COUNTRY SPECIAL

WHY INDONESIA KEEPS RANKING AS ONE OF ASIA'S HAPPIEST

Indonesia ranks low on global happiness but high on daily emotion. Here's what makes Indonesia one of Asia's happiest countries and why.

08.07.2026
BY PEACHY BECK
WHY INDONESIA KEEPS RANKING AS ONE OF ASIA'S HAPPIEST
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A woman in a rice paddy in Central Java laughs so hard at something her coworker said that she has to sit down. That scene  recorded, captioned, reposted  is exactly the kind of moment that shows up in surveys asking "did you smile or laugh yesterday?" And in that specific question, Indonesia beats almost everyone in Asia.

Here's the catch: Indonesia is not one of Asia's "happiest" countries by the measure most people assume. In the 2025 World Happiness Report  the ranking that puts behind Singapore, Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippines, and Malaysia. What Indonesia dominates instead is a different, less-quoted survey: Gallup's Global Emotions data, which asks people about specific feelings from the day before  smiling, laughing, feeling respected, feeling worried. On that measure,

At a glance

  • Indonesia: 83rd of 147 countries, World Happiness Report 2025 (life satisfaction ranking)
  • Indonesia: top-tier globally for reported daily laughter and enjoyment, Gallup Global Emotions 2025
  • 144 countries and areas surveyed by Gallup in 2024, via phone and in-person interviews
  • Indonesia ranked 1st globally for charitable giving and volunteering in the same 2025 dataset

So which is it  happy or not? Both, depending on what you're measuring. Life satisfaction looks at income, freedom, corruption perception, and health infrastructure, and Indonesia's public services are still catching up. Daily emotion looks at how people actually feel hour to hour, and that's shaped by something structural: community.

What explains Indonesia's daily happiness gap?


Researchers keep landing on the same word: gotong royong, the Indonesian practice of mutual aid  neighbors pooling money for a hospital bill, WhatsApp groups organizing help after a flood, communities showing up uninvited to cook for a wedding. It's not charity in the Western sense. It's an expectation.

That framing matters because it's testable in daily life, not just in survey theory. Walk through a kampung in Jakarta at 5 p.m. and you'll hear it before you see it plastic stools scraping onto the street, a game of cards starting up outside a warung, someone's grandmother laughing at full volume two houses down. That's not staged for a camera. It's Tuesday.

Not everyone buys the happiness-ranking industry at face value, though. Bagus Riyono, a psychologist at Universitas Gadjah Mada, has argued the bigger global rankings lean too hard on economic indicators and miss what actually sustains Indonesians emotionally: relationships, not GDP.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on the survey. On the World Happiness Report's life-satisfaction ranking, Indonesia placed 83rd out of 147 countries in 2025. On Gallup's daily-emotion tracking laughter, smiling, feeling respected Indonesia ranks among the global leaders. Both are legitimate measures of "happiness"; they just measure different things.
The World Happiness Report weighs GDP per capita, healthy life expectancy, freedom, generosity, social support, and corruption perception. Indonesia's economic and governance indicators pull the overall score down even though day-to-day emotional experience is strong.
In the 2025 World Happiness Report, Singapore ranked highest in Southeast Asia at 34th globally, followed by Vietnam (46th), Thailand (49th), the Philippines (57th), and Malaysia (64th). Indonesia placed 83rd, still ahead of Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia.
#Indonesia #Jakarta #WorldHappinessReport #SoutheastAsia

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Written by
PEACHY BECK
Contributor at THE S MEDIA — Indonesia's English-language digital media for Generation NOW.
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