A
sovereign state is a political association with effective
sovereignty over a population for whom it makes decisions in the national interest. According to the
Montevideo Convention, a state must have a permanent population, a defined territory, a government, and the capacity to enter into relations with other states.
UN member states and UNGA non-member observer state There are 50 sovereign states with territory located within the common definition of Europe and/or membership in international European organisations that are almost universally recognized internationally. All are either member states of the
United Nations or non-member observer states at the
United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), and all except Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Vatican City are members of the
Council of Europe. 44 countries have their capital city located within Europe, and (as of 2022) 27 of those countries are
member states of the European Union, which means that they are highly integrated with one another and share their sovereignty through
EU institutions. There are currently nine states recognized as
candidate countries for membership in the
European Union. Seven of these nine states are located in Europe (
Albania,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Moldova,
Montenegro,
North Macedonia,
Serbia, and
Ukraine), while two have territories in both Asia and Europe (
Georgia and
Turkey). Each entry in the list below has a map of its location in Europe. Territory in Europe is shown in dark-green; territory not geographically in Europe is shown in a lighter shade of green. The lightest shade of green represents other states in the EU and is shown on the maps of all territories within the EU. For candidate members of the EU, see
potential enlargement of the European Union.
De facto states The following five entities in Europe have partial
diplomatic recognition by one or more
UN member states (and therefore are defined as states by the
constitutive theory of statehood) or have no diplomatic recognition by any UN member state but are defined as states by the
declarative theory of statehood. None are members of the UN, Council of Europe or EU. == Non-sovereign territories ==