Stockholm, 08 June 2026
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) said in its annual yearbook published on 8 June 2026 that the world's nine nuclear-weapon states possess an estimated 12,187 warheads, with the number of operationally available and deployed weapons continuing to rise.
According to Sipri estimates, the nine nuclear-weapon states — the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel — possessed a combined 12,187 nuclear warheads as of January 2026. The total represents a slight decrease of about 54 warheads compared with the beginning of 2025, when the figure stood at 12,241. Sipri researchers stressed, however, that the headline number masks a more troubling trend: the steady increase in the number of warheads actively available for military use.
The decline in the overall stockpile, the report said, is due solely to the United States and Russia continuing to dismantle retired warheads. Both countries remain by far the largest nuclear powers, together accounting for more than 80 percent of the estimated global total. According to Sipri, Russia holds around 5,420 warheads and the United States around 5,042. For the first time since the end of the Cold War, however, the pace at which Washington and Moscow are retiring old warheads has fallen below the pace at which new nuclear weapons are being deployed.
