The largest oceans in the world cover over 71% of Earth’s surface and are among the most tested topics in Indian competitive exams.
From the vast Pacific to the frozen Arctic, questions on ocean names, sizes, depths, and bordering countries appear regularly in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and State PSC papers. This page gives you a complete ranked list of all five oceans and the world’s major seas — with area, depth, and exam-ready facts in one place.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Pacific Ocean — largest and deepest ocean; covers more area than all of Earth’s landmasses combined.
- Mariana Trench (Pacific) — at ~11,034 m, the deepest known point on Earth (Challenger Deep).
- Arctic Ocean — smallest and shallowest of the five oceans; largely covered by sea ice.
- Southern Ocean — surrounding Antarctica; officially recognised as the fifth ocean by National Geographic in June 2021.
- Caspian Sea — world’s largest landlocked body of water; technically a lake despite being called a “sea.”
Many students write “Antarctic Ocean” instead of the correct name “Southern Ocean” — the official name recognised in 2021 is Southern Ocean. Also, the Caspian Sea is not a sea — it is technically the world’s largest lake because it is entirely landlocked. Do not confuse Bay of Bengal (a bay / marginal sea) with the largest sea — the Philippine Sea holds that distinction.
✅ My Progress Tracker
🌊 Complete List of Oceans & Seas
| # ↕ | Ocean ↕ | Area (sq. km) ↕ | Avg. Depth (m) | Deepest Point | Deepest (m) | Region ↕ | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pacific Ocean | 165,250,000 | 4,280 | Mariana Trench (Challenger Deep) | 11,034 | Pacific | Largest & deepest ocean; covers ~46% of world’s water surface |
| 2 | Atlantic Ocean | 106,460,000 | 3,332 | Puerto Rico Trench | 8,376 | Atlantic | Second largest; S-shaped; separates Americas from Europe/Africa |
| 3 | Indian Ocean | 70,560,000 | 3,741 | Sunda Trench (Java Trench) | 7,187 | Indian | Third largest; warmest ocean; surrounds Indian subcontinent |
| 4 | Southern Ocean | 21,960,000 | 3,270 | South Sandwich Trench | 7,235 | Southern | Newest recognised ocean (2021); encircles Antarctica |
| 5 | Arctic Ocean | 14,056,000 | 1,205 | Molloy Deep | 5,550 | Arctic | Smallest & shallowest ocean; largely ice-covered |
| # ↕ | Sea ↕ | Area (sq. km) ↕ | Connected Ocean | Region ↕ | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Philippine Sea | 5,695,000 | Western Pacific Ocean | Pacific | Largest sea in the world by area |
| 2 | Coral Sea | 4,791,000 | Southwest Pacific | Pacific | Contains the Great Barrier Reef |
| 3 | Arabian Sea | 3,862,000 | NW Indian Ocean | Indian | India’s western maritime boundary; major trade route |
| 4 | South China Sea | 3,500,000 | Western Pacific | Pacific | Disputed waters; strategic global shipping lane |
| 5 | Caribbean Sea | 2,754,000 | Western Atlantic | Atlantic | Known for coral reefs and island nations |
| 6 | Mediterranean Sea | 2,500,000 | Atlantic (via Strait of Gibraltar) | Atlantic | Landlocked sea; Suez Canal connects it to Red Sea |
| 7 | Bering Sea | 2,291,900 | North Pacific | Pacific | Separates Asia (Russia) from North America (Alaska) |
| 8 | Bay of Bengal | 2,173,000 | NE Indian Ocean | Indian | India’s eastern boundary; most cyclone-prone sea; world’s largest bay |
| 9 | Sea of Okhotsk | 1,583,000 | NW Pacific | Pacific | Partially frozen in winter; Russia/Japan |
| 10 | Gulf of Mexico | 1,550,000 | Atlantic | Atlantic | Classified as marginal sea; major oil-producing region |
| 11 | Norwegian Sea | 1,383,000 | North Atlantic | Atlantic | Part of the Arctic margin; off Norway |
| 12 | Hudson Bay | 1,230,000 | North Canada | Atlantic | World’s largest bay; freezes in winter |
| 13 | Greenland Sea | 1,205,000 | Arctic Ocean margin | Arctic | Between Greenland and Svalbard; part of Arctic margin |
| 14 | Sea of Japan (East Sea) | 1,008,000 | NW Pacific | Pacific | Strategic sea in Northeast Asia; Japan, Korea, Russia |
| 15 | Andaman Sea | 797,700 | NE Indian Ocean | Indian | India’s Andaman & Nicobar Islands border this sea |
| 16 | Red Sea | 438,000 | Indian Ocean | Indian | Saltiest sea (~40 ppt); Suez Canal connects it to Mediterranean |
| 17 | Black Sea | 436,400 | Mediterranean | Atlantic | Connects to Mediterranean via Bosphorus & Dardanelles straits |
| 18 | Caspian Sea | 371,000 | Landlocked (no ocean) | Atlantic | Largest landlocked water body; technically a lake |
| 19 | Persian Gulf | 251,000 | Indian Ocean | Indian | World’s largest oil-exporting maritime region |
| Water Body | Location Relative to India | Key Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Arabian Sea | West of India | Western seaboard; Mumbai, Goa, Kochi ports |
| Bay of Bengal | East of India | Eastern seaboard; Chennai, Kolkata, Vizag ports; most cyclones |
| Indian Ocean | South of India | Southern tip (Kanyakumari) where all three water bodies meet |
| Andaman Sea | East of Andaman & Nicobar Islands | Strategic island territory; NE Indian Ocean |
| Laccadive Sea | West of Lakshadweep Islands | Lakshadweep island chain; part of Indian Ocean |
| Palk Strait | Between India (TN) and Sri Lanka | Narrow strait; location of Adam’s Bridge (Ram Setu) |
| Gulf of Mannar | Between India (TN) and Sri Lanka | Biosphere reserve; pearl fishing heritage |
| Gulf of Khambhat | West coast, Gujarat | Narmada & Tapti rivers drain here |
| Gulf of Kachchh | Northwest coast, Gujarat | Kandla port; significant tidal energy potential |
⚖️ Compare Two Oceans / Seas
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
National Geographic officially recognised the Southern Ocean as the fifth ocean in June 2021, defined by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current that separates it from the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. Most older textbooks list only four oceans — exam questions may reflect either count; know both.
Remember these three deepest points in order: Mariana Trench (Pacific, ~11,034 m) is the deepest point on Earth. Puerto Rico Trench (Atlantic, ~8,376 m) is second. Java/Sunda Trench (Indian Ocean, ~7,187 m) is third. These three come up repeatedly in SSC, UPSC, and Railway exams.
The Red Sea is the world’s saltiest sea (~40 ppt average salinity), while the Baltic Sea is the least saline major sea. The Caspian Sea, though called a “sea,” is technically the world’s largest lake as it is entirely landlocked with no outlet to any ocean.
India is surrounded by Arabian Sea (west), Bay of Bengal (east), and Indian Ocean (south). The Bay of Bengal is the world’s largest bay by area and is the most cyclone-prone sea affecting India — accounting for ~80% of India’s cyclone activity.
“People Always Imagine Swimming Alone”
→ Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern, Arctic
“A Boy Is” → Arabian Sea · Bay of Bengal · Indian Ocean
🃏 Flashcards
Click a card to flip · Use arrows to navigate
🧩 Practice Quiz
5 questions · Answer all · Check your score
The Pacific Ocean covers approximately 165 million sq. km, making it the largest and deepest ocean on Earth. It covers more area than all of Earth\u2019s landmasses combined.
The Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench (Pacific Ocean) is the deepest known point on Earth at approximately 11,034 metres. It was first reached by Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh in 1960.
National Geographic officially recognised the Southern Ocean as the fifth ocean in June 2021. It surrounds Antarctica and is defined by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Its official name is the Southern Ocean, not “Antarctic Ocean.”
The Philippine Sea in the western Pacific Ocean is the world\u2019s largest sea, covering approximately 5.7 million sq. km. It is often overlooked in favour of better-known seas like the South China Sea or Arabian Sea.
The Bay of Bengal accounts for roughly 80% of India\u2019s cyclone activity due to its warm, shallow waters and funnel-shaped geography. States like Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal are most frequently affected.
\u2705 Key Takeaways
\u2753 Frequently Asked Questions
There are five oceans in the world \u2014 Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern, and Arctic. The Southern Ocean was the most recently recognised, officially added by National Geographic in 2021. Older textbooks and some syllabi still list four oceans, so it is important to know both counts for exam purposes.
The Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean in the world, covering approximately 165 million sq. km \u2014 more than all of Earth\u2019s landmasses combined. It is also the deepest ocean, containing the Mariana Trench (Challenger Deep) at ~11,034 m, the deepest known point on Earth.
India is bounded by the Arabian Sea to the west, the Bay of Bengal to the east, and the Indian Ocean to the south. The southernmost tip of the Indian peninsula, Kanyakumari (Cape Comorin), is the point where all three water bodies converge. This geography makes India one of the few countries flanked by three major water bodies.
Yes, oceans and seas are consistently tested in UPSC Prelims (Geography), SSC CGL, Banking, and Railway exams. Common question types include ranking oceans by size or depth, identifying the deepest points, naming India\u2019s bordering seas, cyclone-prone regions, and saltiest or largest seas. Knowing the five oceans in size order and key sea facts from this list covers most exam patterns.