Continents
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Overview · 🌍 The seven continents

The seven continents

Our planet is divided into seven continents: Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Oceania and Antarctica. Together they cover all the land on Earth — from the Antarctic ice sheet to the rainforests of the Amazon basin. On this page you will find the key figures, a world map and an explanation of how the classification works.

Tap a marker to go to that continent's page. Map © OpenStreetMap contributors · Figures: UN WPP 2024

Continents compared: key figures 2025

All figures are drawn from the UN World Population Prospects 2024, the CIA World Factbook and Worldometer 2025. Visit the comparison page for a sortable table with additional columns.

Continent Population 2025 Area (km²) Countries Largest city
Asia 4,840,000,000 44,580,000 48 Tokyo (~37 M)
Africa 1,550,000,000 30,370,000 54 Lagos (~16 M)
Europe 744,000,000 10,180,000 44 Istanbul / Moscow
North America 617,000,000 24,710,000 23 Mexico City (~22 M)
South America 438,000,000 17,840,000 12 São Paulo (~22 M)
Oceania 47,000,000 8,510,000 14 Sydney (~5.3 M)
Antarctica ~0 permanent 14,200,000 0 — (research stations)

Sources: UN WPP 2024, Worldometer 2025, CIA World Factbook.

What makes something a continent?

A continent is a large, continuous landmass generally regarded as a distinct part of the world. The definition, however, is not purely geological: it blends geography, culture and convention. Physically, Europe and Asia form a single landmass — Eurasia — yet they have been treated as separate continents for centuries, for cultural and historical reasons.

What distinguishes a continent from a large island — such as Greenland or Australia — is less clear than it first appears. Australia counts as a continent because of its continental plate and considerable size; Greenland does not, even though it is the world's largest island. The boundaries are therefore partly a matter of convention. Read more at how many continents are there?.

Which model do we use?

Continenten.com follows the seven-continent model standard in most English-language and Dutch curricula: Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Oceania and Antarctica as seven distinct continents. This model counts North and South America as separate units and distinguishes Oceania (including Australia) from the other continents.

Other models exist: in Latin America and some European countries, North and South America are combined as "America". Some approaches count only five or six continents. The page on the number of continents sets the different models side by side. For figures on oceans — the bodies of water separating continents — see the oceans.

Sources

  • United Nations — World Population Prospects 2024 (population figures)
  • Worldometer 2025 — current estimates by country
  • CIA World Factbook — area and country counts
  • IUCN Red List — conservation status of species
  • Köppen-Geiger — climate classification