Southern and Eastern Africa

Mozambique

A woman stands with a pointer and watches as a child writes on a blackboard placed against a wall. Children are seated on the floor in front of the board. Soe bags can be seen placed against a dilapidated wall.
A class in an improvised corner of one of the buildings destroyed by conflict in Mocimboa da Praia, Cabo Delgado. Photo: OCHA/Mario Mangazi
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Mozambique is facing a deeply neglected crisis where humanitarian needs are rising rapidly amid worsening violence and repeated climate shocks. 

In 2025, humanitarian needs in Mozambique increased due to a significant escalation of the conflict in Cabo Delgado, the high vulnerability of people returning to their home areas amid widespread destruction of social services, and the impact of three major cyclones combined with El Niño–induced droughts. Communities faced severe food insecurity, limited access to health care and education, and heightened protection risks, particularly for women, girls, and children. Repeated shocks eroded resilience and deepened vulnerabilities, leaving hundreds of thousands in need of life-saving assistance.

Humanitarian access was severely disrupted by insecurity, airstrip closures, and mandatory military escorts. While limited responses have since resumed, progress remains constrained by fragile access conditions.

In 2026, insecurity in northern Mozambique is expected to persist and expand, with non-State armed groups continuing mobile raids, abductions, extortion, and informal taxation along key routes, mining areas and coastal zones, further constraining livelihoods and humanitarian access.

Humanitarian operations will face severe constraints due to security escort requirements, road blockages, flooding, funding shortfalls, and bureaucratic impediments, including costly visa and work permit delays and increasing government oversight that risks compromising humanitarian principles. Funding gaps will limit recovery efforts and may reverse development gains, leaving essential services largely non-functional.

The UN and partners require about US$348 million to meet the most urgent humanitarian needs in Mozambique. This includes $265 million to assist the most vulnerable 919,000 people in locations with severe needs.

Overview of humanitarian response in Mozambique

For a full overview of the humanitarian response, visit humanitarianaction.info
Total Population
35,6 M 2026
People in need
1,6 M 2026
People to be covered by assistance
1,1 M 2026
Total requirements (USD)
347,6 M 2026
Funding coverage (%)
4.12 2026
Funding gap (USD)
333,3 M 2026

Top 5 donors

European Commission
$5,4 millions
Germany, Government of
$3,5 millions
United Kingdom, Government of
$2,5 millions
Switzerland, Government of
$1,9 millions
Canada, Government of
$0,6 millions

Top 5 funded sectors

Not specified
$4,5 millions
Food Security and Livelihoods
$3,5 millions
Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
$2 millions
Education
$1,1 millions
Protection
$0,9 millions

Resources

Funding for OCHA Mozambique

Total requirements (USD)
3 130 382 2026
Opening balance (USD)
0 2026
Earmarked funding (USD)
36 101 2026
Total (USD)
36 101 2026

Earmarked contributions

Private Contributions
$0 millions

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.