Falkland Islands

Continent: South America
CapitalStanley
Surface Area12,173 km²
Population2,840
ISO CodeFLK
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Fun Fact

Falkland Islands covers 12,173 km² and has a population of approximately 2,840 people, averaging 0.2/km². The closest area match in the dataset is Vanuatu.

Country profile: South America

Falkland Islands: true size, population, and map scale without illusions

Falkland Islands is more than a dot in an atlas. This page combines area, ranking position, population density, and comparisons that make scale easier to understand beyond the traps of familiar world maps.

Falkland Islands covers 12,173 km², ranking 163 out of 203 by area in this dataset. This is a compact territory where a few thousand square kilometers can noticeably change the ranking. Within South America, that places it 13 out of 13.

Falkland Islands is about 25.7 times smaller than Poland by area. This comparison is deliberately simple: Poland works as an easy reference point, and then it makes sense to move toward a similarly sized country. By area, the closest match is Vanuatu.

The population is approximately 2,840 people, with an average density of 0.2/km². Falkland Islands ranks 200 out of 203 by population and 200 by density. That is very sparse settlement: open space matters as much as the population count itself.

Within its continent, Falkland Islands represents about 0.07% of the area and about 0% of the population covered by this dataset. Its continental population rank is 13 out of 13, so area alone does not tell the full story.

South America stretches across many latitudes, making it useful for seeing how maps shift intuition between the equator and the continent's south. That is why Falkland Islands is best read through several lenses: raw numbers, an equal-scale outline, a comparison with Poland, and a matchup with Vanuatu. Then the map stops being a picture and starts becoming a tool for discovery.

If you want to remember the scale quickly, compare Falkland Islands with a country of similar area and a country of similar population. By population, Antarctica is a useful next clue.

Area#163Area rank among 203 countries and territories in the dataset.
Continent#13Falkland Islands covers about 0.07% of the area in South America.
Population#200About 2,840 people; continental rank 13 of 13.
Density0.2/km²Average people per square kilometer; density rank: #200.
Closest scaleVanuatuThe most natural same-area outline comparison.

How to explore Falkland Islands on the map

The best path is short: compare outlines, check a country with similar population, then try the quiz. It turns numbers into something easier to remember.

The numeric values are used as comparative references for learning scale. Rankings are based on the countries and territories available in this dataset.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) - Size & Location

Falkland Islands covers 12,173 km². In this dataset, that ranks 163 out of 203 by area, and 13 out of 13 within its continent. Falkland Islands is about 25.7 times smaller than Poland by area.

The population is approximately 2,840 people, with an average density of 0.2/km². Falkland Islands ranks 200 out of 203 by population and 200 by density. That is very sparse settlement: open space matters as much as the population count itself.

Two comparisons work especially well: Falkland Islands vs Poland as a familiar reference point, and Falkland Islands vs Vanuatu because their areas are very close. For population, Antarctica is another useful comparison.

South America stretches across many latitudes, making it useful for seeing how maps shift intuition between the equator and the continent's south. That is why a country's position on the map can mislead, while same-scale outline comparison usually gives a better intuition than a classic atlas.

Every projection moves a globe onto a flat surface and must trade something away: shape, area, direction, or distance. On this page, you can compare the impression created by Mercator, orthographic, and equal-area views.

Start with the numbers, open a 1vs1 comparison with a similar country, and then try the size-illusion quiz. That sequence combines facts, visuals, and play, making the scale easier to remember.