Bogotá, 13 de febrero de 2026 El Gobierno de Colombia y el Equipo Humanitario País (EHP) presentan el Plan de Respuesta a Necesidades Humanitarias (HNRP 2026), una estrategia integral diseñada para...
Colombia
Colombia continues to face a multidimensional yet growing humanitarian crisis driven by the reconfiguration of conflict, climate change-related disasters, and the needs of refugee and migrant populations. Rural, ethnic, refugee, and migrant communities remain disproportionately affected.
The fragmentation of non-State armed group and their efforts to expand territorial and social control have intensified violence against civilians. Approximately 78 per cent of the rural population (9.9 million people) live under the influence of at least one non-State armed group. In 2025, 1.5 million people were affected by conflict and violence—three times more than in the same period of 2024.
Grave violations against children have increased for the fifth consecutive year, with forced recruitment and use of children and adolescents—especially among Indigenous and Afro-descendant groups—eroding community resilience. Rising incidents involving explosive devices and drone-deployed munitions have further heightened civilian risks.
In 2026, 10.4 million people in Colombia are projected to need humanitarian assistance — 6.9 million under the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan and 3.5 million under the Regional Refugee and Migrant Response Plan — a 30 per cent increase in severe needs compared to 2025. This rise stems from the overlapping impacts of conflict, climate shocks, and migration, as failed peace efforts and the expansion of non-State armed groups drive displacement, confinement, and social control, while recurrent disasters worsen conditions in already vulnerable areas.
By 2025, more than 1.3 million people faced humanitarian access constraints, reflecting the deterioration of protection and international humanitarian law compliance in areas with limited state presence. Alarmingly, by September 2025, 403 incidents against medical missions were recorded—the highest figure in nearly three decades. Women and girls have been disproportionately affected by the conflict. Between 2021 and 2025, over 6,000 cases of sexual violence were reported, 90 per cent involving women and girls. Non-State armed groups have increased the recruitment and exploitation of girls, while restrictions on health services and reproductive rights continue to put women’s lives at risk.
In 2026, the UN and partners need US$384 million to reach 2.6 million people, representing a more focused and achievable reach aligned with severity levels, operational realities, and expected funding.
Overview of the Humanitarian Response in Colombia
For a full overview of the humanitarian response, visit humanitarianaction.info
- Total Population
- 53,4 M 2026
- People in need
- 6,9 M 2026
- People to be covered by assistance
- 2,7 M 2026
- Total requirements (USD)
- 287 M 2026
- Funding coverage (%)
- 5.43 2026
- Funding gap (USD)
- 271,4 M 2026
Top 5 donors
- European Commission
- $6,9 millions
- Switzerland, Government of
- $4,5 millions
- Germany, Government of
- $1,1 millions
- Spain, Government of
- $1 millions
- Private (individuals & organizations)
- $0,4 millions
Top 5 funded sectors
- Protección
- $5,1 millions
- Salud
- $2,5 millions
- Not specified
- $2,2 millions
- Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición
- $1,7 millions
- Coordinación
- $1,4 millions
#The Colombia Humanitarian Fund
The Humanitarian Fund in Colombia is part of the Regional Humanitarian Pooled Fund for Latin America and Caribbean Humanitarian, one of the UN's regional pooled funds. The Fund aims to support humanitarian action and address needs caused by armed conflicts and disasters, including those of refugees and migrants. The Fund supports efforts led by the Colombia Humanitarian Country Team to promote localization, ensuring equitable access to funding for local and national organizations through fair partnerships. It prioritizes community participation, integrated multi-sectoral approaches, the centrality of protection, gender equality and accountability to affected populations.
Find out more about this country-based pooled fund at the CBPF Data Hub
Funding for OCHA Colombia
- Total requirements (USD)
- 1,5 M 2026
- Opening balance (USD)
- 0 2026
- Earmarked funding (USD)
- 204 k 2026
- Total (USD)
- 204 k 2026
Earmarked contributions
- Private Contributions
- $0,1 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.
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