Harare
Zimbabwe
Key facts and a structured country profile. π§Ύ Change log π True Size
17,472,752 (2025 est.)
390,757 sq km
Southern Africa, between South Africa and Zambia
π§ Background
The hunter-gatherer San people first inhabited the area that eventually became Zimbabwe. Farming communities migrated to the area around A.D. 500 during the Bantu expansion, and Shona-speaking societies began to develop in the Limpopo valley and Zimbabwean highlands around the 9th century. These societies traded with Arab merchants on the Indian Ocean coast and organized under the Kingdom of Mapungubwe in the 11th century. A series of powerful trade-oriented Shona states succeeded Mapungubwe, including the Kingdom of Zimbabwe (ca. 1220-1450), Kingdom of Mutapa (ca. 1450-1760), and the Rozwi Empire. The Rozwi Empire expelled Portuguese colonists from the Zimbabwean plateau, but the Ndebele clan of Zulu King MZILIKAZI eventually conquered the area in 1838 during the era of conflict and population displacement known as the Mfecane. In the 1880s, colonists arrived with the British South Africa Company (BSAC) and obtained a written concession for mining rights from Ndebele King LOBENGULA. The king later disavowed the concession and accused the BSAC agents of deceit. The BSAC annexed Mashonaland and then conquered Matabeleland during the First Matabele War of 1893-1894, establishing company rule over the territory. In 1923, the UK annexed BSAC holdings south of the Zambezi River, which became the British colony of Southern Rhodesia. The 1930 Land Apportionment Act restricted Black land ownership and established rules that would favor the White minority for decades. A new constitution in 1961 further cemented White minority rule. In 1965, the government under White Prime Minister Ian SMITH unilaterally declared its independence from the UK. London did not recognize Rhodesiaβs independence and demanded more voting rights for the Black majority in the country. International diplomacy and an uprising by Black Zimbabweans led to biracial elections in 1979 and independence (as Zimbabwe) in 1980. Robert MUGABE, who led the uprising and became the nation's first prime minister, was the country's only ruler (as president since 1987) from independence until 2017. In the mid-1980s, the government tortured and killed thousands of civilians in a crackdown on dissent known as the Gukurahundi campaign. Economic mismanagement and chaotic implementation of land redistribution policies periodically crippled the economy. General elections in 2002, 2008, and 2013 were severely flawed and widely condemned but allowed MUGABE to remain president. In 2017, Vice President Emmerson MNANGAGWA became president after a military intervention that forced MUGABE to resign, and MNANGAGWA cemented power by sidelining rival Grace MUGABE (Robert MUGABEβs wife). In 2018, MNANGAGWA won the presidential election, and he has maintained the government's longstanding practice of violently disrupting protests and politicizing institutions. Economic conditions remain dire under MNANGAGWA.
πΊοΈ Geography
Southern Africa, between South Africa and Zambia
20 00 S, 30 00 E
Africa
390,757 sq km
386,847 sq km
3,910 sq km
About four times the size of Indiana; slightly larger than Montana
3,229 km
Botswana 834 km; Mozambique 1,402 km; South Africa 230 km; Zambia 763 km
0 km (landlocked)
None (landlocked)
Tropical; moderated by altitude; rainy season (November to March)
Mostly high plateau with higher central plateau (high veld); mountains in east
Inyangani 2,592 m
Junction of the Runde and Save Rivers 162 m
961 m
Coal, chromium ore, asbestos, gold, nickel, copper, iron ore, vanadium, lithium, tin, platinum group metals
41.8% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 10.4% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0.1% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 31.3% (2023 est.)
35.9% (2023 est.)
22.3% (2023 est.)
1,740 sq km (2012)
Zambezi (shared with Zambia [s]), Angola, Namibia, Botswana, and Mozambique [m]) - 2,740 km; Limpopo (shared with South Africa [s], Botswana, and Mozambique [m]) - 1,800 km note: [s] after country name indicates river source; [m] after country name indicates river mouth
Zambezi (1,332,412 sq km)
Okavango Basin (863,866 sq km)
Upper Kalahari-Cuvelai-Upper Zambezi Basin
Aside from major urban agglomerations in Harare and Bulawayo, population distribution is fairly even, with slightly greater overall numbers in the eastern half, as shown in this population distribution map
Recurring droughts; floods and severe storms are rare
Landlocked; the Zambezi forms a natural river boundary with Zambia; in full flood (February-April), the massive Victoria Falls on the river forms the world's largest curtain of falling water; Lake Kariba on the Zambia-Zimbabwe border forms the world's largest reservoir by volume (180 cu km; 43 cu mi)
π₯ People and Societyβ¬οΈ Top
17,472,752 (2025 est.)
8,503,108
8,969,644
Zimbabwean(s)
Zimbabwean
African 99.6% (predominantly Shona; Ndebele is the second largest ethnic group), other (includes Caucasian, Asiatic, mixed race) 0.4% (2022 est.)
Shona (official, most widely spoken) 80.9%, Ndebele (official, second most widely spoken) 11.5%, English (official, traditionally used for official business) 0.3%, 13 minority languages (official; includes Chewa, Chibarwe, Kalanga, Koisan, Nambya, Ndau, Shangani, sign language, Sotho, Tonga, Tswana, Venda, and Xhosa) 7%, other 0.3% (2022 est.)
Apostolic Sect 40.3%, Pentecostal 17%, Protestant 13.8%, other Christian 7.8%, Roman Catholic 6.4%, African traditionalist 5%, other 1.5% (includes Muslim, Jewish, Hindu), none 8.3% (2022 est.)
38.3% (male 3,315,075/female 3,254,643)
57.8% (male 4,758,120/female 5,152,773)
3.9% (2024 est.) (male 270,595/female 399,146)
72.3 (2025 est.)
65.5 (2025 est.)
6.8 (2025 est.)
14.7 (2025 est.)
21.3 years (2025 est.)
20.3 years
22 years
1.82% (2025 est.)
28.18 births/1,000 population (2025 est.)
6.4 deaths/1,000 population (2025 est.)
-3.58 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2025 est.)
Aside from major urban agglomerations in Harare and Bulawayo, population distribution is fairly even, with slightly greater overall numbers in the eastern half, as shown in this population distribution map
32.5% of total population (2023)
2.41% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
1.578 million HARARE (capital) (2023)
1.03 male(s)/female
1.02 male(s)/female
0.92 male(s)/female
0.68 male(s)/female
0.95 male(s)/female (2024 est.)
20.3 years (2015 est.)
358 deaths/100,000 live births (2023 est.)
32.8 deaths/1,000 live births (2025 est.)
37 deaths/1,000 live births
29.6 deaths/1,000 live births
67.2 years (2024 est.)
65.6 years
68.8 years
3.42 children born/woman (2025 est.)
1.68 (2025 est.)
Urban: 92.8% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 47.7% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 62.3% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 7.2% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 52.3% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 37.7% of population (2022 est.)
2.8% of GDP (2021)
5.2% of national budget (2022 est.)
0.14 physicians/1,000 population (2023)
Urban: 97.5% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 50.3% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 65.6% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 2.5% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 49.7% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 34.4% of population (2022 est.)
15.5% (2016)
3.11 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
1.2 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.05 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.39 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
1.47 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
8.4% (2025 est.)
17.6% (2025 est.)
0.7% (2025 est.)
9.6% (2024 est.)
62.2% (2022 est.)
5.4% (2019)
33.7% (2019)
1.9% (2019)
0.4% of GDP (2023 est.)
17.9% national budget (2025 est.)
93.2% (2019 est.)
93.1% (2019 est.)
93.4% (2019 est.)
πΏ Environmentβ¬οΈ Top
Deforestation; soil erosion; land degradation; air and water pollution; poaching; toxic waste and heavy metal pollution from mining
Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Ozone Layer Protection, Wetlands
None of the selected agreements
Tropical; moderated by altitude; rainy season (November to March)
41.8% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 10.4% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0.1% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 31.3% (2023 est.)
35.9% (2023 est.)
22.3% (2023 est.)
32.5% of total population (2023)
2.41% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
12.578 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
7.629 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
4.949 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
14.5 micrograms per cubic meter (2019 est.)
1.45 million tons (2024 est.)
21.8% (2022 est.)
547.078 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
81.352 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
4.281 billion cubic meters (2022 est.)
20 billion cubic meters (2022 est.)
ποΈ Governmentβ¬οΈ Top
Republic of Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe
Southern Rhodesia, Rhodesia, Zimbabwe-Rhodesia
Takes its name from the Kingdom of Zimbabwe (13th-15th century) and its capital of Great Zimbabwe, which was built of stone; the name Zimbabwe comes from the Bantu phrase zimba we bahwe, meaning "houses of stones;" the former name, Rhodesia, was derived from the name of British colonial administrator Cecil RHODES
Presidential republic
Harare
17 49 S, 31 02 E
UTC+2 (7 hours ahead of Washington, DC, during Standard Time)
Named after a village of Harare at the site of the present capital; the village name derived from a Shona chieftain, NE-HARAWA, whose name meant "he who does not sleep"
8 provinces and 2 cities* with provincial status; Bulawayo*, Harare*, Manicaland, Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, Masvingo, Matabeleland North, Matabeleland South, Midlands
Mixed system of English common law, Roman-Dutch civil law, and customary law
Previous 1965 (at Rhodesian independence), 1979 (Lancaster House Agreement), 1980 (at Zimbabwean independence); latest final draft completed January 2013, approved by referendum 16 March 2013, approved by Parliament 9 May 2013, effective 22 May 2013
Proposed by the Senate or by the National Assembly; passage requires two-thirds majority vote by the membership of both houses of Parliament and assent of the president of the republic; amendments to constitutional chapters on fundamental human rights and freedoms and on agricultural lands also require approval by a majority of votes cast in a referendum
Has not submitted an ICJ jurisdiction declaration; non-party state to the ICCt
No
The father must be a citizen of Zimbabwe; in the case of a child born out of wedlock, the mother must be a citizen
No
5 years
18 years of age; universal
President Emmerson Dambudzo MNANGAGWA (since 4 September 2023)
Vice President Constantino CHIWENGA (since 11 September 2023)
Cabinet appointed by president, responsible to National Assembly
Each presidential candidate nominated with a nomination paper signed by at least 10 registered voters (at least 1 candidate from each province) and directly elected by absolute-majority popular vote in 2 rounds, if needed, for a 5-year term (no term limits); co-vice presidents drawn from party leadership
23 August 2023
2023: Emmerson MNANGAGWA reelected president in first round; percent of vote - Emmerson MNANGAGWA (ZANU-PF) 52.6%, Nelson CHAMISA (MDC-T) 44%, Wilbert MUBAIWA (NPC) 1.2%, other 2.2% 2018: Emmerson MNANGAGWA elected president in first round; percent of vote - Emmerson MNANGAGWA (ZANU-PF) 50.7%, Nelson CHAMISA (MDC-T) 44.4%, Thokozani KHUPE (MDC-N) 0.9%, other 4%
2028
Parliament
Bicameral
National Assembly
280 (all directly elected)
Mixed system
Full renewal
5 years
45161
ZANU-PF (175); Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) (104)
30.1%
August 2028
Senate
80 (60 directly elected; 20 indirectly elected)
Proportional representation
Full renewal
5 years
45161
ZANU-PF (33); Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) (27)
44.3%
August 2028
Supreme Court (consists of the chief justice and 4 judges); Constitutional Court (consists of the chief and deputy chief justices and 9 judges)
Supreme Court judges appointed by the president on recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission, an independent body consisting of the chief justice, Public Service Commission chairman, attorney general, and 2-3 members appointed by the president; judges normally serve until age 65 but can elect to serve until age 70; Constitutional Court judge appointment NA; judges serve nonrenewable 15-year terms
High Court; Labor Court; Administrative Court; regional magistrate courts; customary law courts; special courts
Citizens Coalition for Change Movement for Democratic Change or MDC-T National People's Congress or NPC Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front or ZANU-PF Zimbabwe African Peoples Union or ZAPU
Ambassador (vacant); ChargΓ© d'Affaires Sarah BHOROMA (since 12 November 2024)
1608 New Hampshire Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20009
[1] (202) 332-7100
[1] (202) 483-9326
General@zimembassydc.org https://zimembassydc.org/
Ambassador Pamela M. TREMONT (since August 2024)
2 Lorraine Drive, Bluffhill, Harare
2180 Harare Place, Washington DC 20521-2180
[263] 867-701-1000
[263] 24-233-4320
Consularharare@state.gov https://zw.usembassy.gov/
ACP, AfDB, ATMIS, AU, COMESA, FAO, G-15, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICRM, IDA, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Interpol, IOC, IOM, IPU, ISO, ITSO, ITU, ITUC (NGOs), MIGA, NAM, OPCW, PCA, SADC, UN, UNAMID, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNISFA, UNMIL, UNMISS, UNOCI, UNSOM, UNWTO, UPU, WCO, WFTU (NGOs), WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO
18 April 1980 (from the UK)
Independence Day, 18 April (1980)
Description: seven equal horizontal bands of green (top), yellow, red, black, red, yellow, and green, with a white isosceles triangle edged in black based on the left side; in the middle of the triangle, a yellow bird is on top of a five-pointed red star meaning: the bird represents the long history of the country; white stands for peace, green for agriculture, yellow for mineral wealth, red for the blood shed to achieve independence, and black for the people
Zimbabwe bird symbol, African fish eagle, flame lily
Green, yellow, red, black, white
"Kalibusiswe Ilizwe leZimbabwe" [Ndebele] "Simudzai Mureza WeZimbabwe" [Shona] (Blessed Be the Land of Zimbabwe)
Solomon MUTSWAIRO/Fred Lecture CHANGUNDEGA
Adopted 1994; lyrics in the country's three main languages were written by Zimbabwean poet and academic MUTSWAIRO
5 (3 cultural, 2 natural)
Mana Pools National Park, Sapi, and Chewore Safari Areas (n); Great Zimbabwe National Monument (c); Khami Ruins National Monument (c); Mosi-oa-Tunya/Victoria Falls (n); Matobo Hills (c)
πΉ Economyβ¬οΈ Top
Low income Sub-Saharan economy; political instability and endemic corruption have prevented reforms and stalled debt restructuring; new Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency latest effort to combat ongoing hyperinflation; reliant on natural resource extraction, agriculture and remittances
$57.391 billion (2024 est.)
$56.249 billion (2023 est.)
$53.399 billion (2022 est.)
2% (2024 est.)
5.3% (2023 est.)
6.1% (2022 est.)
$3,500 (2024 est.)
$3,400 (2023 est.)
$3,300 (2022 est.)
$44.188 billion (2024 est.)
104.7% (2022 est.)
98.5% (2021 est.)
557.2% (2020 est.)
5.4% (2024 est.)
31.8% (2024 est.)
55.8% (2024 est.)
91.5% (2024 est.)
12.5% (2024 est.)
3.6% (2024 est.)
0.9% (2024 est.)
22.1% (2024 est.)
-30.6% (2024 est.)
Sugarcane, beef, maize, cabbages, potatoes, tomatoes, milk, onions, bananas, wheat (2023)
Mining (coal, gold, platinum, copper, nickel, tin, diamonds, clay, numerous metallic and nonmetallic ores), steel, wood products, cement, chemicals, fertilizer, clothing and footwear, foodstuffs, beverages
2.7% (2024 est.)
6.386 million (2024 est.)
8.6% (2024 est.)
8.8% (2023 est.)
10.1% (2022 est.)
14% (2024 est.)
12.9% (2024 est.)
15.4% (2024 est.)
38.3% (2019 est.)
50.3 (2020 est.)
2.5% (2017 est.)
34.8% (2017 est.)
9.4% of GDP (2023 est.)
9.4% of GDP (2022 est.)
9.4% of GDP (2021 est.)
$17 million (2018 est.)
$23 million (2018 est.)
69.9% of GDP (2016 est.)
7.2% (of GDP) (2018 est.)
$133.877 million (2023 est.)
$304.966 million (2022 est.)
$348.215 million (2021 est.)
$7.603 billion (2023 est.)
$7.453 billion (2022 est.)
$6.575 billion (2021 est.)
UAE 45%, China 18%, South Africa 15%, Mozambique 4%, Hong Kong 2% (2023)
Gold, tobacco, nickel, minerals, diamonds (2023)
$10.293 billion (2023 est.)
$9.569 billion (2022 est.)
$8.104 billion (2021 est.)
South Africa 37%, China 15%, Bahamas, The 5%, Singapore 5%, UAE 4% (2023)
Refined petroleum, fertilizers, trucks, soybean oil, stone processing machines (2023)
$484.973 million (2024 est.)
$115.53 million (2023 est.)
$598.622 million (2022 est.)
$6.671 billion (2023 est.)
Zimbabwean dollars (ZWD) per US dollar -
3,266.332 (2024 est.)
3,509.172 (2023 est.)
374.954 (2022 est.)
88.552 (2021 est.)
51.329 (2020 est.)
β‘ Energyβ¬οΈ Top
50.1% (2022 est.)
89%
33.7%
2.491 million kW (2023 est.)
8.346 billion kWh (2023 est.)
395 million kWh (2023 est.)
2.297 billion kWh (2023 est.)
1.864 billion kWh (2023 est.)
32.5% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
0.4% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
65.7% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
1.5% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
7.968 million metric tons (2023 est.)
6.705 million metric tons (2023 est.)
984,000 metric tons (2023 est.)
71,000 metric tons (2023 est.)
502 million metric tons (2023 est.)
800 bbl/day (2023 est.)
34,000 bbl/day (2023 est.)
10.855 million Btu/person (2023 est.)
π‘ Communicationsβ¬οΈ Top
310,000 (2023 est.)
2 (2023 est.)
15.7 million (2024 est.)
94 (2024 est.)
Government owns all local radio and TV stations; foreign shortwave broadcasts and satellite TV available; in rural areas, access to TV broadcasts is extremely limited; analog TV only, no digital service (2017)
.zw
38% (2023 est.)
269,000 (2023 est.)
2 (2023 est.)
π Transportationβ¬οΈ Top
Z
144 (2025)
5 (2025)
3,427 km (2014)
3,427 km (2014) 1.067-m gauge (313 km electrified)
π‘οΈ Military and Securityβ¬οΈ Top
Zimbabwe Defense Forces (ZDF): Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA), Air Force of Zimbabwe (AFZ) Ministry of Home Affairs: Zimbabwe Republic Police (2025)
0.4% of GDP (2024 est.)
0.3% of GDP (2023 est.)
0.9% of GDP (2022 est.)
1.4% of GDP (2021 est.)
1% of GDP (2020 est.)
Approximately 30,000 active Zimbabwe Defense Forces (2025)
The ZDF inventory is comprised mostly of Russian/Soviet-era and Chinese armaments with smaller quantities of older or obsolescent material from countries such as Brazil, France, Italy, South Africa, the UK, and the US (2025)
18-22 years of age for voluntary military service for men and women (enlisted personnel); 18-24 for officer cadets; 18-30 for technical/specialist personnel; no conscription (2025)
The primary responsibilities of the Zimbabwe Defense Forces (ZDF) are protecting the countryβs sovereignty and territory and securing its borders; it also has a role in domestic security and socio-economic development projects and has continued to be active in the countryβs politics since the 2017 military-assisted political transition; the ZDF is part of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) Standby Force and provided troops for the SADC military deployment to Mozambique from 2021-2024; Zimbabwe has defense ties with China and Russia the ZDF was formed after independence from the former Rhodesian Army and the two guerrilla forces that opposed it during the Rhodesian Civil War (aka "Bush War") of the 1970s, the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA) and the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA); the ZDF intervened in the Mozambique Civil War (1983-1992), the Democratic Republic of Congo during the Second Congo War (1998-2003), and the Angolan Civil War (1975-2002) during the late 1990s (2025)
π°οΈ Spaceβ¬οΈ Top
Zimbabwe National Geospatial and Space Agency (ZINGSA; established in 2019 and officially launched in 2021) (2025)
Has a nascent program with the goal of using space technologies in economic development, including remote sensing capabilities to assist with monitoring or managing agriculture, food security, climate change, disease outbreaks, environmental hazards and disasters, and natural resources, as well as weather forecasting; has cooperated with Japan and Russia (2025)
2020 - began a program (BIRDS-5) sponsored by Japan to promote the development of a domestic space program by designing, building, testing, launching, and operating the first satellites for participating countries 2021 - established satellite ground communications station and completed national wetlands mapping project 2022 - first nano-sized remote sensing/educational satellite (ZIMSAT-1) built with Japanβs assistance and launched by Japan under the BIRDs-5 program 2024 - second RS satellite (ZIMSAT-2) built with Russian assistance and launched by Russia
π Transnational Issuesβ¬οΈ Top
22,432 (2024 est.)
32,675 (2024 est.)
Tier 2 Watch List β the government did not demonstrate overall increasing efforts to eliminate trafficking compared with the previous reporting period, therefore Zimbabwe remained on Tier 2 Watch List for the second consecutive year; for more details, go to: https://www.state.gov/reports/2025-trafficking-in-persons-report/zimbabwe/
Source: Factbook JSON archive.