This brief overview is designed to address the options for increasing organ transplant rates to between 100 and 120 transplanted organs per million population globally. The focus of this review is the data produced through the World Health Organization's Global Observatory on Donation and Transplantation, with consideration for the issues that different countries need to address to achieve higher transplant rates. Without both optimized living donation and optimized deceased donation, rates of transplant are not sufficient to provide for a level of self-dependency for transplant therapy. Deceased donation comprises both donation from donors declared dead after cessation of all functions of the brain and donors declared dead from irreversible cessation of circulation of the blood. The preservation strategies that hold the greatest chance of increasing the utility of marginal and older donors involve normothermic circulation to prevent ischemic damage and potentially restore function of damaged organs. Normothermic in situ perfusion of abdominal organs has demonstrated utility, and consideration must be given to normothermic perfusion of the thoracic organs to improve heart and lung transplants, but this may challenge the legal definitions of death. Each nation must endeavor to increase organ donation capacity across the spectrum of donor types and must address the opportunities that normothermic perfusion of organs at retrieval may offer to alleviate shortages of organs for transplant and provide selfdependency for the communities.