Why Don’t Muslim Refugees Just goto the 50+ other Muslim Nations, especially THE RICH ONEs with oil that share their culture, traditions, values, religion, politics, proximity?
Do rich Muslim nations want poor, unskilled, low IQ, high crime Muslim refugees in their country?
Are Muslim Refugees actually like missionaries, Trojan horse, destabilizers to a host country???
Top 10 richest muslim countries
Determining the "richest" countries can be measured by Total GDP (Nominal), which shows the overall size of the economy, or GDP per Capita, which indicates the wealth of the average citizen.
Based on International Monetary Fund (IMF) projections for 2025 and 2024, the following countries represent the wealthiest Muslim-majority nations.
Top 10 Muslim Countries by Total GDP (Nominal)
These nations have the largest overall economies in the Islamic world.
- Indonesia: ~$1.53 trillion
- Turkey (Türkiye): ~$1.44 trillion
- Saudi Arabia: ~$1.11 trillion
- United Arab Emirates (UAE): ~$568 billion
- Malaysia: ~$488 billion
- Bangladesh: ~$481 billion
- Pakistan: ~$480 billion
- Iran: ~$463 billion
- Egypt: ~$347 billion
- Kazakhstan: ~$296 billion
Top 10 Muslim Countries by GDP per Capita
These nations are where individual citizens are, on average, the wealthiest, often due to high natural resource exports relative to their population size.
- Qatar: ~$72,760
- United Arab Emirates (UAE): ~$51,290
- Brunei: ~$33,623
- Saudi Arabia: ~$33,291
- Kuwait: ~$32,289
- Bahrain: ~$26,277
- Oman: ~$20,631
- Turkey (Türkiye): ~$16,709
- Kazakhstan: ~$14,788
- Malaysia: ~$14,423
Key Economic Drivers
- Energy Resources: The wealthiest nations per capita, such as Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, rely heavily on massive oil and natural gas reserves.
- Industrial Diversity: Nations like Indonesia and Turkey have broader industrial bases, including manufacturing and agriculture, contributing to their high total GDP.
- Economic Hubs: The UAE and Qatar have successfully diversified into global finance, tourism, and transportation, with Dubai and Doha serving as international hubs.
For 2025, the richest Muslim countries, primarily driven by oil, gas, and strong Islamic finance, include Gulf States like Qatar, UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain, alongside others such as Brunei, Malaysia, and potentially others like Oman, focusing on high GDP per capita and robust Islamic economic sectors, though lists vary by metric (GDP, wealth, etc.).
Here's a breakdown of consistently high-ranking nations:
- Qatar: Often #1 for GDP per capita in the Arab world due to vast natural gas and oil.
- United Arab Emirates (UAE): A powerhouse in oil, gas, tourism, and finance.
- Kuwait: Relies heavily on oil wealth, placing it high on per capita lists.
- Saudi Arabia: A major global oil producer with significant wealth, leading in bank value in MENA.
- Bahrain: Prosperous from oil, gas, and aluminum, ranking high regionally.
- Brunei: Prosperous due to oil and gas, a leader in Islamic banking.
- Malaysia: Leads in Islamic economy strength with strong finance and halal sectors.
- Oman: Another Gulf nation benefiting from natural resources.
While other populous Muslim nations like Turkey, Egypt, and Indonesia have large economies, the Gulf States and Brunei consistently lead in per capita wealth due to their concentrated natural resource wealth.









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