Another COVID-19 milestone was reached on 9 August 2020 as the number of COVID-19 cases exceeded 20 million cases. It took five months from January to June to reach the first 10 million cases. Then it took just six weeks to reach an additional 10 million cases.
New Cases ⇨
Total Cases ⇨
Cases per Capita (per 100,000 population) ⇨
Cases Trajectory
(These charts are for 9 Aug 2020. For recent Cases Trajectory charts, click here: ⇨)
The first chart shows the Cases Trajectory for 213 countries worldwide. The other charts show the Cases Trajectory of each country in each Region:
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory Worldwide (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in the Americas (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in the Caribbean (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in EU member states (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Non-EU European countries (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in the Middle East (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Northern and Eastern Africa (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Central and Southern Africa (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Western Africa (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Asia (chart)
- COVID-19 Cases Trajectory in Oceania (chart)
New Deaths ⇨
Total Deaths ⇨
Mortality Rate per Capita (per 100,000 population) ⇨
Case Fatality Rate ⇨
Deaths Trajectory ⇨
Cases Trajectory
Move the mouse cursor over the chart to see the underlying numbers.
Small numbers with decimals between 0 and 1 (e.g. 0.1) are used to make zeroes visible on a logarithmic scale.
Decimals are also added to the y-value of data points that have exactly the same x and y values as other data point(s), in order to distinguish them on the chart.
The data point of each country shows where the country is on the Cases Trajectory:
- The horizontal axis shows the total number of COVID-19 cases. This number stays the same when there are no new cases and goes up when new cases are reported. It will never go down.
- The vertical axis shows the moving average of New (daily) COVID-19 cases in the past seven (7) days. This number will go up when an increasing number of new cases were reported in the past 7 days and will go down when the number of reported cases has decreased in the past 7 days. When no new cases have been reported in the past 7 days, this number will go down to zero. As zero values cannot be shown on the logarithmic scale of the vertical axis, zero values are replaced with “0.1” or a lower value e.g. “0.09”. The lowest significant value above zero is “0.14”, which is the daily average of one new case in the past seven days.
A country that is successful in reducing the spread of the disease will have a low value on the vertical axis, and the data point will be positioned near or at the bottom of the chart.
Move the mouse cursor over the chart to see the underlying numbers.
* Note:
Egypt is also included in the chart for Northern Africa;
Turkey is also included in the chart for Europe (Non-EU).