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Lithuania 2023 Press Freedom Profile

Lithuania scores 86.8/100 on the 2023 RSF World Press Freedom Index, ranking #7 globally. Freedom House rates it Free (89/100). Context: pop 2.8 million, GDP $54.22B.

RSF Score86.79Global rank #7
Freedom StatusFreeFH total 89/100
GDP$54.22BWorld Bank data
Population2.8 millionNational total

2023 Press Freedom Scorecard

Overall score and global position

In the 2023 World Press Freedom Index, Lithuania scores 86.79 out of 100 and ranks #7 globally — one of the strongest press-freedom environments. Of the 25 Freedom House indicators, Lithuania earns 15 at the maximum 4/4 and 0 at 0/4; its strongest category is Electoral Process (12/12) and its weakest is Rule of Law (11/16).

86.8 / 100

Composite index comparison

RSF Overall (Reporters Without Borders)86.8 / 100

Press freedom score — higher is freer.

Political Rights (Freedom House)38 / 40

Elections, political pluralism, government functioning.

Civil Liberties (Freedom House)51 / 60

Freedom of expression, association, rule of law, personal autonomy.

Freedom of Expression (V-Dem 2025)91.7 / 100

Academic press-freedom index from the Varieties of Democracy project (0–1 rescaled to 0–100).

Five-year RSF trend

02550751002019: 77.942020: 78.812021: 79.952022: 84.142023: 86.7920192020202120222023

Over 2019–2023, Lithuania moved from 77.94 to 86.79 on the RSF scale (a gain of 8.85 points). The lowest recorded score was 77.94 and the highest was 86.79.

Year-over-year RSF movement

Lithuania's biggest single-year RSF movement in the 2019–2023 window was a gain of 4.19 points between 2021 (79.95) and 2022 (84.14).

Years From To Δ score
2019 → 2020 77.94 78.81 ▲ 0.87
2020 → 2021 78.81 79.95 ▲ 1.14
2021 → 2022 79.95 84.14 ▲ 4.19
2022 → 2023 84.14 86.79 ▲ 2.65

Full socio-economic dashboard

public

Demographics & geography

Population2.8 million
Urban population1.9 million
Density43.0 people / km²
Land area65,300 km²
CapitalVilnius
Largest cityVilnius
Latitude55.1694°
Longitude23.8813°
Forested area34.8%
Agricultural land47.2%
CO₂ emissions12,963 kt
payments

Economy & labour

GDP$54.22B
GDP per capita$19,455
CurrencyEUR
CPI118.38
CPI change (%)2.3%
Minimum wage$2.41 /hr
Unemployment rate6.4%
Labor-force participation61.6%
Tax revenue (% of GDP)16.9%
Total tax rate42.6%
Gasoline price$1.16 /L
medical_services

Health

Life expectancy75.7 years
Birth rate10.00 / 1 000
Fertility rate1.63 births / woman
Infant mortality3.3 / 1 000 live births
Maternal mortality ratio8 / 100 000 live births
Physicians6.35 / 1 000 people
Out-of-pocket health spend32.1%
school

Education

Gross primary enrollment103.9%
Gross tertiary enrollment72.4%
account_balance

Administration

Official languageLithuanian
ISO abbreviationLT
Calling code+370
Armed forces size34,000 personnel

All socio-economic indicators from the World Bank country dataset (2023 snapshot).

Democratic Rights & Civil Liberties

Freedom status explained

Freedom House classifies Lithuania as Free with a 2024 aggregate score of 89/100 — meaning national institutions reliably protect political rights and civil liberties.

Within Freedom House's Europe region (43 countries), Lithuania ranks #26 on the latest aggregate score — the 40th percentile. The region leaders are Finland, Sweden, Norway.

Political Rights vs Civil Liberties

Political Rights

38/ 40

Rating 1 of 7 (1 = best)

Civil Liberties

51/ 60

Rating 2 of 7 (1 = best)

Political rights are rated noticeably higher than civil liberties — the formal political framework is more open than the day-to-day environment for expression, association, and personal autonomy.

Twelve-year Freedom House trend

02550751002013: 902014: 902015: 912016: 912017: 912018: 912019: 912020: 912021: 902022: 892023: 892024: 89201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024

Between 2013 and 2024, Freedom House moved Lithuania from Free (Free, 90/100) to Free (Free, 89/100).

Indicator trajectory (A–G over 12 years)

Of the 25 Freedom House indicators tracked for Lithuania, 5 moved at least one point across the available Freedom House history. The eight with the largest absolute change appear below.

Code Indicator Earliest Latest Δ
C2 Anti-corruption safeguards 2/4 (2013) 3/4 (2024) ▲ +1
D1 Free media 4/4 (2013) 3/4 (2024) ▼ -1
F1 Independent judiciary 4/4 (2013) 3/4 (2024) ▼ -1
F4 Equal treatment 3/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -1
G2 Property rights 3/4 (2013) 4/4 (2024) ▲ +1

Latest A–G indicator scorecard

A.

Electoral Process

PR

Subtotal12 / 12
  • A1Free and fair head-of-government elections

    4/4

  • A2Free and fair legislative elections

    4/4

  • A3Electoral laws and framework

    4/4

B.

Political Pluralism & Participation

PR

Subtotal16 / 16
  • B1Right to organise in political parties

    4/4

  • B2Opposition can realistically gain power

    4/4

  • B3Free political choice without domination

    4/4

  • B4Political rights of minorities

    4/4

C.

Functioning of Government

PR

Subtotal10 / 12
  • C1Elected officials determine government policy

    4/4

  • C2Safeguards against corruption

    3/4

  • C3Transparency of government

    3/4

D.

Freedom of Expression & Belief

CL

Subtotal15 / 16
  • D1Free and independent media

    3/4

  • D2Freedom of religious expression

    4/4

  • D3Academic freedom

    4/4

  • D4Free private discussion

    4/4

E.

Associational & Organisational Rights

CL

Subtotal11 / 12
  • E1Freedom of assembly

    4/4

  • E2Freedom for NGOs

    4/4

  • E3Free trade unions

    3/4

F.

Rule of Law

CL

Subtotal11 / 16
  • F1Independent judiciary

    3/4

  • F2Due process in civil and criminal matters

    3/4

  • F3Protection from illegitimate force

    3/4

  • F4Equal treatment under the law

    2/4

G.

Personal Autonomy & Individual Rights

CL

Subtotal14 / 16
  • G1Freedom of movement

    4/4

  • G2Property rights

    4/4

  • G3Personal social freedoms

    3/4

  • G4Equality of opportunity

    3/4

Each indicator is scored 0–4 by Freedom House analysts; category subtotals combine into the Political Rights (A + B + C = 0–40) and Civil Liberties (D + E + F + G = 0–60) aggregates shown above. 2024 edition.

Frequently Asked Questions

When did Lithuania see its biggest RSF press-freedom change?

The sharpest single-year shift was an improvement of 4.19 points between 2021 (79.95) and 2022 (84.14) on the RSF index.

Which Freedom House indicator moved most in Lithuania?

Indicator C2 (Anti-corruption safeguards) changed by +1 points, moving from 2/4 to 3/4 across the available history — the biggest indicator-level movement of the 25 Freedom House sub-scores for Lithuania.

How does Lithuania rank within its Freedom House region?

Lithuania holds position #26 of 43 in the Europe region on the latest Freedom House aggregate score. The region's top country is Finland (100/100).

What is Lithuania's economic context for its press freedom score?

Lithuania has a GDP of $54.22B across a population of 2.8 million, giving a per-capita GDP of about $19,455. Its capital is Vilnius; the official language is Lithuanian.