With 396 million speakers worldwide in 2025 compared to standard Arabic's 335 million, French comes in behind English, Mandarin Chinese and Spanish as one of the world's most used languages, according tofiguresfrom the International Organisation of Francophonie (OIF).
People inFrancemake up only 66 million of the total, says the organisation, which is dedicated to promoting the French language and ties between French-speaking countries.
Nearly 65 percent of French speakers live on the African continent.TheDemocratic Republic of the Congohas the largest number, with just over 57 million French speakers, followed byAlgeriawith more than 15 million andMoroccowith nearly 14 million.
As European populations decline, African countries are soon predicted to make up an even larger majority of French speakers.
By 2050, French is expected to be spoken by 590 million people, "nine out of ten of whom will live inAfrica", the secretary-general of the OIF,Louise Mushikiwabo, writes in her introduction.
The report predicts the future of French "will no longer be shaped in Paris, but rather in Abidjan, Beirut, Brussels, Dakar, Kinshasa, Montreal, Port-au-Prince, Tunis or Yaound".
Why a changing French language is nothing to be afraid of
Learners' language
The vast majority of people who speak French use it alongside other languages. Only around 90 million have it as their mother tongue.
In contrast, it is the second most widely studied foreignlanguagein the world afterEnglishwith nearly 170 million learners worldwide.
While French remains a key language in diplomacy, tourism and international law, the reporthighlights a decline in the use ofFrenchin quantitative sciences, new technologies and higher education, where English largely dominates.
On the internet, where around 20 percent of content is in English, French is the fourth most present language. It accounts for about 3.5 percent of online content,a level comparable to Arabic, Hindi, Portuguese and Russian.
The last word: why half of the world's languages could vanish this century
French has been steadily expanding its global footprint over recent decades. The OIF reported 220 million French speakers in 2010, and321 millionat its last count in 2022.
Since then, however, the organisation has changed the way it calculates the total. Its latest estimate includes children learning French from age six up, whereas previous counts started from age 10.
Using the old method puts the current number of French speakers at 348 million.
In comparison, some 559 million people speak Spanish, nearly 1.2 billion speak Mandarin and over 1.5 billion speak English.
Originally published on RFI















