capital, though most ministries still operate from Dar.
The newest capital on the continent is Gitega, Burundi, which formally replaced Bujumbura in 2019. The oldest is Cairo, which has outlived at least six empires.
Sub-Saharan quick reference
Nigeria → Abuja (not Lagos). Kenya → Nairobi. Ethiopia → Addis Ababa, which also hosts the African Union. Ghana → Accra. Senegal → Dakar. South Sudan, the world's newest country, → Juba. DR Congo → Kinshasa, directly across the river from Brazzaville, the capital of Republic of Congo — the two capitals stare at each other across the Congo River, the closest pair of capitals on Earth.
Asia — 48 capitals, from Tokyo to Thimphu
Asia is the largest and most populous continent, and its capitals reflect enormous political diversity. Tokyo is the most populous capital on Earth (close to 38 million in the greater metropolitan area). Beijing is the capital of the world's most populous country. Thimphu, Bhutan, had no paved roads until the 1960s.
Some Asian capitals to double-check before your next quiz:
- Kazakhstan — Astana. It was Astana, then Nur-Sultan (2019–2022), then Astana again.
- Myanmar — Naypyidaw, not Yangon. The government moved in 2005 to a purpose-built city in the interior.
- Sri Lanka — legislative capital is Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte; the commercial capital Colombo is usually what people mean.
- Palestine — officially declares Jerusalem as capital, with Ramallah as the administrative centre.
- Israel — claims Jerusalem; most international recognition is of Tel Aviv.
- Kyrgyzstan — Bishkek. Turkmenistan — Ashgabat. Uzbekistan — Tashkent. Tajikistan — Dushanbe. The '-stan' capitals are the ones most players miss.
The oldest continuously inhabited capital on Earth is arguably Damascus, Syria — inhabited for at least 11,000 years and a capital for most of the last 2,000.
Europe — 44 capitals, most of them ancient
Europe's capitals tend to be its largest cities, a pattern broken by a few deliberate exceptions. In GuessGlobe's main quiz, Russia is counted with Europe, while Turkey, Cyprus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia appear in Asia. The most consistently missed European capitals on quizzes:
- Switzerland — Bern, not Zurich or Geneva. Bern is technically the de facto capital; Switzerland's constitution has never formally named one.
- Liechtenstein — Vaduz, population 5,700.
- Malta — Valletta, one of the smallest capital cities in the EU by both area and population.
- Netherlands — Amsterdam is the constitutional capital; the government and royal family actually work in The Hague.
- Montenegro — Podgorica.
- North Macedonia — Skopje. (The country changed its name in 2019; the capital did not.)
Vatican City is also in Europe, and is technically its own capital — a country of 0.44 square kilometres whose capital covers the whole country.
The Balkans
Balkan capitals trip people up because the borders have moved so much in the last 40 years. Serbia → Belgrade. Croatia → Zagreb. Bosnia and Herzegovina → Sarajevo. Slovenia → Ljubljana. Albania → Tirana. Montenegro → Podgorica. North Macedonia → Skopje. Kosovo → Pristina is worth knowing too, but Kosovo is partially recognised and not part of GuessGlobe's main 195-country count.
The Americas — 35 capitals, often not the largest city
North, Central, and South America have a strong tradition of capital cities that are not the largest city in the country. The United States picked Washington, D.C. over Philadelphia or New York. Canada picked Ottawa between Toronto and Montreal. Brazil purpose-built Brasília in the 1960s to pull development inland from Rio de Janeiro. Argentina's Buenos Aires is an outlier — the capital is also the metropolis.
| Country | Capital | Largest city | Why moved |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Brasília | São Paulo | Inland push from Rio (1960) |
| Australia | Canberra | Sydney | Compromise between Sydney & Melbourne |
| Canada | Ottawa | Toronto | Compromise; defence from US border |
| USA | Washington, D.C. | New York City | Federal compromise (1790) |
| Turkey | Ankara | Istanbul | Atatürk's republican project (1923) |
| Pakistan | Islamabad | Karachi | Purpose-built inland (1967) |
| Kazakhstan | Astana | Almaty | Move north (1997) |
| Myanmar | Naypyidaw | Yangon | Military relocation (2005) |
| Côte d'Ivoire | Yamoussoukro | Abidjan | President's home town (1983) |
| Nigeria | Abuja | Lagos | Neutral ground between regions (1991) |
Players most often miss:
- Belize — Belmopan, not Belize City.
- Canada — Ottawa, not Toronto.
- Brazil — Brasília, not Rio or São Paulo.
- Bolivia — Sucre (constitutional) and La Paz (seat of government).
- Ecuador — Quito, not Guayaquil.
- Honduras — Tegucigalpa.
- Suriname — Paramaribo. The one with the Dutch colonial architecture.
- Guyana — Georgetown. Not the capital of anywhere else.
Oceania — 14 capitals, and some very small ones
Oceania's capitals include some of the smallest on Earth. Nauru has no official capital — the government simply sits in the district of Yaren. Tuvalu's capital Funafuti shares its name with the island. Most atlases list:
- Australia → Canberra (not Sydney).
- New Zealand → Wellington (not Auckland).
- Papua New Guinea → Port Moresby.
- Fiji → Suva. Samoa → Apia. Tonga → Nuku'alofa. Vanuatu → Port Vila.
- Kiribati → South Tarawa. Marshall Islands → Majuro. Micronesia → Palikir.
- Palau → Ngerulmud, the smallest capital by population in the world (fewer than 400 residents).
Think you can name every capital? Put the list to the test on the 3D globe.
▶ Play Capitals QuizWhy capitals move
Capitals change for four main reasons: political compromise (the USA, Australia, Canada), geographic strategy (Brazil moving inland, Myanmar moving upcountry, Kazakhstan moving north), colonial hangover (newly independent states shedding a colonial capital), and security (relocating away from a coast or border). The most recent moves:
- Indonesia — announced the move from Jakarta (sinking and sprawling) to Nusantara, Borneo, in 2019. Partial transfer is underway as of 2026.
- Egypt — New Administrative Capital east of Cairo, opened for government use in 2023; the transition continues.
- Burundi — moved to Gitega in 2019.
- Equatorial Guinea — declared Ciudad de la Paz as the new capital in 2017; Malabo still handles most government functions.
The pattern: planned, interior, and built to avoid being flooded, bombed, or clogged by the largest existing city. Very few countries move to an older or smaller city; the direction of travel is almost always forward.
Countries with more than one capital
Five countries formally operate with more than one capital:
- South Africa — Pretoria, Cape Town, Bloemfontein.
- Bolivia — Sucre (constitutional), La Paz (de facto).
- Eswatini — Mbabane (administrative), Lobamba (legislative/royal).
- Netherlands — Amsterdam (constitutional), The Hague (seat of government).
- Malaysia — Kuala Lumpur (official), Putrajaya (administrative).
A handful of others are arguable depending on how strictly you define "capital," including Chile (Santiago + legislature in Valparaíso) and Sri Lanka (Colombo + Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte).
Quiz yourself
Reading about capitals is one thing; placing them under time pressure is another. The fastest way to commit this list to memory is to play it — a method called active recall, which we explain in our memorisation guide. Start with the continent you know worst; the gain curve is steepest there.
▶ Play GuessGlobeFrequently asked questions
Short answers to the capital-city questions readers ask most.
Damascus, Syria, is the oldest capital of any country — the site has been continuously inhabited for at least 11,000 years and served as a capital for most of the last 2,000. Cairo, founded in 969 CE, is the longest-serving capital in Africa.
Five countries formally operate with more than one: South Africa (Pretoria, Cape Town, Bloemfontein), Bolivia (Sucre, La Paz), Eswatini (Mbabane, Lobamba), the Netherlands (Amsterdam, The Hague), and Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya). Chile and Sri Lanka are arguable depending on how strictly you define "capital."
Ngerulmud, Palau — fewer than 400 residents. Vaduz (Liechtenstein) and Funafuti (Tuvalu) are the other contenders for "smallest capital" depending on whether you're measuring population, area, or metropolitan footprint.
Many New World countries deliberately picked a smaller city to avoid concentrating power in one metropolis. The United States chose Washington, D.C. over Philadelphia and New York; Canada chose Ottawa between Toronto and Montreal; Brazil purpose-built Brasília in the 1960s; Australia built Canberra to compromise between Sydney and Melbourne.
Kazakhstan reverted Nur-Sultan back to Astana in 2022. Burundi moved from Bujumbura to Gitega in 2019. Indonesia is mid-transition from Jakarta to the new planned capital of Nusantara on Borneo, a process that began in 2019 and is still underway as of 2026. Want to quiz yourself on the current list? Start a capitals round.
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 →