How many ants would it take to lift the world?

The next time an inquisitive four-year-old asks how many ants there are on Earth, you can be ready to fire back a specific number. Researchers in Germany have scoured the scientific literature to come up with an answer to that question, as well as the inevitable follow-up – how much do they all weigh combined?

The scientists, from Julius Maximilians University (JMU), say they started the study because there hadn’t been a reliable estimate of the total number of ants on the planet, or how common they were in different habitats. So the team took on the momentous task of counting up these industrious little insects themselves.

It wasn’t just a matter of taking an abacus around to every anthill on the planet. Instead, they consulted 489 scientific studies discussing the matter, covering all continents and habitats, and from that data they calculated what they say is a conservative empirical estimate.

According to the team, there are almost 20 quadrillion ants on Earth right now. That’s a 20 followed by 15 zeroes, which is a number that’s hard to really get your head around. Put it this way – there are 2,000 times more ants on Earth than there are stars in our galaxy.

The team went a step further and estimated how much all these ants would weigh together – about 12 million tons. That’s more than the total mass of all wild birds and mammals combined (except us humans). Conclusion: that’s a hell of a lot of ants.

So how are they spread across the planet? As might be expected, the researchers found that ants are concentrated at the tropics, with forests and deserts housing higher amounts and urban environments having less. Polar regions are essentially ant-free.

It may sound a bit frivolous, but this study wasn’t just a matter of satisfying the curious kid in us all. The team says that since ants play such an outsized role in their ecosystems, it’s important to understand their distribution and how they might be affected by climate change.

"Per hectare, ants move up to 13 tons of soil mass per year," said Patrick Schultheiss, co-lead author of the study. “So they have a great influence on maintaining the nutrient cycle and also play a decisive role in the distribution of plant seeds.”

The research was published in the journal PNAS.

Source: JMU

How Many Ants are There in The World?

20 quadrillion ants live on earth. In 2022 ant researchers (also known as entomologists) at Julius Maximilians University gathered averaging current data and did the math. Considering ants live everywhere except the north and south poles, this isn’t a hard number to believe. Considering how many ants get into houses, it’s a number that explains the unending arguments between man and ant.

How many ants would it take to lift the world?

The not surprising piece of data, ants love the tropics most. They prefer forests and arid places. They dislike humans. The more humans, the fewer ants. I find this suspect considering, again, the number of ants that want to live in my house.

Other Ant Facts for Future Entomologists.

  • Ants are smart.
  • Ants do math instinctively to build bridges, hills, homes, and maps leading to food sources.

How many ants would it take to lift the world?


  • Ants waste no energy in their work. Efficiency is an ant thing.
  • Ants are strong. How many ants would it take to lift a human? Good question. One ant can lift one milligram. One average human weighing one-hundred-and-fifty-pounds, is 68,038,855.5 milligrams. That’s how many ants will be called up for duty the day ants decide lifting a human is a good idea. That .5, half an ant, is an awkward thought. But there it is in cold hard math.
  • Ant cooperation is hive mind, yielding immediate change to group goals at any intervention.

How many ants would it take to lift the world?


  • Ants are survivors. I know this because of the ants surrounding my house kicking the front door wanting in.

Ants are also an incredible entomology STEM project for junior researchers. Since there’s 20 quadrillion ants in the world, there are plenty of ants to go around.

How many ants would it take to lift the world?

Kathy LaFollett

October 05, 2022

Kathy LaFollett is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.