There is no exact, counted number of stars in the universe, but current scientific estimates put the total in the observable universe at roughly between 102210^{22}1022 and 102410^{24}1024 stars.

Quick answer

  • A commonly quoted rough figure is about 102210^{22}1022 stars (10 sextillion).
  • Some methods give higher ranges up to about 4.5×10244.5\times 10^{24}4.5×1024 stars.
  • Any specific number is an estimate , not a direct count, and will be refined as observations improve.

How scientists get that number

Astronomers cannot count individual stars; instead they estimate based on galaxies.

  1. Estimate stars in a typical galaxy
    • The Milky Way is thought to have on the order of 100–400 billion stars.
  1. Estimate how many galaxies there are
    • Deep surveys suggest around 200 billion to perhaps 2 trillion galaxies in the observable universe.
  1. Multiply the two
    • Taking 100 billion stars per galaxy and 2 trillion galaxies gives about 2×10232\times 10^{23}2×1023 stars (often rounded to about 200 sextillion).

Different assumptions about “typical” galaxies and how much light they contribute give a range rather than a single value, which is why you see estimates from about 102210^{22}1022 up to a few 102410^{24}1024.

A couple of concrete examples

  • One popular educational estimate uses:
    • 100 billion stars in a typical galaxy,
    • 2 trillion galaxies,
    • leading to roughly 200 billion trillion (200 sextillion) stars.
  • A research-summary site notes that:
    • Combining various observational methods suggests the observable universe likely contains between 102210^{22}1022 and 102410^{24}1024 stars overall.

So when people ask “how many stars are there in the universe?”, the best honest answer is: an unimaginably huge number, on the order of 102210^{22}1022–102410^{24}1024 stars in the observable part of it, and we will never know the exact figure.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.