These Fortune 500 companies are bigger than most national economies—here’s where they’d rank as countries
The Fortune 500, now in its 72nd year, tracks the biggest U.S. companies by revenue. Each year, companies are ranked by how much they’ve made (or lost) and by how their market caps and bottom lines rank within their cohorts.
Some of the largest F500 companies have revenues that dwarf the GDPs of most of the world’s economies.
Take, for example, Nvidia, which would be considered the world’s fourth-largest economy were it a country. Nvidia is worth more than Japan. Apple exceeds India. Amazon’s market value tops Brazil’s entire annual economic output. A Fortune analysis of Fortune 500 market capitalizations (using data from the end of March) against World Bank GDP data finds that nine U.S. companies now carry market values larger than all but a handful of the world’s national economies—and a tenth is close behind.
The comparison uses market capitalization—the total value of a company’s outstanding shares—set against 2024 GDP figures in current U.S. dollars from the World Bank. The two metrics measure different things: GDP reflects the annual value of goods and services a country produces, while market cap reflects what investors collectively believe a company is worth. But placed side by side, the numbers illuminate just how concentrated corporate value has become at the top of the American market.
Here is where each company would rank if it were a country:
- United States (GDP): $28,750,956M
- China (GDP): $18,743,803M
- Germany (GDP): $4,685,593M
- Nvidia (market cap): $4,237,920M
- Japan (GDP): $4,027,598M
- Apple (market cap): $3,725,927M
- India (GDP): $3,909,892M
- Alphabet (market cap): $3,478,613M
- United Kingdom (GDP): $3,686,033M
- France (GDP): $3,160,443M
- Microsoft (market cap): $2,748,745M
- Italy (GDP): $2,380,825M
- Canada (GDP): $2,243,637M
- Amazon (market cap): $2,235,762M
- Brazil (GDP): $2,185,822M
- Russia (GDP): $2,173,836M
- South Korea (GDP): $1,875,388M
- Mexico (GDP): $1,856,366M
- Australia (GDP): $1,757,022M
- Spain (GDP): $1,725,672M
- Broadcom (market cap): $1,465,427M
- Meta Platforms (market cap): $1,447,235M
- Indonesia (GDP): $1,396,300M
- Tesla (market cap): $1,394,967M
- Türkiye (GDP): $1,359,124M
- Saudi Arabia (GDP): $1,239,805M
- Netherlands (GDP): $1,214,928M
- Berkshire Hathaway (market cap): $1,033,220M
- Switzerland (GDP): $936,564M
- Poland (GDP): $917,767M
- Walmart (market cap): $990,810M
Nvidia, which has become the defining infrastructure stock of the artificial intelligence era, tops the corporate list at $4.24 trillion—a figure that would place it fourth globally, ahead of Japan and India, and just behind Germany. Apple, at $3.73 trillion, would rank sixth, between Japan and India. Alphabet, at $3.48 trillion, falls just below India and above the United Kingdom.
Microsoft, at $2.75 trillion, would rank between France and Italy, while Amazon, at $2.24 trillion, sits just below Canada and above Brazil.
The next tier is tighter. Broadcom ($1.47 trillion) and Meta Platforms ($1.45 trillion) would rank between Spain and Indonesia. Tesla ($1.39 trillion) narrowly trails Indonesia ($1.40 trillion)—by less than $6 billion. Berkshire Hathaway, at $1.03 trillion, lands between the Netherlands and Switzerland.
Walmart, which topped the Fortune 500 revenue rankings for 13 consecutive years before Amazon claimed the title in 2026, sits just outside this group at roughly $913 billion in market cap, below Switzerland.
The concentration is notable even within the list itself. The top five companies alone—Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon—have a combined market value of roughly $16.4 trillion, which could rival China’s GDP.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
原文: https://fortune.com/2026/06/03/fortune-500-companies-national-economy-fortune-500-gdp/
