The 2026 edition of the annual World Happiness Report has arrived. It is as advertised: a multi-metric survey of human happiness, roughly split by country. The purpose of the report is to determine what factors are making people happy, which ones are making them miserable, and which nations are quantifiably happier than others.
The 2026 edition doesn’t offer too many surprises. Yet again, all the nations in the top 10 (mostly Nordic nations) have strong federal governments that provide their citizens with hearty social safety nets, including some form of universal healthcare system. Your top five, for instance, are Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Costa Rica, and Sweden.
This is Finland’s ninth year in a row in the number one spot. Costa Rica broke into the top five not so much for its vast wealth but for the deep social bonds its citizens forged with one another… though its government does provide its citizens with a strong social safety net, too.
On that front, not much has changed. The one noteworthy element of this year’s report is in what exactly is making people unhappy: algorithmically influenced social media.
Why You’re Unhappy, According to the 2026 World Happiness Report
The real story here is in the countries that are slipping down the list. It’s mostly English-speaking countries like the United States, Canada, and the UK, none of which are in the top 10 for the second year in a row. The drop is especially notable among the nations’ youth, whose life satisfaction has taken a massive hit in the past decade, for reasons that are only a mystery if you just woke up from a 10-year coma.
The report points the finger at social media. The report found that heavy social media use correlates with lower well-being, especially among young people in Western countries, with a special emphasis on girls. Interestingly, the pattern didn’t hold up globally. In places like the Middle East or North Africa, social media use hasn’t produced the same kind of emotional and psychological damage, leading to a deep and statistically measurable unhappiness.
The difference, the report claims, seems to be in how Western social media is designed. Platforms that encourage healthy direct social interaction seemed to support emotional and psychological well-being. But Western platforms, driven by a seemingly endless sea of algorithmically curated trash, seek to reap engagement from rage-baiting and erode happiness.
The report suggests a sweet spot between being overloaded by social media and fleeing it to protect oneself from its negative aspects, but unfortunately, the corporate strategy of social media platforms across the United States, the UK, and Canada seems to be one of active hostility toward its users.
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