Developed in partnership with the Reykjavík Global Forum, The Reykjavík Index for Leadership is the measure of how women and men are perceived in terms of their suitability for leadership. This is the eighth year of results in the G7.
A score of 100 would mean that women and men were viewed by society as equally suitable for leadership.
Launched in 2018, with the support of the Icelandic Government, the Index measures perceptions of women and men as leaders across 23 economic sectors. The initial findings cover the G7 group of countries together with Iceland.
Verian presented the initial findings of the 2026 Reykjavík Index for Leadership on 10 November 2025 in Iceland. The full report report was launched at an event in New York on 12 March 2026.
Countries within the G7 are experiencing different trajectories:
This cohort issue was apparent in our very first data, back in 2018, but since then it has widened to become increasingly important. It signals a wider paradigm shift in many G7 countries, as we see young people no longer having more ‘progressive’ attitudes than their parents. However, it is important to remember the nuance in this data. Within it, there will be polarised views including segments of young people who hold similar, or even more progressive, views than older generations.
In 2025, the most significant contrast can be seen in Germany, where there is an 11 point gap between 18-34 and 35-54 year olds.
Italy is an outlier this year, with little difference based on respondent age.
Our findings reveal that prejudice around suitability for leadership is not just against women. We have also seen the increase in prejudice against men in the sectors of the economy that has historically been viewed as associated with women. For example, men are seen as less suited for leadership than women in childcare. Meanwhile, women continue to face these challenges in defence, engineering and aerospace.
With a Reykjavík Index of 86, this year’s findings show that Iceland continues to have the highest scores of any country measured with a Reykjavík Index of 86 compared to the G7 average of 68.
Field work period: September-November 2025