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Costa Rica's area vs Papua New Guinea's: size comparison by land type

Updated on by Georank team

Papua New Guinea is 9.04 times bigger by total area compared to Costa Rica: 178,704 sq mi vs 19,761 sq mi. Without inland water, the land area of Papua New Guinea is 174,850 sq mi vs 19,714 sq mi for Costa Rica — a 8.87 times difference in territory size.

  • Costa Rica ranks 126/197 by total surface area vs 53/197 for Papua New Guinea.
  • Costa Rica occupies 0.03% of the land mass of all countries, compared with 0.3% for Papua New Guinea.
  • 33.1% of Costa Rica's area is agricultural land vs 3.1% in Papua New Guinea.
  • Costa Rica has 0.04% of the world's agricultural land area — Papua has 0.03%.
  • 60.4% of Costa Rica is covered by forests, compared to 79% in Papua.
  • 0.08% of the world's forests are in Costa Rica, and 0.89% are in Papua New Guinea.

True size map comparison: Costa Rica vs Papua New Guinea

See how Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea compare in true size on the map. Drag the outlines to different latitudes to see how the Mercator projection affects their apparent size.

Total size and land area comparison

Costa Rica Papua New Guinea
Total area 19,761
sq mi
178,704
sq mi
Size difference ratio 1 9.04
Total area rank 126/197 53/197
Share of all countries' surface area 0.01% 0.09%
Land area 19,714
sq mi
174,850
sq mi
Land area difference ratio 1 8.87
Land area rank 126/197 54/197
Share of all countries' land area 0.03% 0.3%
Population 5,129,910 10,576,502
Population density 262.6 ppl/mi² 62.6 ppl/mi²

Surface area by type

Costa Rica Papua New Guinea
Forest area 11,907
sq mi
138,051
sq mi
Forest area as share of land 60.4% 79%
Forest area rank 90/196 19/196
World's forests share 0.08% 0.89%
Agricultural land area 6,534
sq mi
5,425
sq mi
Agricultural land share 33.1% 3.1%
Agricultural land area rank 125/194 132/194
Share of global agricultural land 0.04% 0.03%
Arable land 645
sq mi
1,274
sq mi
Arable land share 3.27% 0.73%
Arable land area rank 142/191 134/191
Permanent cropland 1,456
sq mi
3,417
sq mi
Permanent cropland share 7.39% 1.95%
Permanent cropland area rank 62/192 40/192
Water area 46.3
sq mi
3,853
sq mi
Water as share of total area 0.23% 2.16%
Water area rank 138/197 47/197
Roads length 3,129
mi
5,809
mi
Land borders length 411
mi
512
mi
Coastline length 802
mi
3,201
mi
Share of marine protected waters 28.4% 0.1%

Costa Rica vs Papua New Guinea size on the map

Data sources: World Bank | Agriculture & Rural Development (2026, retrieved 2026-04-06).

GeoRank.org/size/costa-rica/papua-new-guinea | CC BY

The map above outlines the borders of Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea but is not accurate for size comparison because it's a 2d map with Mercator projection that distorts territories near the poles. The farther a country is from the equator, the more magnified it appears. More about country size projections.

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Data sources:

  1. World Bank | Agriculture & Rural Development (2023–2026, retrieved 2026-04-06)
  2. Wikidata (2026, retrieved 2026-02-08)
  3. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) (2025, retrieved 2026-02-20)
  4. United Nations | World Population Prospects (2026, retrieved 2026-03-10)

Total agricultural land encompasses all areas used for agriculture: territories under permanent and temporary crops and pastures. It includes land under flowering shrubs, fruit and nut trees, and vineyards, but excludes sites utilized for timber production.

Arable land encompasses fields utilized for temporary crop production, pastures, market or kitchen gardens, and temporarily fallowed land. Land abandoned due to shifting cultivation practices is not included.

Permanent cropland refers to farmland for the long-term cultivation of crops, such as coffee, cocoa, and rubber, which do not require replanting after each harvest. This category encompasses land with permanent crops like flowering shrubs, fruit and nut trees, and vines, but does not include land under trees for timber production.

Inland areas under water, such as large rivers, lakes, and some coastal waterways.

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) — you’re free to copy, share, remix, adapt, and use even commercially as long as you give appropriate credit and clearly indicate if you made changes. Other sources may be subject to different license terms.