NATO Air Fleet Outnumbers China 6-to-1, 20,376 Aircraft vs 3,309

Photo of Chris Lange
By Chris Lange Published

Key Points

  • China has been a rising military power, flexing its economic muscles and building an impressive air force and navy

  • While not directly opposed to Western powers, China is seeking regional, if not global, hegemony

  • The NATO Alliance boasts the most impressive coalition of forces the world has ever seen, whether its naval power or its collective air force

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NATO Air Fleet Outnumbers China 6-to-1, 20,376 Aircraft vs 3,309

© NATO meeting (CC BY 2.0) by Estonian Foreign Ministry

For the last few decades, China has been a rising military power, flexing its economic muscles and building an impressive air force and navy. While not directly opposed to Western powers, China is seeking regional, if not global, hegemony. However, at the top of the heap is the NATO Alliance headed up by the United States. The Alliance boasts the most impressive coalition of forces the world has ever seen, whether its naval power or its collective air force. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is exploring how China measures up against NATO’s collective forces.

To compare all of NATO and China, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the 2025 Military Strength Ranking from Global Firepower, an annually updated defense-related statistics website with information on 145 countries. Global Firepower ranked 145 countries based on their PowerIndex, a composite of over 60 measures in categories such as military might, financials, logistical capability, and geography. The smaller the PowerIndex value the more powerful a nation’s theoretical conventional fighting capability is. We included multiple factors in the comparison across different fields ranging from economics, land power, air power, and naval power, as well as a few others to give a full picture to how these countries measure up.

Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at how these countries match up across multiple sectors ranging from military prowess to economic strength.

Here is a look at how the entirety NATO and China compare on these fronts:

Why Are We Covering This?

Silhouette of a military man in headphones at a laptop against the background of a digital globe of the earth, contour lighting. Concept: collection of confidential information, surveillance.
Anelo / Shutterstock.com

In this rapidly evolving world, the comparison of military power between countries serves as a measure of global stability. This analysis is important not just for understanding each nation’s defense capabilities but also should an offensive conflict arise. While superpowers like the United States, China, and Russia dominate headlines with their military resources, other nations also play important roles in regional security dynamics and geopolitical relations. This analysis seeks to understand these countries from a base level of assets, resources, manpower, and economics.

NATO Financials

US dollars on the map of Europe. American investment and trading with EU, european economy
Oleg Elkov / Shutterstock.com

  • Purchasing power parity: $57,111,222,000,000
  • Foreign exchange reserves and gold: $3,128,907,000,000
  • Defense budget: $1,381,771,896,295 – #1 out of 145
  • External debt: 69,215,507,000,000

China Financials

SeanPavonePhoto / iStock via Getty Images

  • Purchasing power parity: $31,227,000,000,000
  • Foreign exchange reserves and gold: $3,450,000,000,000
  • Defense budget: $266,850,000,000 – #2 out of 145
  • External debt: 1,218,458,500,000

NATO Population

Saeima / Wikimedia Commons

  • Total population: 981,309,310
  • Population reaching military age: 11,631,585
  • Population fit-for-service: 365,356,994

China Population

long8614 / iStock

  • Total population: 1,415,043,270
  • Population reaching military age: 19,810,606
  • Population fit-for-service: 626,864,169

NATO Manpower

Special forces soldier, military communications operator or maintainer in helmet and glasses, screaming in radio during battle in desert. Calling up reinforcements, reporting situation on battlefield
Getmilitaryphotos / Shutterstock.com

  • Active personnel: 3,439,197
  • Air Force personnel: 1,170,584
  • Army personnel: 3,083,256
  • Navy personnel: 1,032,053
  • Reserve personnel: 4,343,065
  • Paramilitary forces: 876,620
  • Total military personnel: 8,593,632

China Manpower

China+military | China News 4 Ways How Chinas Military Stacks Up Against the US
Times Asi / CC BY 2.0 / Flickr

  • Active personnel: 2,035,000
  • Air Force personnel: 400,000
  • Army personnel: 2,545,000
  • Navy personnel: 380,000
  • Reserve personnel: 510,000
  • Paramilitary forces: 625,000
  • Total military personnel: 3,170,000

NATO Air Power

NATO Exercises Take Place In Poland
2022 Getty Images / Getty Images News via Getty Images

  • Total aircraft: 20,376
  • Fighter aircraft: 3,314
  • Attack aircraft: 1,163
  • Transport aircraft: 1,480
  • Special-mission aircraft: 889
  • Tanker aircraft: 658
  • Trainer aircraft: 4,319
  • Helicopters: 9,141
  • Attack helicopters: 1,416

China Air Power

Anton Petrus / Moment via Getty Images
  • Total aircraft: 3,309
  • Fighter aircraft: 1,212
  • Attack aircraft: 371
  • Transport aircraft: 289
  • Special-mission aircraft: 112
  • Tanker aircraft: 10
  • Trainer aircraft: 402
  • Helicopters: 913
  • Attack helicopters: 281

NATO Land Forces

2022 Getty Images / Getty Images News via Getty Images
  • Total military vehicles: 976,138
  • Tanks: 11,495
  • Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS): 1,977
  • Self-propelled artillery: 3,985
  • Towed artillery: 6,294
  • Total artillery: 10,279

China Land Forces

Anton Petrus / Moment via Getty Images
  • Total military vehicles: 144,017
  • Tanks: 6,800
  • Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS): 2,750
  • Self-propelled artillery: 3,490
  • Towed artillery: 1,000
  • Total artillery: 4,490

NATO Naval Forces

NATO sub
Canva | sansara from Getty Images and KCKATE from Jookiko

  • Total naval assets: 2,689
  • Total naval tonnage:
  • Aircraft carriers: 17
  • Helicopter carriers: 13
  • Destroyers: 101
  • Frigates: 128
  • Corvettes: 67
  • Submarines: 147
  • Off-shore patrol vessels: 492
  • Mine warfare vessels: 180

China Naval Forces

  • Total naval assets: 754
  • Total naval tonnage: 2,857,143
  • Aircraft carriers: 3
  • Helicopter carriers: 4
  • Destroyers: 50
  • Frigates: 47
  • Corvettes: 72
  • Submarines: 61
  • Off-shore patrol vessels: 150
  • Mine warfare vessels: 36

NATO Natural Resources

DieterMeyrl / E+ via Getty Images

  • Oil production: 30,166,332 BBL / day
  • Oil proven reserves: 221,933,340,000 BBL / day
  • Natural gas production: 1,423,891,622,000 cubic meters
  • Natural gas proven reserves: 17,767,751,090,000 cubic meters
  • Coal production: 1,070,779,000 metric tons
  • Coal proven reserves: 354,197,999,000 metric tons

China Natural Resources

nevarpp / iStock via Getty Images

  • Oil production: 4,984,000 BBL / day
  • Oil proven reserves: 26,023,000,000 BBL / day
  • Natural gas production: 225,341,000,000 cubic meters
  • Natural gas proven reserves: 6,654,000,000,000 cubic meters
  • Coal production: 4,827,000,000 metric tons
  • Coal proven reserves: 143,197,000,000 metric tons

NATO Logistics

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

  • Labor force: 481,709,900
  • Merchant Marine fleet: 17,123
  • Ports: 2,022
  • Airports: 23,121
  • Roadway coverage: 14,012,923 km
  • Railway coverage: 529,594 km
  • Waterway coverage: 101,559 km

China Logistics

loveguli / E+ via Getty Images

  • Labor force: 779,246,000
  • Merchant Marine fleet: 8,314
  • Ports: 66
  • Airports: 531
  • Roadway coverage: 5,200,000 km
  • Railway coverage: 150,000 km
  • Waterway coverage: 27,700 km

NATO Military Strength

Estonian Foreign Ministry / Wikimedia Commons

  • Strength score of the top country: 0.0744 (United States)
  • Global strength rank of the top country: #1 out of 145 (United States)

China Military Strength

Flag of China on military uniform. Army, troops, soldiers. Collage.
Bumble Dee / Shutterstock.com

  • Strength score: 0.0788
  • Global strength rank: #3 out of 145
Photo of Chris Lange
About the Author Chris Lange →

Chris Lange is a writer for 24/7 Wall St., based in Houston. He has covered financial markets over the past decade with an emphasis on healthcare, tech, and IPOs. During this time, he has published thousands of articles with insightful analysis across these complex fields. Currently, Lange's focus is on military and geopolitical topics.

Lange's work has been quoted or mentioned in Forbes, The New York Times, Business Insider, USA Today, MSN, Yahoo, The Verge, Vice, The Intelligencer, Quartz, Nasdaq, The Motley Fool, Fox Business, International Business Times, The Street, Seeking Alpha, Barron’s, Benzinga, and many other major publications.

A graduate of Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas, Lange majored in business with a particular focus on investments. He has previous experience in the banking industry and startups.

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