Luxembourg is not a microstate
Luxembourg always ends up in lists with Monaco and Vatican City as a European microstate. But many argue it doesn’t belong in this category.
At 2,586 km² (998 mi²), Luxembourg has real territory – farmland, forests, proper cities. It sits between three major countries and has substance to it. The so-called microstates? Completely different scale:
Country | Area (km²) | Area (mi²) |
---|---|---|
Luxembourg | 2,586 km² | 998 mi² |
Andorra | 468 km² | 181 mi² |
Malta | 316 km² | 122 mi² |
Liechtenstein | 160 km² | 62 mi² |
San Marino | 61 km² | 24 mi² |
Monaco | 2.1 km² | 0.8 mi² |
Vatican City | 0.49 km² | 0.19 mi² |

Monaco could fit inside Luxembourg 1,230 times. Even Andorra, the biggest of the actual microstates, is five times smaller.
Then there’s the economy. Luxembourg’s GDP per capita was around €56,300 in 2024. That’s 1.42 times the EU average of €39,680. Major banks operate there. Around 200,000 people cross the border daily just to work in Luxembourg.

Yes, you can drive across Luxembourg in under an hour. But you can walk across Vatican City in minutes and Monaco barely takes longer. Luxembourg works like a normal European country – it just happens to be geographically compact while being economically massive.
I love small countries!