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Ranked: The Animals That Kill the Most Humans
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Key Takeaways
- Mosquitoes kill an estimated 760,000 people each year, more than any other animal.
- Humans rank second due to homicide, followed by snakes at roughly 100,000 deaths annually.
- Most of the deadliest animals spread disease rather than killing through direct attacks.
Most people fear sharks, lions, or wolves. But the animals responsible for the most human deaths are far smaller and far more common.
Using data from Our World in Data, this visualization ranks the world’s deadliest animals by estimated annual human deaths, revealing that small disease-carrying creatures kill far more people than large predators.
The Deadliest Animals by Human Deaths
Mosquitoes are responsible for an estimated 760,000 deaths each year by spreading diseases such as malaria, dengue, and yellow fever.
According to the World Health Organization, malaria alone caused roughly 600,000 deaths in 2022, with the heaviest burden falling on African countries including Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
| Rank | Animal | Estimated Human Deaths per Year | Primary Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mosquitoes | 760,000 | Disease (malaria, dengue, yellow fever) |
| 2 | Humans | 600,000 | Homicide |
| 3 | Snakes | 100,000 | Venomous bites |
| 4 | Dogs | 40,000 | Rabies |
| 5 | Freshwater snails | 14,000 | Schistosomiasis |
| 6 | Kissing bugs | 8,000 | Chagas disease |
| 7 | Sandflies | 5,000 | Leishmaniasis |
| 8 | Roundworms | 4,000 | Ascariasis |
| 9 | Scorpions | 3,000 | Venomous stings |
| 10 | Tapeworms | 2,000 | Cysticercosis |
Human-caused deaths come in second, driven by hundreds of thousands of homicides each year. Far behind, snakes cause an estimated 100,000 deaths annually from species like the king cobra to Australia’s tiger snake.
Even dogs, among the most familiar animals, are linked to around 40,000 deaths annually due to rabies, a largely preventable disease that persists in regions with limited access to vaccines.
Freshwater snails, sandflies, and kissing bugs also spread deadly diseases, disproportionately affecting lower-income regions with limited healthcare access. These organisms transmit illnesses like schistosomiasis, leishmaniasis, and Chagas disease, which are often preventable or treatable but still remain deadly without adequate medicine.
Diseases Drive the Deadliest Threats
Contrary to popular perception, larger animals are far less deadly than smaller ones. Even dangerous creatures like scorpions and snakes are overshadowed by pathogens carried by insects and parasites.
The ranking highlights a counterintuitive reality: humanity’s deadliest animals are rarely large predators. Instead, the biggest threats are species that spread infectious disease, especially in regions with limited healthcare access and mosquito control infrastructure.
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To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the leading causes of death in America.