Tracking Universal Health Coverage: 2025 Global monitoring report
Technical appendices and regional data tables
The window to 2030, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) target year, is closing. Without accelerated and sustained progress, hard-won universal health coverage (UHC) gains risk being lost and the world will fall short of its UHC goals. The 2025 UHC Global Monitoring Report demonstrates why. Using revised and improved UHC indicators and fully reproduced time series for both, the report presents the latest available data. Provided on this page are supporting technical appendices and regional and global data tables for service coverage index (SDG 3.8.1) and financial hardship (SDG 3.8.2) and their components.
Technical appendices
Selected resources on the 2025 revisions to SDG UHC indicators:
- Comprehensive review proposals submitted to SDG Inter-Agency and Expert Group expert group ( 3.8.1 and 3.8.2)
- Information on the revision of the SDG UHC indicator 3.8.2
Income group, World bank and WHO regional data tables
SDG 3.8.1 and 3.8.2 combined
Service coverage index and components (SDG 3.8.1)
Financial hardship in health and components (SDG 3.8.2, 2025 definition)
Source: SDG indicator 3.8.1 (2025 definition), WHO global service coverage database; SDG indicator 3.8.2 (2025 definition), global database on financial protection assembled by WHO and the World Bank, 2025 update. |
Notes: In accordance with resolution WHA78.25 (2025), Indonesia was reassigned to the WHO Western Pacific Region as of 27 May 2025. These tables provide estimates for South-East Asia and Western Pacific regions both including and excluding Indonesia. The World Bank. World Development Indicators (WDI) database. Historical classification by income. https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/search/dataset/0037712/world-development-indicators Country income group classification is year specific and the number of countries in an income group can vary. This analysis reflects the income group classification as accessed on 31.10.2025. The peak years of disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic are marked in grey because data from this period do not account for the pandemic’s full impact.
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