Southern and Eastern Africa

Somalia

An OCHA team hears from drought-affected communities in Galkacyo district in Somalia's Mudug region.
An OCHA team hears from drought-affected communities in Galkacyo district in Somalia's Mudug region. Photo: OCHA/Erich Ogoso
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Somalia’s humanitarian crisis is among the world's most complex, driven by cycles of internal conflict and climate shocks, that drive displacement and undermine development efforts. The cumulative effect of both violence and climate shocks continues to drive displacement, destroy livelihoods, leaving millions of people in urgent need of assistance. 

Failure of rains in 2025 have caused severe drought conditions, which continue to displace people across the country. Authorities estimate that more than 4.6 million people – nearly one in four people in Somalia – have been affected by the drought. The worst-affected areas include the central regions of Galgaduud and Mudug.

According to authorities and humanitarian partners, nearly half a million people have now abandoned their homes since September of last year. Families are on the move in search of water, pasture for their livestock and food.  

This is putting additional pressure on already overcrowded displacement sites.

Somalia’s fragile health system is under immense strain as poor access to safe water and drought-driven displacement have triggered an upsurge of vaccine-preventable diseases, AWD/cholera and other disease outbreaks, affecting the country’s high number of 'zero-dose' children. 

The health system’s capacity to respond is severely hindered by chronic underfunding and logistical disruptions, leaving critical gaps in facility-based care. The combined impact of restricted access to healthcare and the rising disease burden poses an immediate threat to life, particularly for malnourished children and pregnant women in the most severely affected inter-sectoral priority areas.

Conflict remains a critical driver of humanitarian needs in Somalia, with inter-clan fighting, retaliatory attacks, and military offensives. It also affects the delivery of aid. 

Severe aid cuts can lead to pipeline disruptions in food and nutrition supplies such as Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food and Ready-to-Use Supplementary Food, as well as interruptions in cash assistance programmes with dire consequences.

The UN and partners will need US$852 million to support 2.4 million people. The response will prioritize providing healthcare, water, food security and shelter among other urgent interventions.

Overview of humanitarian response in Somalia

For a full overview of the humanitarian response, visit humanitarianaction.info
Total Population
19,7M 2026
People in need
4,8M 2026
People to be covered by assistance
2,4M 2026
Total requirements (USD)
852M 2026
Funding total (USD)
111M 2026
Funding coverage (%)
13.03 2026

Top 5 donors

United Kingdom, Government of
$33,1 millones
European Commission
$30,3 millones
Denmark, Government of
$13,1 millones
Qatar, Government of
$12,2 millones
Germany, Government of
$5,8 millones

The Somalia Humanitarian Fund

The Somalia Humanitarian Fund (SHF) is a multi-donor country-based pooled mechanism created in 2010 to allocate funding for the most urgent life-saving interventions in Somalia. With the SHF, governments and private donors can channel their contributions into a common, unearmarked fund to deliver life-saving assistance to people who need it most. The Humanitarian Coordinator oversees the fund and its allocations. The Fund supports the highest-priority projects of the best-placed responders—mainly international and national NGOs and some UN agencies—through an inclusive and transparent process that meets priorities set out in the Somalia Humanitarian Response Plan.

Top 5 donors

United Kingdom
$2,8 millones (paid)
Germany
$2,3 millones (pledged)
Kuwait
$1,3 millones (pledged)
Canada
$1,2 millones (pledged)

Resources

Somalia

Appeal

Somalia Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan 2026

Somalia faces an intensifying humanitarian crisis driven by prolonged drought, conflict, and recurrent disease outbreaks. A multi-stakeholder shock analysis conducted in 2025 estimated that 7.5...

Originally published
Source
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Read more

Somalia

Situation Report

SOMALIA: 2025 Drought Emergency| Situation Report No. 3

Highlights: Drought conditions have intensified across Somalia leading to widespread water scarcity, crop failure, livestock losses, and displacements. In many areas, community coping mechanisms are...

Originally published
Source
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Read more

Funding for OCHA Somalia

Total requirements (USD)
7,9M 2026
Opening balance (USD)
0 2026
Earmarked funding (USD)
1M 2026
Total (USD)
1M 2026

Earmarked contributions

Private Contributions
$0,7 millones

Unearmarked contributions

  • Australia
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Estonia
  • Finland
  • Iceland
  • Ireland
  • Luxembourg
  • Monaco
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Qatar
  • Sweden

Unearmarked contributions (or commitments) are those for which the donor does not require the funds to be used for a specific project, sector, crisis or country, leaving OCHA to decide how to allocate the funds.

Opening balance may include unearmarked and earmarked funding with implementation dates beyond the calendar year, and excludes miscellaneous income (e.g. adjustments, gain/losses on exchange rate etc.)

Funding information from the OCHA Contributions Tracking System.