Home › Compare

How Alaska compares

The Alaska Permanent Fund is the largest sovereign wealth fund in the United States — and a small fish in a very large global pond. Here's the picture.

#1
Largest U.S. sovereign wealth fund
~$89B
Alaska Permanent Fund (2026)
~26×
How much larger Norway's fund is
$13–14T
All sovereign wealth funds combined

Global scale

The world's largest sovereign wealth funds

Assets under management. Alaska is shown for scale at the bottom.

Approximate AUM, 2025–2026. Sources below.[1]

The numbers

RankFundCountryApprox. assets
1Government Pension Fund Global (NBIM)Norway$2.1 trillion+
2China Investment Corporation (CIC)China$1.33 trillion
3Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA)UAE$1.11 trillion
4Public Investment Fund (PIF)Saudi Arabia$925 billion
5Qatar Investment Authority (QIA)Qatar$557 billion
Alaska Permanent Fund (APF)USA (Alaska)$89 billion

Approximate values, 2025–2026; some funds do not disclose exact figures. Five funds now exceed $1 trillion.[1]

The Norway model

What Alaska can learn from the world's biggest

Norway started saving its oil money in 1990 — 14 years after Alaska — yet its fund is now about 26 times larger. How?

Norway deposits nearly all of its petroleum revenue into the fund and, by a strict rule, spends only the expected real return (around 3% a year) on the budget. The principal keeps compounding, and the fund is built to outlive the oil.

Alaska's design is similar in spirit, but it saves a smaller share (a constitutional minimum of 25% of royalties) and pays a direct dividend. The contrast is a useful mirror as Alaskans debate how much to save, how much to draw, and whether to protect the Fund's real value.

And among U.S. funds?

Several U.S. states run resource-based funds, but Alaska's is by far the largest and the only one that pays a universal annual dividend. Peers include Texas's Permanent University Fund and Permanent School Fund, New Mexico's Land Grant Permanent Fund, North Dakota's Legacy Fund, and Wyoming's Permanent Mineral Trust Fund — but none returns money directly to residents the way Alaska does.

Sources

  1. Sovereign wealth fund rankings: Visual Capitalist and industry trackers (2025–2026). Norway >$2.1T; CIC ~$1.33T; ADIA ~$1.11T; PIF ~$925B; QIA ~$557B; global total ~$13–14T.
  2. Alaska Permanent Fund value: APFC apfc.org (~$89B, 2026). Norway fund history and spending rule: Norges Bank Investment Management.