List of Most Spoken African Languages, Number of Speakers and Countries Where They Are Spoken

Africa hosts over 2,000 languages, with Swahili, Arabic, and Hausa leading by total speakers.

Top 15 Languages Table

Rank Language Speakers (millions) Main Countries 
1 Swahili 200+ Tanzania, Kenya, DRC, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Mozambique
2 Arabic 170+ Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, Libya, Mauritania
3 French 130+ DRC, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, Mali, Cameroon, Madagascar
4 English 120+ Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, Ghana, Uganda, Namibia
5 Hausa 100+ Nigeria, Niger, Ghana, Chad, Cameroon, Sudan
6 Yoruba 50+ Nigeria, Benin, Togo; diaspora in UK/US
7 Oromo 45+ Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia
8 Igbo 45+ Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea
9 Portuguese 40+ Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde
10 Amharic 35–40 Ethiopia
11 Berber (Tamazight) 30 Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Mali, Niger
12 Zulu 12 South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique
13 Shona 14 Zimbabwe, Mozambique
14 Wolof 10 Senegal, Gambia, Mauritania
15 Tigrinya 10 Eritrea, Ethiopia

Swahili (Kiswahili)

Swahili tops African languages with 200 million speakers, blending Bantu roots and Arabic loanwords from coastal trade. Native to 15-20 million in Tanzania/Kenya, it serves as East Africa's lingua franca for commerce, education, and EAC diplomacy. UNESCO recognizes it as a global language; AU adopted it officially in 2022.

Arabic Dialects

North Africa's 170 million Arabic speakers use Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) formally alongside dialects like Egyptian (100M). Dominant in six countries, Maghrebi variants differ phonetically from Levantine. Quranic influence standardizes literacy; media from Al Jazeera boosts second-language use.

French in Former Colonies

French claims 130 million across 26 nations, strongest in West/Central Africa where it's official in DRC (80M speakers). Education systems embed it; Francophonie summits promote unity. Pidgin variants emerge in Cameroon, blending with English.

English as Neutral Bridge

120 million speak English, often as L2 in multilingual states like Nigeria (100M). Post-colonial legacy aids business/tech; Kenya's iHub thrives on it. South Africa's variety mixes Afrikaans influences.

Hausa Trade Language

Hausa unites 100 million across Sahel, Nigeria's second official language. BBC Hausa reaches 80M; Islamic scholarship preserves Ge'ez script. Niger's nomads spread it via caravans.

Yoruba Cultural Powerhouse

50 million Yoruba speakers in Nigeria's southwest fuel Nollywood, voicing 2,500 films yearly. Benin/Togo extend range; US diaspora (Atlanta) revives via podcasts. Tonal richness carries proverbs/orikis.

Oromo Ethiopia's Giant

Oromo grew to 45 million amid Ethiopia's federalism, challenging Amharic dominance. Qubee script (Latin-based) boosts literacy; Cushitic roots differ from Semitic neighbors.

Igbo Entrepreneurial Spirit

Nigeria's Igbo (45M) drive Aba markets, exporting via Onitsha. Biafran War survivors rebuilt globally; chi (personal god) philosophy underscores resilience.

Portuguese Lusophone Africa

40 million in Angola/Mozambique use it post-independence; Angola's oil wealth elevates status. Creole variants in Guinea-Bissau mix Kriol elements.

Amharic Semitic Stronghold

Ethiopia's 35-40 million Amharic users employ Ge'ez script, oldest in Africa. Imperial hymns and Orthodox liturgy preserve it; Addis Ababa media hub.

Berber Resilience

30 million Tamazight speakers revived Tifinag script post-Arab Spring; Morocco's Tamazight TV reaches Rif mountains.​

Southern Bantu Cluster

Zulu (12M, South Africa) and Shona (14M, Zimbabwe) anchor Sotho-Nguni family; click consonants mark Khoisan influence.​

Wolof West African Core

Senegal's 10M Wolof speakers dominate Dakar rap/teranga hospitality culture.​

Tigrinya Horn Anchor

Eritrea/Ethiopa's 10M use Ge'ez-derived script; Orthodox chants sustain fidelity.​

Linguistic Diversity Context

Africa's 30% of world languages thrive in 54 nations; Niger-Congo (1,500 langs) dominates sub-Sahara, Afroasiatic North/East. Colonial borders ignored ethnolinguistic maps, birthing pidgins like Sheng (Nairobi).

Bantu expansion (3,000 years) spread Swahili/Zulu from Cameroon; Arabic arrived 7th century via Umayyads. Urbanization accelerates L2 shifts; apps like Duolingo add Swahili/Yoruba.

Native vs Total Speakers

Swahili leads total (200M L2); Arabic native-heavy (140M). English/French excel as elites' tools, excluding rural majorities.

Economic Impacts

Hausa/Yoruba power West African trade blocs; Swahili unifies $100B EAC market. Translation industries emerge—Nairobi firms localize apps.

Preservation Efforts

AU's 55/92 Language Plan digitizes 200 langs by 2026; Kenya's CBC mandates Kiswahili mother-tongue early years. Endangered tongues like Khoekhoe get apps.

Future Projections

Urban youth adopt Englishes; AI voice tech (Google Translate adds 10 African langs) aids minority access. Climate migration may blend Sahel tongues.

Swahili's continental status grows via SADC adoption; Arabic adapts via Egyptian films.