N'Djamena
Chad
Key facts and a structured country profile. π§Ύ Change log π True Size
19,674,004 (2025 est.)
1.284 million sq km
Central Africa, south of Libya
π§ Background
Chad emerged from a collection of powerful states that controlled the Sahelian belt starting around the 9th century. These states focused on controlling trans-Saharan trade routes and profited mostly from the slave trade. The Kanem-Bornu Empire, centered around the Lake Chad Basin, existed between the 9th and 19th centuries, and at its peak, the empire controlled territory stretching from southern Chad to southern Libya and included portions of modern-day Algeria, Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria, and Sudan. The Sudanese warlord Rabih AZ-ZUBAYR used an army comprised largely of slaves to conquer the Kanem-Bornu Empire in the late 19th century. In southeastern Chad, the Bagirmi and Ouaddai (Wadai) kingdoms emerged in the 15th and 16th centuries and lasted until the arrival of the French in the 19th and 20th centuries. France began moving into the region in the late 1880s and defeated the Bagirmi kingdom in 1897, Rabih AZ-ZUBAYR in 1900, and the Ouddai kingdom in 1909. In the arid regions of northern Chad and southern Libya, an Islamic order called the Sanusiyya (Sanusi) relied heavily on the trans-Saharan slave trade and had upwards of 3 million followers by the 1880s. The French defeated the Sanusiyya in 1910 after years of intermittent war. By 1910, France had incorporated the northern arid region, the Lake Chad Basin, and southeastern Chad into French Equatorial Africa. Chad achieved its independence in 1960 and then saw three decades of instability, oppressive rule, civil war, and a Libyan invasion. With the help of the French military and several African countries, Chadian leaders expelled Libyan forces during the 1987 "Toyota War," so named for the use of Toyota pickup trucks as fighting vehicles. In 1990, Chadian general Idriss DEBY led a rebellion against President Hissene HABRE. Under DEBY, Chad approved a constitution and held elections in 1996. Shortly after DEBY was killed during a rebel incursion in 2021, a group of military officials -- led by DEBYβs son, Mahamat Idriss DEBY -- took control of the government. The military officials dismissed the National Assembly, suspended the Constitution, and formed a Transitional Military Council (TMC), while pledging to hold democratic elections by October 2022. A national dialogue in August-October 2022 culminated in decisions to extend the transition for up to two years, dissolve the TMC, and appoint Mahamat DEBY as Transitional President; the transitional authorities held a constitutional referendum in December 2023 and claimed 86 percent of votes were in favor of the new constitution. The transitional authorities have announced plans to hold elections by October 2024. Chad has faced widespread poverty, an economy severely weakened by volatile international oil prices, terrorist-led insurgencies in the Lake Chad Basin, and several waves of rebellions in northern and eastern Chad. In 2015, the government imposed a state of emergency in the Lake Chad Basin following multiple attacks by the terrorist group Boko Haram, now known as ISIS-West Africa. The same year, Boko Haram conducted bombings in N'Djamena. In 2019, the Chadian government also declared a state of emergency in the Sila and Ouaddai regions bordering Sudan and in the Tibesti region bordering Niger, where rival ethnic groups are still fighting. The army has suffered heavy losses to Islamic terror groups in the Lake Chad Basin.
πΊοΈ Geography
Central Africa, south of Libya
15 00 N, 19 00 E
Africa
1.284 million sq km
1,259,200 sq km
24,800 sq km
Almost nine times the size of New York state; slightly more than three times the size of California
6,406 km
Cameroon 1,116 km; Central African Republic 1,556 km; Libya 1,050 km; Niger 1,196 km; Nigeria 85 km; Sudan 1,403 km
0 km (landlocked)
None (landlocked)
Tropical in south, desert in north
Broad, arid plains in center, desert in north, mountains in northwest, lowlands in south
Emi Koussi 3,445 m
Djourab 160 m
543 m
Petroleum, uranium, natron, kaolin, fish (Lake Chad), gold, limestone, sand and gravel, salt
40% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 4.2% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 35.7% (2023 est.)
3.1% (2023 est.)
57% (2023 est.)
300 sq km (2012)
Lake Chad (endorheic lake shared with Niger, Nigeria, and Cameroon) - 10,360-25,900 sq km note - area varies by season and year to year
Niger (2,261,741 sq km)
Lake Chad (2,497,738 sq km)
Lake Chad Basin, Nubian Aquifer System
The population is unevenly distributed due to contrasts in climate and physical geography; the highest density is found in the southwest, particularly around Lake Chad and points south; the dry Saharan zone to the north is the least densely populated, as shown in this population distribution map
Hot, dry, dusty harmattan winds occur in north; periodic droughts; locust plagues
Note 1: Chad is the largest of Africa's 16 landlocked countries note 2: a wide variety of animals lived in modern-day Chad during the African Humid Period, including elephants, giraffes, hippos, and antelope; the last remnant of this "Green Sahara" exists in the Lakes of Ounianga in northern Chad, a series of 18 interconnected freshwater, saline, and hypersaline lakes note 3: Lake Chad, the most significant water body in the Sahel, is a remnant of a former inland sea, paleolake Mega-Chad; at its greatest extent, sometime before 5000 B.C., Lake Mega-Chad was the largest of four Saharan paleolakes that existed during the African Humid Period; it covered an area of about 400,000 sq km (150,000 sq mi), roughly the size of today's Caspian Sea
π₯ People and Societyβ¬οΈ Top
19,674,004 (2025 est.)
9,756,129
9,917,875
Chadian(s)
Chadian
Sara (Ngambaye/Sara/Madjingaye/Mbaye) 30.5%, Kanembu/Bornu/Buduma 9.8%, Arab 9.7%, Wadai/Maba/Masalit/Mimi 7%, Gorane 5.8%, Masa/Musseye/Musgum 4.9%, Bulala/Medogo/Kuka 3.7%, Marba/Lele/Mesme 3.5%, Mundang 2.7%, Bidiyo/Migaama/Kenga/Dangleat 2.5%, Dadjo/Kibet/Muro 2.4%, Tupuri/Kera 2%, Gabri/Kabalaye/Nanchere/Somrai 2%, Fulani/Fulbe/Bodore 1.8%, Karo/Zime/Peve 1.3%, Baguirmi/Barma 1.2%, Zaghawa/Bideyat/Kobe 1.1%, Tama/Assongori/Mararit 1.1%, Mesmedje/Massalat/Kadjakse 0.8%, other 4.6%, unspecified 1.7% (2014-15 est.)
French (official), Arabic (official), Sara (in south), more than 120 languages and dialects
The World Factbook, une source indispensable d'informations de base. (French) ΩΨͺΨ§Ψ¨ ΨΩΨ§Ψ¦Ω Ψ§ΩΨΉΨ§ΩΩ Ψ Ψ§ΩΩ Ψ΅Ψ―Ψ± Ψ§ΩΨ°Ω ΩΨ§ ΩΩ ΩΩ Ψ§ΩΨ§Ψ³ΨͺΨΊΩΨ§Ψ‘ ΨΉΩΩ ΩΩΩ ΨΉΩΩΩ Ψ§Ψͺ Ψ§ΩΨ£Ψ³Ψ§Ψ³ΩΨ© (Arabic) The World Factbook, the indispensable source for basic information.
Muslim 52.1%, Protestant 23.9%, Roman Catholic 20%, animist 0.3%, other Christian 0.2%, none 2.8%, unspecified 0.7% (2014-15 est.)
45.8% (male 4,428,132/female 4,323,398)
51.7% (male 4,831,744/female 5,031,383)
2.5% (2024 est.) (male 204,823/female 274,115)
92.1 (2025 est.)
87.2 (2025 est.)
4.9 (2025 est.)
20.6 (2025 est.)
16.9 years (2025 est.)
16.3 years
17.2 years
2.98% (2025 est.)
38.62 births/1,000 population (2025 est.)
8.75 deaths/1,000 population (2025 est.)
-0.12 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2025 est.)
The population is unevenly distributed due to contrasts in climate and physical geography; the highest density is found in the southwest, particularly around Lake Chad and points south; the dry Saharan zone to the north is the least densely populated, as shown in this population distribution map
24.4% of total population (2023)
4.1% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
1.592 million N'DJAMENA (capital) (2023)
1.04 male(s)/female
1.02 male(s)/female
0.96 male(s)/female
0.75 male(s)/female
0.98 male(s)/female (2024 est.)
18.1 years (2014/15 est.)
748 deaths/100,000 live births (2023 est.)
61.1 deaths/1,000 live births (2025 est.)
68.1 deaths/1,000 live births
56.7 deaths/1,000 live births
60 years (2024 est.)
58.1 years
62 years
5.13 children born/woman (2025 est.)
2.51 (2025 est.)
Urban: 77.9% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 43.8% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 52% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 22.1% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 56.2% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 48% of population (2022 est.)
5.2% of GDP (2021)
7.3% of national budget (2022 est.)
0.09 physicians/1,000 population (2023)
0.4 beds/1,000 population (2017 est.)
Urban: 56.4% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 6.3% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 18.4% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 43.6% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 93.7% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 81.6% of population (2022 est.)
6.1% (2016)
0.55 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.37 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.01 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.01 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.16 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
6.5% (2025 est.)
11.8% (2025 est.)
1.3% (2025 est.)
18.2% (2022 est.)
72.6% (2019 est.)
24.2% (2019)
60.6% (2019)
8.1% (2019)
3.2% of GDP (2023 est.)
16.5% national budget (2023 est.)
30.6% (2019 est.)
44.5% (2019 est.)
18.6% (2019 est.)
7 years (2015 est.)
9 years (2015 est.)
6 years (2015 est.)
πΏ Environmentβ¬οΈ Top
Inadequate supplies of potable water; soil and water pollution from improper waste disposal in rural areas and poor farming practices; desertification
Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Wetlands
Marine Dumping-London Convention
Tropical in south, desert in north
40% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 4.2% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 35.7% (2023 est.)
3.1% (2023 est.)
57% (2023 est.)
24.4% of total population (2023)
4.1% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
2.054 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
2 metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
2.054 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
41.2 micrograms per cubic meter (2019 est.)
101.8 kt (2022-2024 est.)
1,282.9 kt (2019-2021 est.)
60.3 kt (2019-2021 est.)
12 kt (2019-2021 est.)
1.359 million tons (2024 est.)
11.1% (2022 est.)
103.7 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
103.7 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
672.2 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
45.7 billion cubic meters (2022 est.)
ποΈ Governmentβ¬οΈ Top
Republic of Chad
Chad
RΓ©publique du Tchad/Jumhuriyat Tshad
Tchad/Tshad
Named for Lake Chad, which lies along the country's western border; taken from a local word meaning "large body of water" or "lake"
Presidential republic
N'Djamena
12 06 N, 15 02 E
UTC+1 (6 hours ahead of Washington, DC, during Standard Time)
Said to derive its name from a local word meaning "place of rest"
23 provinces; Barh-El-Gazel, Batha, Borkou, Chari-Baguirmi, Ennedi-Est, Ennedi-Ouest, Guera, Hadjer-Lamis, Kanem, Lac, Logone Occidental, Logone Oriental, Mandoul, Mayo-Kebbi-Est, Mayo-Kebbi-Ouest, Moyen-Chari, N'Djamena, Ouaddai, Salamat, Sila, Tandjile, Tibesti, Wadi-Fira
Mixed system of civil and customary law
Several previous; latest adopted by National Transitional Council 27 June 2023, approved by referendum 17 December, verified by Chad Supreme Court 28 December, promulgated 1 January 2024
Previous process: proposed as a revision by the president of the republic after a Council of Ministers (cabinet) decision or by the National Assembly; approval for consideration of a revision requires at least three-fifths majority vote by the Assembly; passage requires approval by referendum or at least two-thirds majority vote by the Assembly
Has not submitted an ICJ jurisdiction declaration; accepts ICCt jurisdiction
No
Both parents must be citizens of Chad
Chadian law does not address dual citizenship
15 years
18 years of age; universal
President Mahamat Idriss DΓBY (since 6 May 2024)
Prime Minister Allamaye HALINA (since 23 May 2024)
Council of Ministers
President directly elected by absolute-majority popular vote in 2 rounds, if needed, for a 5-year term (no term limits)
6 May 2024
2024: Mahamat Idriss DΓBY elected president; percent of vote - Mahamat Idriss DΓBY (MPS) 61%, Succes MASRA (Transformers) 18.5%, Albert PADACKE 16.9%, other 3.6%
TBD
Parliament
Bicameral
National Assembly (National Assembly)
188 (all directly elected)
Mixed system
Full renewal
5 years
12/29/2024
Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) (124); Rally of Chadian Nationalists/Awakening (RNDT/ Le RΓ©veil) (12); Others (27); Other (25)
33.5%
December 2029
Senate (Senate)
69 (46 indirectly elected; 23 appointed)
Full renewal
6 years
2/25/2025
Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) (66); Other (3)
36.2%
February 2031
Supreme Court (consists of the chief justice, 3 chamber presidents, and 12 judges or councilors and divided into 3 chambers); Supreme Council of the Judiciary (consists of the Judiciary president, vice president and 13 members)
Supreme Court chief justice selected by the president; councilors - 8 designated by the president and 7 by the speaker of the National Assembly; chief justice and councilors appointed for life; Supreme Council of the Judiciary - with the exception of the Judiciary president and vice president, members are elected for single renewable 4-year terms
High Court of Justice; Courts of Appeal; tribunals; justices of the peace
Chadian Convention for Peace and Development or CTPD Federation Action for the Republic or FAR National Rally for Development and Progress or Viva-RNDP National Union for Democracy and Renewal or UNDR Party for Unity and Reconstruction or PUR Patriotic Salvation Movement or MPS Rally for Democracy and Progress or RDP Rally of Chadian Nationalists/Awakening or RNDT/Le Reveil Social Democratic Party for a Change-over of Power or PDSA Union for Democracy and the Republic or UDR Union for Renewal and Democracy or URD Transformers
Ambassador (vacant); ChargΓ© d'Affaires ANWAR SADAT Fatahalbab (since 30 July 2025)
2401 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008
[1] (202) 652-1312
[1] (202) 578-0431
Info@chadembassy.us https://chadembassy.us/
Ambassador (vacant); ChargΓ© dβAffaires William FLENS (since July 2025)
Rond-Point Chagoua, B.P. 413, NβDjamena
2410 N'Djamena Place, Washington DC 20521-2410
[235] 6885-1065
[235] 2253-9102
NdjamenaACS@state.gov https://td.usembassy.gov/
ACP, AfDB, AU, BDEAC, CEMAC, EITI (compliant country), FAO, FZ, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICCt, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, Interpol, IOC, IOM, IPU, ITSO, ITU, ITUC (NGOs), LCBC, MIGA, MNJTF, NAM, OIC, OIF, OPCW, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNOCI, UNOOSA, UNWTO, UPU, WCO, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO
11 August 1960 (from France)
Independence Day, 11 August (1960)
Description: three equal vertical bands of blue (left side), gold, and red meaning: combines the blue and red French (former colonial) colors with the red and yellow Pan-African colors; blue stands for the sky, hope, and the south of the country; gold for the sun and the desert in the north; red for progress, unity, and sacrifice
Goat (north), lion (south)
Blue, yellow, red
"La Tchadienne" (The Chadian)
Louis GIDROL and his students/Paul VILLARD
Adopted 1960
2 (1 natural, 1 mixed)
Lakes of Ounianga (n); Ennedi Massif: Natural and Cultural Landscape (m)
πΉ Economyβ¬οΈ Top
Oil-dependent economy challenged by market fluctuations, regional instability, refugee influx, and climate vulnerability; high levels of extreme poverty and food insecurity; recent growth driven by oil and agricultural recovery; debt-restructuring agreement under G20 Common Framework
$52.895 billion (2024 est.)
$51.03 billion (2023 est.)
$49.012 billion (2022 est.)
3.7% (2024 est.)
4.1% (2023 est.)
12.9% (2022 est.)
$2,600 (2024 est.)
$2,600 (2023 est.)
$2,700 (2022 est.)
$20.626 billion (2024 est.)
8.9% (2024 est.)
10.8% (2023 est.)
5.8% (2022 est.)
32.2% (2024 est.)
29.7% (2024 est.)
31.6% (2024 est.)
61.3% (2024 est.)
8.7% (2024 est.)
14.4% (2024 est.)
3.4% (2024 est.)
28.1% (2024 est.)
-17.2% (2024 est.)
Sorghum, groundnuts, millet, beef, cereals, yams, sugarcane, maize, cassava, milk (2023)
Oil, cotton textiles, brewing, natron (sodium carbonate), soap, cigarettes, construction materials
5.1% (2024 est.)
6.6 million (2024 est.)
1.1% (2024 est.)
1.1% (2023 est.)
1.1% (2022 est.)
1.5% (2024 est.)
2.1% (2024 est.)
0.7% (2024 est.)
44.8% (2022 est.)
37.4 (2022 est.)
2.8% (2022 est.)
29.5% (2022 est.)
0% of GDP (2023 est.)
0% of GDP (2022 est.)
0% of GDP (2021 est.)
$2.129 billion (2020 est.)
$2.15 billion (2020 est.)
52.4% of GDP (2016 est.)
$5.799 billion (2024 est.)
$5.7 billion (2023 est.)
$5.658 billion (2022 est.)
UAE 26%, China 19%, Germany 17%, Netherlands 13%, France 10% (2023)
Crude petroleum, gold, oil seeds, gum resins, cotton (2023)
$3.557 billion (2024 est.)
$3.271 billion (2023 est.)
$2.898 billion (2022 est.)
China 28%, UAE 23%, Turkey 10%, France 9%, India 5% (2023)
Jewelry, broadcasting equipment, packaged medicine, cars, refined petroleum (2023)
$1.05 billion (2023 est.)
$1.013 billion (2022 est.)
$211.591 million (2021 est.)
$2.286 billion (2023 est.)
Cooperation Financiere en Afrique Centrale francs (XAF) per US dollar -
606.345 (2024 est.)
606.57 (2023 est.)
623.76 (2022 est.)
554.531 (2021 est.)
575.586 (2020 est.)
β‘ Energyβ¬οΈ Top
11.7% (2022 est.)
46.3%
1.3%
167,000 kW (2023 est.)
282.103 million kWh (2023 est.)
109.04 million kWh (2023 est.)
94.3% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
0.8% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
2.3% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
2.6% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
20 metric tons (2023 est.)
124,000 bbl/day (2023 est.)
15,000 bbl/day (2023 est.)
1.5 billion barrels (2021 est.)
1.502 million Btu/person (2023 est.)
π‘ Communicationsβ¬οΈ Top
(2024 est.) The telephone system is down. No data is available for the year 2024.
(2024 est.) The telephone system is down. No data is available for the year 2024.
14.8 million (2024 est.)
73 (2024 est.)
1 state-owned TV station; 2 privately-owned TV stations; state-owned radio network, Radiodiffusion Nationale Tchadienne (RNT), operates national and regional stations; over 10 private radio stations; some stations rebroadcast programs from international broadcasters (2017)
.td
13% (2023 est.)
0 (2022 est.)
(2022 est.) less than 1
π Transportationβ¬οΈ Top
TT
44 (2025)
π‘οΈ Military and Securityβ¬οΈ Top
Chadian National Army (Armee Nationale du Tchad, ANT): Ground Forces (l'Armee de Terre, AdT), Chadian Air Force (l'Armee de l'Air Tchadienne, AAT), Chadian National Gendarmerie; General Direction of the Security Services of State Institutions (Direction Generale des Services de Securite des Institutions de l'Etat, GDSSIE) Ministry of Public Security and Immigration: National Nomadic Guard of Chad (GNNT) (2025)
3% of GDP (2024 est.)
2.9% of GDP (2023 est.)
2.6% of GDP (2022 est.)
2.5% of GDP (2021 est.)
2.9% of GDP (2020 est.)
Estimated 35-40,000 active Chadian National Army personnel (2025)
The ANT has a mix of older, secondhand, and some more modern armaments from a variety of suppliers, including Brazil, China, France, Russia/former Soviet Union, TΓΌrkiye, Ukraine, and the UAE (2025)
18-25 for voluntary service; men subject to 18-36 months of compulsory service at age 20; women are subject to 12 months of compulsory military or civic service at age 21 (2025)
Note: Chad has committed approximately 1,000-1,500 troops to the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) against Boko Haram and other terrorist groups operating in the general area of the Lake Chad Basin and along Nigeria's northeast border; national MNJTF troop contingents are deployed within their own territories, although crossβborder operations are conducted periodically
Internal security is the primary focus of the Chadian National Army, and it is actively engaged in counterinsurgency operations against multiple terrorist and rebel groups; the terrorist groups Boko Haram and Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham in West Africa operate in the Lake Chad Basin area; meanwhile, a number of anti-government militias operate in northern Chad, some from bases in southern Libya, including the FACT (Front pour le Changement et la Concorde au Tchad), the Military Command Council for the Salvation of the Republic (le Conseil de Commandement Militaire pour le salut de la RΓ©publique or CCSMR), the Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (le Union des Forces pour la DΓ©mocratie et le DΓ©veloppement or UFDD), and the Union of Resistance Forces (le Union des Forces de la RΓ©sistance UFR); former Chadian President Idriss DEBY was killed in April 2021 during fighting between the FACT and government forces (2025)
π¨ Terrorismβ¬οΈ Top
Boko Haram; Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham - West Africa (ISIS-WA)
π Transnational Issuesβ¬οΈ Top
1,286,645 (2024 est.)
1,542,532 (2024 est.)
Tier 3 β Chad does not fully meet the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and is not making significant efforts to do so, therefore, Chad was downgraded to Tier 3; for more details, go to: https://www.state.gov/reports/2025-trafficking-in-persons-report/chad/
Source: Factbook JSON archive.