Data InsightsTobacco use in India has halved this century

Tobacco use in India has halved this century

Line chart of the estimated share of people aged 15 years and older in India who currently use tobacco where overall use fell substantially this century — about 50% to 24% for any tobacco (including chewed tobacco) and about 19% to 10% for smoking between 2000 and 2022. Source: WHO — Global Health Observatory (2026). License: CC BY.

At the turn of the millennium, one-in-five adults in India smoked tobacco, and almost half of all adults were using any form of tobacco, including products that are chewed or sniffed.

But over the past two decades, rates of both have roughly halved. You can see this in the chart.

Some countries have seen a decline in smoking among men, but a rise among women. This is not the case in India: tobacco use has fallen substantially for both sexes.

This decline has huge implications. Each year, smoking causes almost one million Indians to die earlier than they otherwise would. Since smoking-related diseases can take decades to develop, this recent decline in smoking rates will result in fewer deaths in the future.

Smokeless tobacco tends to have lower health risks because people are not inhaling smoke. But it still increases the risk of oral, throat, and esophageal cancers, gum disease, and other conditions.

Read my colleague Max Roser’s article on the scale of the global smoking problem, and how we make progress against it

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