Anthropogenic disturbances, such as habitat fragmentation, edge effects, biological invasions, and selective logging, can affect abiotic conditions and biotic interactions that influence the likelihood of seed germination, an important bottleneck for plant regeneration. However, there is no research synthesis evaluating the impact of those disturbances on germination. We performed a global meta-analysis comparing seed germination on disturbed and undisturbed sites. We evaluated the influence of disturbance type, vegetation, plant growth form, dispersal syndrome, seed mass, climate region and phylogeny on germination responses to disturbance. We obtained information about 74 plant species from 25 studies. We found an overall negative effect of anthropogenic disturbance on seed germination. Biological invasion and habitat fragmentation presented a negative impact, whilst edge effects, selective logging and grazing had no consistent effect on seed germination. Anthropogenic disturbances decreased germination of forest species, but plants from open physiognomies (savannas, shrublands and grasslands) were not consistently affected. Disturbed conditions decreased germination of understory forest herbs and shrubs from open physiognomies. Germination of abiotic-dispersed plants was decreased in disturbed areas, whilst there was no consistent effect on biotic-dispersed ones. Seed mass had no effect on species responses, but the interactions between seed mass and growth form and dispersal syndrome affected germination responses. Species responses did not differ between tropical and temperate regions. Phylogenetic relationships among species did not drive the results. Anthropogenic disturbances generally decrease seed germination, and non-trees, small-seeded and abiotic dispersed plants are the most affected. Therefore, conservation practices or restoration efforts focusing on early recruitment, such as direct sowing of seeds, should pay special attention to decreases in seed germination due to habitat alterations following disturbances. Amelioration of disturbed conditions, such as control of invasive species, should be considered to maintain germination rates and plant regeneration in long-term.