French Overtakes Arabic as World’s Fourth Most Spoken Language, Driven by African Growth
French has surged past Arabic to become the fourth most widely spoken language globally, according to a new report by the International Organisation of Francophonie (OIF). With 396 million speakers projected by 2025—compared to Arabic’s 335 million—French now trails only English, Mandarin Chinese, and Spanish in global usage.
The findings, released ahead of International Francophonie Day on March 20, highlight Africa’s pivotal role in the language’s expansion. A staggering 65% of French speakers now reside on the continent, far outpacing France itself, which accounts for just 66 million native speakers.
Africa: The New Epicenter of French
The Democratic Republic of Congo leads with over 57 million French speakers, followed by Algeria (15 million) and Morocco (14 million). As Europe’s population declines, Africa’s dominance is expected to grow even stronger. By 2050, an estimated 590 million people will speak French—90% of them in Africa, according to OIF Secretary-General Louise Mushikiwabo.
“The future of French will no longer be shaped in Paris,” Mushikiwabo writes, “but in cities like Abidjan, Kinshasa, and Dakar.”
A Language of Learners, Not Just Native Speakers
Unlike Mandarin or Spanish, French thrives largely as a second language. Only about 90 million people speak it natively, while nearly 170 million are actively learning it—making it the world’s second most studied language after English.
Despite its diplomatic and cultural prestige, French faces challenges in science, technology, and higher education, where English dominates. Online, French makes up just 3.5% of content, comparable to Arabic and Portuguese but dwarfed by English’s 20% share.
Counting Controversy
The OIF’s latest figures include children as young as six, a methodological shift that boosted totals. Under the old counting system (starting at age 10), French would have 348 million speakers today—still ahead of Arabic but behind Spanish (559 million), Mandarin (1.2 billion), and English (1.5 billion).
A Language on the Rise
French has steadily expanded its reach, growing from 220 million speakers in 2010 to 321 million in 2022. Its resilience underscores the cultural and economic influence of Francophone nations, particularly in fast-growing African economies.
As demographics shift, the language’s identity is evolving—less tied to its European roots and increasingly shaped by its vibrant, multilingual speakers across the Global South.
— Reported by Nexio News
