See which NATO countries spend less than 2% of their GDP on defense

February 12, 2024 at 9:03 p.m. EST
4 min

Donald Trump said over the weekend that he would encourage Russia to attack “delinquent” NATO allies that, in his judgment, spend too little on defense.

His remarks shocked leaders on both sides of the Atlantic — and mischaracterized how the 31-member alliance works.

NATO member nations all make payments to cover the operating expenses of the organization, which was founded in the aftermath of World War II to help Western Europe counter the Soviet Union with help from Canada and the United States. But they don’t pay membership fees to remain in the alliance, so there’s no delinquency to speak of.

Countries do, however, commit to spending at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defense each year, with the goal of ensuring the alliance’s military readiness and deterring any potential attacks. The commitment is a guideline, not a requirement, that has been in place for nearly two decades.

Last year, 11 countries met or exceeded that target, according to NATO statistics. The rest spent smaller portions of their GDP on defense. (Iceland, the only member state with no armed forces, is omitted from the data set.)

Most of the countries that spent beyond the 2 percent mark either share a border with Russia or sit near the front lines of the Ukraine war. Trump’s insinuation that they’re not paying their share is false.

Poland — which shares part of its northern border with the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad and a long stretch of its southeastern border with Ukraine — spent a greater share of its GDP on defense last year than any other member state, at 3.9 percent.

The United States ranked second, at 3.49 percent. But in raw numbers, the $860 billion U.S. defense budget is more than double that of all other NATO allies combined.

NATO member countries

Atlantic

Ocean

FINLAND

NORWAY

RUSSIA

EST.

North

Sea

SWEDEN

LAT.

DEN.

LITH.

RUS.

U.K.

BELARUS

NETH.

POLAND

GERMANY

BELG.

LUX.

UKRAINE

CZECH.

REP.

FRANCE

MOLDOVA

HUNG.

SWITZ.

Crimea

SLOV.

ROM.

Illegally annexed by Russia in March 2014

CROATIA

BOS.

SERBIA

BULG.

ITALY

MONT.

KOS.

SPAIN

NORTH

MAC.

ALB.

TURKEY

GREECE

Mediterranean

Sea

400 MILES

NATO countries not shown:

Portugal, Iceland, United States and Canada

NATO member countries

Atlantic

Ocean

FINLAND

NORWAY

RUSSIA

EST.

SWEDEN

North

Sea

Moscow

LAT.

DEN.

LITH.

RUS.

UNITED

KINGDOM

BELARUS

NETH.

GERMANY

POLAND

BELG.

LUX.

UKRAINE

CZECH.

REP.

FRANCE

MOLDOVA

SWITZ.

HUNGARY

Crimea

SLOV.

ROMANIA

ITALY

Illegally annexed by Russia in March 2014

CROATIA

BOS.

SERBIA

SPAIN

BULGARIA

KOS.

MONT.

NORTH

MAC.

ALB.

TURKEY

GREECE

NATO countries not shown:

Portugal, Iceland, United States and Canada

400 MILES

NATO member countries

NATO countries not shown:

Iceland, United States and Canada

FINLAND

NORWAY

Atlantic

Ocean

RUSSIA

Helsinki

ESTONIA

SWEDEN

North

Sea

Moscow

LATVIA

DEN.

LITHUANIA

IRELAND

UNITED

KINGDOM

RUS.

BELARUS

Berlin

NETH.

Warsaw

GERMANY

POLAND

BELG.

LUX.

UKRAINE

CZECH.

REP.

FRANCE

MOLDOVA

SWITZ.

HUNGARY

Crimea

SLOV.

ROMANIA

CROATIA

Illegally annexed by Russia in March 2014

PORTUGAL

BOS.

SERBIA

SPAIN

BULGARIA

ITALY

MONT.

KOS.

NORTH

MAC.

ALB.

TURKEY

GREECE

400 MILES

Other member states spending more than 2 percent of their GDP include Estonia, Lithuania, Romania and NATO’s newest member, Finland, which joined the alliance last year. (It’s worth noting that most of the big spenders have national laws or policies that require 2 percent defense spending in accordance with NATO’s goals.)

Countries farther from Russia were more likely to spend below the 2 percent guideline. Some — including Germany, Italy and Canada — spent considerably under that target, despite having large economies and GDPs topping $1 trillion. Others, such as Luxembourg, may struggle to meet the threshold because of the limited size of their militaries and defense industries.

Trudeau told NATO that Canada will never meet spending goal, Discord leak shows

Most NATO allies are spending a greater share of their GDP on defense than they were in 2014. That year, Russia invaded the Crimean Peninsula and annexed it, inflaming tensions in Eastern Europe and prompting NATO to double down on its 2 percent spending goal.

At the time, only three allies were meeting that target. The number increased to seven in 2022. After Russia invaded Ukraine in February of that year, defense spending spiked in several countries.

Poland again topped the list, with its defense spending jumping from 2.4 percent of its GDP to 3.9 percent. In total, Poland spent more than $29 billion on defense last year, nearly $12 billion more than it spent in 2022 and three times what it spent a decade ago. France, Slovakia, Hungary and several others also ratcheted up defense spending after the Russian invasion.

Earlier this year, Turkey voted in favor of Sweden’s membership after months of delay. Pending Hungary’s ratification, Sweden is expected to join NATO this year as the 32nd member, and has committed to spending 2.1 percent of its GDP.

Some member states are spending more but have yet to exceed the 2 percent mark. Others have flatlined. But the pressure to ramp up defense spending hasn’t gone unnoticed.

Following Trump’s remarks, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Monday pledged to meet NATO’s 2 percent goal. “That is urgently needed,” Scholz said. “Because as harsh as this reality is, we do not live in times of peace.”