International Datasets
DataInt harmonizes 79 international datasets sourced exclusively from official institutional publishers, spanning the full breadth of global reference data. The economic and development layer includes the World Bank's World Development Indicators (WDI), Worldwide Governance Indicators, Global Findex, Health Nutrition & Population statistics, Education Statistics and Gender Statistics, alongside the IMF Headline Indicators, the Maddison Project's historical GDP series, the World Inequality Database (WID) and CEPII BACI bilateral trade. Governance and society are represented by V-Dem (Varieties of Democracy v16), IPU Parline, the International IDEA Voter Turnout and Direct Democracy databases, the UNODC crime and justice portal, UNHCR refugee statistics and the IDMC internal-displacement database. Demographics and human development draw on UN DESA World Population Prospects 2024, the UNDP Human Development Index and ILOSTAT labour statistics. The climate and energy layer covers EDGAR emissions, the Global Carbon Budget, Ember's electricity generation mix, EIA international energy and Global Forest Watch. Geography and logistics are anchored by the complete GeoNames database (over 12 million features across 249 countries), GADM and geoBoundaries administrative areas, Natural Earth vector maps, Marine Regions maritime boundaries, OurAirports, the World Bank Logistics Performance Index, OECD/ITF freight statistics and Global Fishing Watch. Every value carries its source, edition year and methodology, so the data is fit for research, due diligence and production analytics rather than one-off lookups.
Which institutions are the international datasets sourced from?
Exclusively official publishers: the World Bank (16 statistical databases including WDI, WGI, Findex and HNP), the International Labour Organization (ILOSTAT, NORMLEX), UN DESA (World Population Prospects), UNDP, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNODC, the IMF, the OECD, SIPRI, the V-Dem Institute, International IDEA and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, among others. Nothing is crowd-sourced or AI-generated.
What geographic and logistics data is available?
GeoNames (over 12 million features across 249 countries), GADM and geoBoundaries administrative boundaries (levels 0–5), Natural Earth vector maps, Marine Regions exclusive economic zones, OurAirports, the World Bank Logistics Performance Index, OECD/ITF freight transport statistics, BIC container-facility codes and Global Fishing Watch port and anchorage data.
Does the collection cover governance, democracy and human rights?
Yes. It includes V-Dem (Varieties of Democracy), the Database of Political Institutions, IPU Parline world parliaments, the International IDEA voter-turnout, direct-democracy and political-finance databases, the World Bank's Worldwide Governance Indicators and CPIA, the UNODC crime-and-justice portal, UNHCR refugee statistics and the IDMC internal-displacement database.
How is each figure traced back to its source?
Every indicator is stamped with its originating publisher, the edition or reference year, and the underlying methodology. Where multiple authorities report the same measure, the figures are shown side by side rather than silently reconciled — DataInt reports what the sources say, not a single asserted truth.
Country Datasets
DataInt provides 1,905 country-specific datasets across 250+ countries and territories, covering administrative divisions, banking and financial-institution codes, customs offices, port and terminal facilities, tax authorities, and national trade classifications. Each country's collection draws on locally-sourced, officially-published regulatory and reference data — the practical building blocks for doing business in a given market. The depth scales with data availability: Turkey alone carries more than 40 datasets, including GTIP customs tariff codes, bank and branch codes, customs office directories, tax office registries, port and terminal data, postal codes and trade statistics, while major economies such as the United States, China and the larger EU member states maintain their own comprehensive collections. Country datasets are particularly valuable for customs brokers, freight forwarders, banks and compliance teams that need accurate, current local reference data. Because every dataset is normalized to a consistent structure and stamped with its source and edition, records from different countries can be queried and compared without bespoke parsing per jurisdiction.
How many countries and datasets are covered?
DataInt currently organizes 1,905 datasets across 250+ countries and territories spanning Europe, Asia, the Americas, Africa and Oceania. Major trading nations such as Turkey, the United States, China, Germany, France and the United Kingdom hold the most comprehensive collections, while smaller markets are covered to the extent that official data is published.
What types of country-specific data are available?
Typical country datasets include customs tariff codes, bank and financial-institution codes, customs office directories, port and terminal codes, tax authority registries, postal and administrative divisions, and trade statistics. The exact mix varies by country based on what each national authority publishes.
How is country data different from international standards data?
International standards such as ISO or HS codes are globally uniform. Country datasets capture nation-specific implementations, extensions and local regulatory data. For example, Turkey's GTIP codes extend the global HS system with national subdivisions specific to Turkish customs, and national bank codes follow each country's own clearing conventions.
How current is country-specific data and where does it come from?
Each dataset traces to an official national source — a customs administration, central bank, tax authority or statistics office — and carries its edition or reference date. Customs tariffs typically refresh annually as governments publish new schedules; banking codes change as institutions are added or merged; customs and tax-office directories update as authorities revise them.
Standards Datasets
DataInt aggregates 31 datasets from the world's leading international standards organizations. The ISO family includes country codes (ISO 3166 and ISO 3166-2 subdivisions), currency codes (ISO 4217), language codes (ISO 639 parts 1–3) and container codes (ISO 6346). Aviation is covered by IATA airline, airport and ULD codes, ICAO aircraft type designators and the FAA aircraft registry, alongside aviation abbreviations. Maritime and logistics standards span IMO statutory certificates, EMSA ship-type classifications, the SMDG liner, terminal and reference code lists, the World Port Index and Equasis world fleet statistics. Trade and finance are represented by Incoterms rules, the Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) registry from GLEIF, and the Unicode CLDR locale display names. Dangerous-goods and chemical safety are unusually deep, with the BAM dangerous-goods family (UN, ADR, RID, ADN, IMDG and ICAO variants), the CAMEO chemicals database, GHS hazard labels and the US CFR 49 hazardous-materials regulations, plus GENC geopolitical entity codes. Each dataset is normalized to a consistent schema with multilingual fields where applicable, so it can underpin logistics software, trade-document validation and ERP reference tables without per-source cleanup.
What international standards datasets are available on DataInt?
31 datasets from ISO, IATA, ICAO, IMO, ICC, GLEIF, BAM and other bodies. These include ISO 3166 country codes, ISO 3166-2 subdivisions, ISO 4217 currencies, ISO 639 languages, ISO 6346 container codes, IATA airline/airport/ULD codes, ICAO Doc 8643 aircraft types, Incoterms, the LEI registry, the SMDG shipping code lists, the World Port Index and the full BAM dangerous-goods family.
How current are the standards datasets and where do they come from?
Each dataset traces to its issuing authority and carries an edition or reference date. ISO codes follow ISO amendments, IATA codes follow seasonal updates, the LEI registry is maintained by GLEIF, and Incoterms reflect the latest ICC revision. The dangerous-goods sets follow the UN Model Regulations and their modal agreements (ADR, RID, ADN, IMDG, ICAO-TI).
Which dangerous-goods and chemical-safety standards are included?
The BAM family covers UN numbers and the ADR (road), RID (rail), ADN (inland waterway), IMDG (sea) and ICAO (air) modal regulations, complemented by the CAMEO chemicals database, GHS hazard labels and the US CFR 49 hazardous-materials regulations — a complete reference set for multimodal hazmat transport and compliance.
What formats and structure does standards data use?
Every dataset is delivered as structured records with consistent field naming and, where the standard defines them, multilingual labels. Code lists preserve their official hierarchy (for example chapter/heading structure or subdivision nesting) so cross-references between standards remain intact.
European Union Datasets
DataInt aggregates 20 datasets from European Union institutions covering customs, trade, statistics, finance and regulation. Customs and trade are anchored by TARIC (the EU's integrated customs tariff with duty rates and trade measures), the Combined Nomenclature (CN), dual-use items subject to export controls, the EU Common Military List, and the eAmbrosia register of geographical indications. Statistical classifications include NACE Rev. 2.1 economic activities, NUTS 2021 territorial units, CPA products by activity, and CPV public-procurement vocabulary — the same frameworks Eurostat and national statistical offices use. Finance and payments are represented by the EU consolidated sanctions list, EBA-authorized payment and e-money institutions, the ECB's list of monetary financial institutions (MFI), daily euro bilateral exchange rates, and SEPA and TARGET/T2 payment-system participants. Transport and environment round out the set with European rail stations, the TEN-T trans-European transport network, EU transport statistics, EU VAT rates across member states, and the European Waste Catalogue (EWC). Together these are the essential references for EU trade compliance, customs declarations, statistical reporting, financial-institution due diligence and public procurement, each normalized and stamped with its source and edition.
What is TARIC and how does it differ from the HS system?
TARIC (Tarif Intégré Communautaire) is the EU's integrated customs tariff. It extends the 6-digit HS codes with EU-specific subdivisions (up to 10 digits), duty rates, trade-defence measures, quotas and preferential arrangements. DataInt provides the TARIC nomenclature together with the Combined Nomenclature (CN) it builds on.
How can I look up EU sanctions?
The EU consolidated sanctions list covers the individuals, entities and organizations subject to EU restrictive measures, with names, aliases and identification details suitable for screening. DataInt also carries the UN Security Council consolidated list, so EU and UN designations can be checked together.
What EU statistical classifications are available?
NACE Rev. 2.1 (economic activities), NUTS 2021 (territorial units), CPA (products by activity) and CPV (public-procurement vocabulary). These are the classifications used by Eurostat and national statistical offices across all EU member states, kept in their official hierarchical structure.
Are EU VAT rates and payment-system registers available per country?
Yes. The VAT dataset covers every member state with standard, reduced and super-reduced rates, while the EBA payment-institution register, ECB MFI list and SEPA and TARGET/T2 participant lists provide member-state-level coverage of authorized financial and payment-system entities.
United Nations Datasets
DataInt provides 20 datasets from United Nations agencies that form the backbone of international trade and statistical classification. Trade and customs are anchored by the Harmonized System (HS) codes used by customs authorities worldwide, the SITC and BEC trade classifications, and the UN Dangerous Goods list with 2,347 UN numbers. Locations and transport are covered by UN/LOCODE, its enriched facilities-and-terminals extension, and UN/LOCODE border crossings — together identifying ports, airports, inland clearance depots and crossing points across the globe. Economic and statistical classifications include CPC (Central Product Classification), ISIC Rev. 4 economic activities, COICOP (consumption) and COFOG (government functions), and ICATUS time-use codes, alongside the M49 country and area codes that underpin UN statistical geography. Interoperability is handled by three correspondence tables — CPC-to-HS, HS-to-SITC and ISIC-to-NACE — that let analysts move cleanly between systems. The set is completed by the UN/EDIFACT electronic data-interchange directory, UNECE Recommendation 20 units of measure and Recommendation 21 package-type codes, and the UN Security Council consolidated sanctions list. Each dataset preserves its official hierarchy and carries source and edition metadata, making it dependable for customs declarations, trade statistics, dangerous-goods compliance and economic analysis.
What are HS codes and what does DataInt provide?
The Harmonized System (HS) is the standardized product-classification system maintained under the World Customs Organization and used by customs authorities worldwide. DataInt provides the full HS nomenclature with its chapter, heading and subheading hierarchy, plus correspondence tables linking HS to SITC and CPC for cross-referencing between systems.
What is UN/LOCODE and how much does it cover?
UN/LOCODE (United Nations Code for Trade and Transport Locations) identifies ports, airports, inland clearance depots and other trade-relevant locations worldwide — over 100,000 locations across 249 countries with geographic coordinates, function codes and status indicators. DataInt also carries an enriched facilities-and-terminals extension and a border-crossings dataset.
How do I look up UN dangerous-goods numbers?
The UN Dangerous Goods dataset contains 2,347 UN numbers from the Model Regulations (Rev. 23). Each entry includes the proper shipping name, hazard class, packing group, subsidiary hazards, special provisions and limited/excepted-quantity allowances — the reference layer beneath the modal ADR/RID/IMDG/ICAO regulations.
What correspondence tables link the UN classifications?
Three: CPC-to-HS (products to trade codes), HS-to-SITC (trade to statistics) and ISIC-to-NACE (economic activities to the EU classification). These enable consistent cross-referencing between the different systems used by UN and EU agencies, so a record classified in one scheme can be mapped to its equivalents.