IMDB Origins
IMDB started as a "actresses with beautiful eyes" list on Usenet in 1990, before becoming the movie database we know today.
0
0
active websites
Here's what our growth model calculates — by the day, hour, minute, and second.
New websites per day
0
websites added to the internet every 24 hours
Per Hour
0
New sites go live each hour, around the clock.
Per Minute
0
Fresh domains launch every single minute.
Per Second
0
The internet’s pace, measured per second.
While You Read
0+
Estimated new sites since you started reading.
This yearly benchmark shows how large the online audience is when we talk about website growth.
6.00B
People Online (2025)
In 2025, about 6.0 billion people were online worldwide.
74%
Population Online (2025)
In 2025, about 74% of the world's population was online. That was up from 5,800,000,000 people online in 2024.
Based on the ITU yearly benchmark for 2025.
English still leads the web, but it now accounts for less than half of all websites rather than an overwhelming majority.
Current language-share benchmark.
Most Popular
English
Dominates the web as the primary language for websites worldwide
49.5%
of all websites
Spanish
6%
German
6%
Japanese
5%
French
4.5%
While over 7,000 living languages exist worldwide, less than 200 languages have a digital presence on the Internet
WordPress remains the most widely used content management system, while a few other platforms account for much of the next tier.
Current CMS-share benchmark.
42.4%
of all websites use WordPress
Making it the world's most popular content management system
59.8%
Known CMS Websites
share among websites where the CMS is known
5.1%
Shopify
share of all websites
4.3%
Wix
share of all websites
2.5%
Squarespace
share of all websites
Why WordPress Stays So Popular
WordPress became popular early and never really lost its momentum. Millions of websites already run on it, which means there are countless developers, agencies, tutorials, plugins, and themes built around the same system. For many people, that makes WordPress the safest option: it is affordable, flexible, easy to customize, and proven across blogs, business websites, media sites, and online stores. Once a platform reaches that kind of scale, it becomes hard to replace because so much of the web is already built on top of it.
How AI Is Changing This
AI is making website creation easier for people who would never have touched WordPress before. A founder can now build a simple landing page, a marketer can launch a campaign page, and a solo creator can spin up a lightweight app with newer AI-first tools in far less time. That is important because it gives new websites more ways to be created outside the traditional WordPress path. At the same time, WordPress is not standing still. It is also gaining AI features, which helps it stay useful for its huge existing base. So AI is likely to chip away at WordPress share gradually by changing how new websites get built, rather than causing a sudden collapse.
Chapter 1
Discover the total count of websites worldwide and what it means for the digital landscape.
How many websites are on the Internet?
While the exact number of websites keeps changing every second, there are well over 1.4 billion sites on the world wide web (1,419,977,535 according to the latest available data, compared to 1,180,650,484 in February 2025).
The milestone of 1 billion websites was reached in September 2014 followed by a bounce back to under 1 billion for one and half years.
The total number of websites on the Internet reached 1 billion again only in March 2016.
Today this number continues to change as you read this article.
Historical growth of websites since 2008, showing January snapshots by year with total websites, active websites, and active share.
| Year | All Websites | Active Websites | Active % |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 2026 | 1,376,952,390 | 207,532,573 | 15.07% |
| January 2025 | 1,161,445,625 | 194,973,562 | 16.79% |
| January 2024 | 1,079,154,539 | 192,375,760 | 17.83% |
| January 2023 | 1,073,166,232 | 198,834,218 | 18.52% |
| January 2022 | 1,036,099,382 | 197,220,000 | 19.04% |
| January 2021 | 1,025,456,000 | 187,637,000 | 18.3% |
| January 2020 | 1,030,111,000 | 189,021,000 | 18.35% |
| January 2019 | 1,038,563,000 | 192,980,000 | 18.58% |
| January 2018 | 1,060,403,000 | 195,540,000 | 18.44% |
| January 2017 | 1,064,660,000 | 174,791,000 | 16.42% |
| January 2016 | 966,811,000 | 170,047,000 | 17.59% |
| January 2015 | 860,926,000 | 167,659,000 | 19.47% |
| January 2014 | 860,467,000 | 180,468,000 | 20.98% |
| January 2013 | 672,985,000 | 182,499,000 | 27.12% |
| January 2012 | 646,987,000 | 155,190,000 | 23.99% |
| January 2011 | 547,211,000 | 255,810,000 | 46.76% |
| January 2010 | 255,839,000 | 205,691,000 | 80.4% |
| January 2009 | 238,027,000 | 185,300,000 | 77.86% |
| January 2008 | 173,123,000 | 75,959,000 | 43.88% |
Source: Netcraft Web Server Survey
Websites Milestone
The milestone of 1 billion websites was reached in September 2014
Path to 1 billion websites
Web scale crossed a new threshold
Reached in
Growth milestones
First billion mark
IMDB started as a "actresses with beautiful eyes" list on Usenet in 1990, before becoming the movie database we know today.
There's a website and app called Run & Pee that tells you the best time to take a bathroom break during movies without missing important scenes.
The internet is a phenomenon that has made our lives so much easier. Today, there is an infinite number of different online tools for every need you can imagine!
Chapter 2
Learn the difference between total and active websites, and why it matters.
Although there are over a billion websites out there, not all of them are active.
Only about 15% of all websites in the world are active and being used in some fashion.
The remaining 85% of all websites are not active. Instead, most of them are parked domains or have a similar function.
As of February 2026, there are 208,211,331 active websites and 1,211,766,204 inactive websites in the World.
In other words, the total number of active websites is almost 6x less than the total number of inactive websites.
More Inactive Sites
Inactive sites outnumber active 6:1
Active vs Inactive Websites
Distribution of active and inactive websites worldwide
Hover a share to isolate it
Years of Continuous Data
Tracking active vs. inactive websites since 2015.
One of the web's most stable website benchmarks.
Chapter 3
Explore the vast number of individual pages that make up the internet.
Okay, we already know how many websites are on the Internet. Now, what about the web pages?
How many pages are on the Internet?
As you probably know, a webpage is something different from a website.
Web pages are compound parts of websites and sites usually consist of one or more web pages.
Currently, the absolute number of all existing web pages on the Internet is unknown.
The newest public indexed-page benchmark currently stands at at least 3.98 billion indexed pages as of January 15, 2025.
That figure is not a count of all pages on the web. It is a benchmark for publicly indexed pages, which is why it sits below the broader number of pages that likely exist online.
In other words, a website count and an indexed-page count are related, but they are not the same thing.
Latest public indexed-page benchmark (January 15, 2025)
Chapter 4
Understand domain registration trends and the most popular extensions.
The latest Verisign Domain Name Industry Brief reports approximately 386.9 million domain name registrations worldwide as of Q4 2025.
A domain name is the URL (Uniform Resource Locator) or simply the address of a website.
All those millions of individuals, businesses, and organizations own domain names to provide the general public easy access to their web resources.
So, how many domains are there on the Internet?
There is no precise number of all active domain names out there. This figure is ever-changing.
However, we do know that the latest quarterly benchmark stands at roughly 386.9 million registrations worldwide.
What is a Top-Level Domain (TLD)?
A domain name usually has two parts: a top-level domain (TLD) and a second-level domain (SLD). For example, in the URL www.siteefy.com TLD is .com and SLD is siteefy.
TLD is the part of the domain that is right from the dot. SLD is the other part of it that is left from the dot.
There are two main types of TLDs. One is generic while the other refers to the country.
Typical generic TLDs include .com, .biz, .org, .net, and so on.
A country-specific domain name is usually two letters that refer to a specific country such as .au for Australia. Alternatively, it can be made of two parts like co.uk for the United Kingdom.
The TLD market itself keeps changing as domains grow, shrink, launch, and retire over time.
Historical TLD registration context kept in the article to show how the domain market is distributed.
| TLD | Registered Domains |
|---|---|
| .cn (China) | 18.0 million |
| .de (Germany) | 17.4 million |
| .net | 13.2 million |
| .uk (United Kingdom) | 11.1 million |
| .org | 10.7 million |
| .nl (Netherlands) | 6.3 million |
| .ru (Russia) | 5.6 million |
| .br (Brazil) | 5.0 million |
| .au (Australia) | 4.2 million |
Source: Older domain-registration benchmark retained as dated context
Historical provider-market snapshot retained for context rather than presented as a live current table.
| Service Provider | Market Share |
|---|---|
| GoDaddy | 47.53% |
| Cloudflare DNS | 17.49% |
| Google Domains | 4.16% |
| Google Cloud DNS | 4.16% |
| Amazon | 4.11% |
| NS1 | 3.88% |
| Network Solutions | 3.47% |
| OVH Domains | 3.18% |
| DNS.com | 1.47% |
| Enom DNS Hosting | 1.29% |
Source: Datanyze (historical benchmark)
Symbolics.com was registered on March 15, 1985, making it the first .com domain ever registered. The company sold for $7.5M in 2009.
Older TLD registration benchmark retained for context rather than presented as a live current chart.
Chapter 5
See the incredible pace at which new websites come online.
As per our calculations, approximately 491 websites are added to the web every minute on a net basis. That works out to around 707,372 websites added per day worldwide.
In the absence of any reliable live creation data, the best thing we can do here is to produce a defensible estimate from the broader website-count trend.
For the purposes of this section, we have measured the change in the total number of websites worldwide and found out that the web has been growing by approximately 491 websites per minute on a smoothed net basis.
This means that every 24 hours we get an increase of roughly 707,372 websites in the total number of websites worldwide.
Approximately 491 every minute on a net basis
Chapter 6
A current look at website hosting locations by country.
There is no single perfect live count for websites by country because ownership, management, audience, and hosting can all point to different places.
That is why the clearest current benchmark on this page is server location.
As of March 23, 2026, the United States is used by 33.6% of websites whose server location is known.
That puts the US well ahead of the next-largest hosting location, Germany, at 14.0%.
This does not mean those websites are all American businesses. It means the US is the most common server location in the current benchmark, and a single website may use more than one server location.
Current benchmark showing how websites are distributed by server location, used here as the best live proxy for the U.S. web footprint.
| Country | Share |
|---|---|
| United States | 33.6% |
| Germany | 14% |
| Japan | 6.1% |
| France | 5.3% |
| Netherlands | 3.9% |
| Russian Federation | 3.5% |
| United Kingdom | 2.9% |
| Italy | 2.5% |
| Brazil | 2.1% |
| India | 2.1% |
Source: W3Techs Server Locations
Share of websites with a known server location
Next-largest hosting location in the same benchmark
Chapter 7
A current yearly look at how many websites are built to work well on phones.
There is no single perfect live count for "mobile-friendly websites" because a site can work well on phones in different ways.
The clearest current benchmark is whether pages are built to fit phone screens properly and keep text easy to read.
In the latest yearly benchmark (2025), 95.2% of mobile pages were built to fit phone screens properly.
In the same benchmark, 92.1% of mobile home pages and 92.9% of mobile inner pages used text that was easy to read on a phone.
That suggests mobile-friendly basics are now standard across most of the web, even though some websites still feel much better on mobile than others.
Mobile pages designed to display properly on phones
Mobile inner pages with text that is easy to read on phones
Chapter 8
What we can and cannot measure about Google's view of the web.
There is no official public number for how many websites are in Google's index.
That is partly because search engines focus on individual web pages, not on websites as a whole.
The newest public benchmark we can point to currently stands at at least 3.98 billion indexed pages as of January 15, 2025.
That benchmark is useful, but it is not the same thing as a website count, and it is not an exact live count of everything Google knows about.
So the honest answer is that Google's exact page and website totals are not publicly known.
Latest public indexed-page benchmark (January 15, 2025)
Chapter 9
A current monthly snapshot of the most visited websites by traffic.
What is the most popular website in the world?
google.com is ranked #1 in the latest worldwide traffic snapshot (February 2026).
The current global top five are google.com, youtube.com, facebook.com, instagram.com, and chatgpt.com.
This chapter now focuses on the worldwide ranking because that is the part of the benchmark we can source directly and refresh cleanly every month.
These rankings are monthly traffic snapshots, so they show who is leading right now rather than claiming the order never changes.
Current monthly traffic snapshot for the worldwide web.
| Rank | Website | Visits | Pages / Visit | Bounce Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | google.com | 88,460,065,425 | 5.53 | 37.02% |
| 2 | youtube.com | 45,068,713,468 | 9.43 | 30.28% |
| 3 | facebook.com | 8,223,710,674 | 8.0 | 45.86% |
| 4 | instagram.com | 5,320,502,486 | 9.23 | 49.06% |
| 5 | chatgpt.com | 5,194,915,553 | 3.96 | 37.88% |
| 6 | reddit.com | 4,451,904,136 | 3.51 | 59.09% |
| 7 | wikipedia.org | 3,772,950,164 | 3.26 | 58.36% |
| 8 | pornhub.com | 3,342,914,099 | 7.59 | 23.88% |
| 9 | x.com | 3,284,472,016 | 9.45 | 46.25% |
| 10 | whatsapp.com | 2,486,282,964 | 5.15 | 57.33% |
Source: Semrush Top Websites
#1 worldwide in the latest monthly traffic snapshot (February 2026)
Google founders tried to sell the company to Excite for $1 million in 1999, but were rejected. Today Google is worth over $1 trillion.
Chapter 10
Understand the factors driving explosive website growth.
All things considered, the growth of websites has been quite remarkable thanks in large part to a decision taken on April 30th, 1993 by CERN.
This decision made the world wide web available on a basis that was free of royalties.
In essence, it became a public domain which allowed people around the world to create their own websites.
While the growth of the web has been explosive, one of the biggest jumps occurred in 2013 when the web grew by almost a third.
The world wide web is credited to Tim Berners-Lee, who began it in March 1989
The 'Fi' in Wi-Fi doesn't stand for anything - it was just chosen because it rhymes with Hi-Fi. It's a completely made-up term.
Chapter 11
Travel back to 1991 and the birth of the World Wide Web.
How many websites are there on the Internet today? Over a billion! But it all started with a single website.
The first website of the Internet went live on August 6, 1991. It was about the World Wide Web project itself.
The first website of the Internet was hosted at CERN on Berners-Lee's NeXT computer.
In 2013 CERN restored the world's first website on its original address.
As a result, the first website of the internet is still available today.
On 30 April 1993 CERN put the World Wide Web in the public domain
1989
The World Wide Web
The World Wide Web was created by Tim Berners-Lee, a British scientist working at CERN in Switzerland. His revolutionary invention changed the world forever.
Creator
Sir Tim Berners-Lee
British scientist and inventor
Location
CERN, Switzerland
European Organization for Nuclear Research
First Website
info.cern.ch
Went live on August 6, 1991
The first website ever created is still accessible online today, preserved as a piece of Internet history
Chapter 12
A better way to understand the internet's size is to look at several current benchmarks together.
How big is the internet today?
There is no single perfect live number for the size of the internet because the internet is not just one thing. It includes websites, web pages, domains, apps, files, users, and constant traffic moving between them.
A clearer way to think about it is to look at the biggest benchmarks side by side: 1,419,977,535 websites (February 2026), 208,211,331 active websites, 3.98 billion publicly indexed pages (January 15, 2025), 386.9 million registered domains (Q4 2025), and 6,000,000,000 people online (2025).
Each of those numbers measures a different part of the internet. Website totals show overall scale, active-site totals show how much of the web is actually being used, domain registrations show naming scale, indexed-page benchmarks show searchable scale, and internet-user totals show the size of the connected audience.
That is why no single number can fully describe how big the internet is. The honest answer is that it is enormous, always changing, and better understood through several current benchmarks instead of one headline figure.
Types of Websites on the Internet
Even with all that scale, most websites still fall into a few broad groups.
1. Static website;
2. Brochure or business website that gets updated;
3. Dynamic website with user accounts or other interaction;
4. E-commerce website;
5. Website built around a web application.
The entire Internet weighs approximately 2 ounces (about 50 grams) - the combined weight of all electrons in motion.
Li-Fi technology uses LED light bulbs to transmit data and could be 100 times faster than Wi-Fi, reaching speeds of 224 gigabits per second.
Visual exploration of the Internet's massive scale and data storage
Everything you need to know about websites on the Internet
Sources Appendix
Open this appendix to see which figures are live, which are periodic, and which sections are intentionally kept as dated context.
| Section | Type | Source | Date | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total websites, active websites, growth estimate, yearly table update | Live metric | Netcraft Web Server Survey | February 2026 | Primary monthly website-count benchmark used for the headline numbers and the net-growth model. |
| Registered domains | Periodic metric | Verisign Domain Name Industry Brief | Q4 2025 | Quarterly domain-registration benchmark used for the global domain section. |
| People online | Periodic metric | ITU Facts and Figures | October 15, 2025 | Yearly internet-use benchmark used for online-population context and demand-side web growth context. |
| CMS share and WordPress usage | Live metric | W3Techs CMS Usage | March 22, 2026 | Daily technology-share benchmark used for the WordPress and CMS section. |
| Website language distribution | Live metric | W3Techs Content Languages | March 22, 2026 | Daily language-share benchmark used for the language distribution section and related FAQ answers. |
| Indexed web pages | Dated context | WorldWideWebSize | January 15, 2025 | This section refreshes automatically against the latest public indexed-page benchmark. The source currently says its estimate has been frozen since January 15, 2025 because Google stopped exposing the data flow it relied on. |
| Website hosting by country | Live metric | W3Techs Server Locations | March 23, 2026 | Current hosting-location benchmark used as the live proxy for the U.S. web footprint on this page. It measures server location, not ownership or management. |
| Mobile-friendly websites | Periodic metric | HTTP Archive Web Almanac (SEO) | 2025 | Yearly mobile-readiness benchmark based on viewport-tag adoption and legible-font-size pass rates on mobile pages. |
| Most visited websites | Periodic metric | Semrush Top Websites | February 2026 | Monthly worldwide website-traffic ranking used for the current global top-website table. |
| Birth of the web and first website | Evergreen | CERN | Reference material | Historical reference used for the origin story and first-website context. |
Methodology Note
Open this note to see the method behind the growth figures above.
What we measure
These figures estimate the net growth in the total number of websites worldwide. They do not count every individual website launch or deletion. Instead, we derive a smoothed growth rate from the observed change in the global website count over a recent observation window.
Data source
The primary input is the monthly website-count benchmark published by the Netcraft Web Server Survey, the longest-running and most widely cited survey of its kind. Each monthly data point reflects a full scan of hostnames responding to HTTP requests.
Approach
Our model applies a proprietary smoothing algorithm to the monthly change series. It is designed to reflect the prevailing growth trend while dampening the effect of one-off anomalies that do not represent a sustained shift in website creation.
The resulting monthly estimate is then converted into the per-day, per-hour, per-minute, and per-second pace figures shown on this page.
Limitations
Interpretation
The figures are best read as an estimate of current net growth speed, not as an exact live count of website creation.
The model is recalculated each time new survey data becomes available and is designed to balance timeliness with stability so the numbers remain useful from month to month.