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Global Appeal 2026

Chad. More than 41,000 Sudanese refugees flee across border in 2025
Reports

Global Appeal 2026

November 2025
The Global Appeal highlights UNHCR’s plans for the coming year and the funding needed to protect, assist and empower a record number of forcibly displaced and stateless people, and help them find solutions.

Sudanese refugees gather together, sheltering from the sun under trees and building makeshift shelters, at a temporary site in Koulbous, Chad, on the border with Sudan, after fleeing the conflict that erupted in Sudan in April 2023.

UNHCR’s Global Appeal 2026 describes UNHCR’s plans for 2026, including anticipated changes in the global population of forcibly displaced and stateless people, the budget required to meet their needs, and the actions UNHCR plans to take.

A full response to this Appeal would allow UNHCR to prepare in advance, anticipate challenges, and engage strategically on a systematic and multi-year basis when needed.

Read the full Global Appeal

$8.505 billion

are needed in 2026 to protect and assist forcibly displaced and stateless people

128 countries and territories

in which UNHCR will be present and undertake action

136 million people

are projected to be forcibly displaced or stateless in 2026

To be a refugee, an internally displaced or a stateless person is to be cast into a situation of uncertainty and vulnerability, through no fault of your own. It is to find yourself uprooted, seeking safety, legal recognition of your rights, and access to opportunity so you can rebuild your life, or perhaps secure your children’s future.

Filippo Grandi, High Commissioner for Refugees

Country operations

View financial needs and programme plans for selected countries.

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Regions

View regional-level financial needs and programme plans.

An icon of a person crossing a dotted line.

Emergencies

View financial needs and programme plans by emergency.

A young boy in a blue sweater stands against a height rule as a man wearing a surgical mask and gloves measures his height.

Mohamed & Abdelazim | Sudanese refugees in Egypt

Mohamed was too young to remember Sudan. Violence erupted soon after his birth, forcing his mother, Nour Haroun, to flee with him and his sister to Egypt. In Cairo, the family found safety but remained vulnerable. Nour relied on UNHCR’s cash assistance, and Mohamed, suffering from anaemia, received care at a partner clinic.

In March 2025, funding cuts forced UNHCR to suspend life-saving support for refugees in Egypt, leaving thousands without medical treatment or child protection services.

Abdelazim Mohamed, another Sudanese refugee, fled Khartoum with his wife. He suffers from cardiomyopathy and ischemic heart disease. UNHCR’s health partner once provided him with stent procedures and medication. Now, that support is gone.

“I fought so hard to survive,” he says. “But if I can’t afford my medicine, what happens to me? What happens to my wife?”

Their stories reveal the human cost of shrinking humanitarian budgets—where survival hangs in the balance for those who have already lost everything.

Read the full story

Global population planning figures

UNHCR sets its annual budget based on the projected number of forcibly displaced and stateless people for the upcoming year. The 2026 budget anticipates that there will be 136 million forcibly displaced and stateless people by the end of 2026. As of 31 October 2025, UNHCR was present in 128 countries and territories, providing protection and assistance and helping to bring about solutions.

Global funding needs

Based on the population planning figures, UNHCR has calculated a required budget of $8.505 billion for 2026. This budget is designed to enable UNHCR and its partners to provide life-saving protection, assistance and solutions in new and ongoing displacement situations. Of the total, $7.539 billion – or 89% – is planned for operations in the field, with $8.088 billion 95% – allocated to programmed activities.

2025 budget needs

Syrian Arab Republic: UNHCR and its partner delivering core relief items in rural Lattakia, Dourin village.

© UNHCR/Emad Kabbas

Outcome Areas

OA1 - Access
SDG16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

OUTCOME AREA 1

Access to territory, registration and documentation

  • Global financial needs: $694 million 
  • Change from 2025 budget: -7%

In many countries, it is increasingly difficult for people who have been forced to flee to reach safe territory and have their basic rights recognized, including the right to international protection.

In 2026, UNHCR will intervene to prevent and respond to refoulement, support protection-sensitive border management, and register more people who have been forced to flee, whether in new emergencies or long-term refugee situations.

Refugees from Sudan are registered at Kyriandongo reception center in Uganda

UNHCR launched in Jordan a self-renewal service via kiosks, making it easier and faster for refugees to update their information and renew their documents. Lubna Zeineh from UNHCR registration staff conducts an iris scan for Hamza Al-Homsi, a 9-year-old Syrian refugee using the kiosk system.

OA2 - Status

OUTCOME AREA 2

Status determination

  • Global financial needs: $155 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: +23%

Faced with a historic rise in asylum applications, a slew of emergencies, and increasingly complex mixed movements of refugees and migrants, asylum procedures must be able to provide international protection promptly and fairly to those who need it.

In 2026, UNHCR will process asylum claims in countries where no fair and efficient systems exist. In other countries, it will reinforce national systems for determining refugee status and statelessness, ensuring that asylum-seekers can access free legal services and information, and assisting authorities in their response to people moving along key routes.

A woman holds up an ID card and license document for the camera.

Matin, a 20-year-old refugee from Afghanistan, on his way to work in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. He arrived in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2022 and was granted international protection in 2023, enabling him to stay and access basic rights. With support from UNHCR, Catholic Relief Services, and the Public Employment Services, he found work at a Sarajevo-based textile company.

OA3 - Policy
SDG10: Reduced Inequalities

OUTCOME AREA 3

Protection policy and law

  • Global financial needs: $209 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -20%

Despite record forced displacement, many States have still not acceded to key international agreements on refugees or statelessness, nor have they passed laws on internal displacement.

In 2026, UNHCR will promote and support States’ alignment with key international instruments for the protection of forcibly displaced and stateless people, especially the 1951 Refugee Convention, its 1967 Protocol, and the two statelessness conventions. UNHCR will also advocate for stronger legal frameworks in many countries, based on analysis of their laws and policies, and will provide advice on the interpretation of relevant international instruments, and assistance to States in their implementation.   

A woman holing documents.

After fleeing twice and losing her land documents, Mary returned to Hai Matar in South Sudan. With support from the EU, UNHCR, and partners, she reclaimed her family’s land and built a new home. The HLP project helps displaced families secure shelter and resolve land issues through legal aid and peaceful solutions.

OA4 - GBV
SDG5: Gender Equality

OUTCOME AREA 4

Gender-based violence

  • Global financial needs: $262 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -21%

More than 60 million women and girls are forcibly displaced and stateless, and they are at particular risk of gender-based violence (GBV). Without more funding, most of them are likely to be unable to access GBV services in 2026.

UNHCR will provide holistic response services for survivors and persons at risk of gender-based violence, primarily women and girls. We will work to prevent gender-based violence by addressing its root causes, and we will ensure strong GBV coordination mechanisms in refugee settings.

unhcr staff standing with Burundian refugee and psychologist

Ancila, a Burundian refugee and psychologist, stands alongside a UNHCR staff member during a gender-based violence sensitization session in northern Mozambique. Together, they hold a poster with key messages on protection from sexual exploitation and abuse.  

OA5 - Children

OUTCOME AREA 5

Child protection

  • Global financial needs: $197 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -12%

Children represent over 40% of displaced populations worldwide, but UNHCR’s ability to respond to their needs is limited by a decline in funding amid increasingly complex crises.

UNHCR aims to protect forcibly displaced and stateless children from abuse, neglect, exploitation, violence and family separation. We do so by strengthening child protection systems and by promoting coordinated interventions and solutions in children’s best interests.

In 2026, UNHCR will aim to build the capacity of local and refugee-led organizations to deliver community-based child protection and psychosocial support, while progressively transitioning UNHCR’s s Best Interests Procedures (BIP) to national systems.

Woman carrying a child

After losing their home in a missile strike, a Ukrainian foster family relocated from Kherson to Odesa. With State support, they moved into a new permanent home in December 2024.

OA6 - Justice
SDG16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

OUTCOME AREA 6

Safety and access to justice

  • Global financial needs: $237 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -27%

When people are forced to flee from their homes or are stateless, they are often in acutely vulnerable situations, at risk of arbitrary detention, trafficking, gender-based violence, discrimination and more.

UNHCR works with bar associations, Ministries of Justice, judicial bodies, legal NGOs, community-led organizations and human rights defenders to facilitate legal assistance and promote inclusion in national justice systems, strengthening access to justice for forcibly displaced and stateless people.

These partnerships advance justice via training, protection monitoring and immigration detention monitoring, alternatives to detention, strategic litigation, court interventions, and access to multisectoral services to enhance safety and protection of forcibly displaced and stateless people from abuse and exploitation.

A UNHCR staff member assists a man as he disembarks from a boat in a harbour.

Ali, a Syrian refugee, was arrested in March 2025 when his documents weren’t recognized. With legal aid from Raghad, a lawyer from UNHCR’s partner IRC, he was released after three days and continues to receive legal assistance. 

OA7 - Community
SDG5: Gender Equality

OUTCOME AREA 7

Community engagement and women's empowerment

  • Global financial needs: $497 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -18%

Humanitarian responses often fail to reflect the concerns of forcibly displaced and stateless people, undermining their rights and their agency and potentially putting them at greater risk.

In 2026, UNHCR will support hundreds of grassroots organizations and invest in strengthening communication channels. We will carry out participatory assessments; promote women’s equal participation, empowerment, digital inclusion and leadership; and seek to enhance the protection, empowerment and inclusion of LGBTIQ+ individuals.

A woman sits at a table and uses tools to repair a phone.

In Ban Mai Nai Soi refugee camp, Thailand, Karenni women refugees from Myanmar take part in a weaving training led by WEAVE NGO. The initiative helps preserve traditional artisan skills while promoting refugee women's empowerment and sustainable livelihoods. 

OA8 - Basic needs
SDG1: No Poverty

OUTCOME AREA 8

Well-being and basic needs

  • Global financial needs: $1.581 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -30%

When people are forced to flee, they often arrive in new locations with very little, and need immediate support.

In 2026, UNHCR plans to provide cash assistance – the most cost-efficient form of support – to displaced people to meet their urgent needs in emergencies. We will also distribute essential household items to forcibly displaced people where cash assistance is not possible or preferred. UNHCR will maintain emergency stockpiles of life-saving supplies, while enhancing the procurement of goods closer to the point of delivery to supplies more sustainable and cost-effective. We will also promote access to cleaner and safer energy for forcibly displaced people and host communities.

People sleeping at transit center.

At a UNHCR-supported transit centre in Pavlohrad, Ukraine, newly displaced people –  many vulnerable and arriving with few belongings –  receive clothing, cash assistance, hygiene kits, legal aid, and psychosocial support from UNHCR and partners Proliska and Right to Protection.

OA9 - Shelter
SDG11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

OUTCOME AREA 9

Sustainable housing and settlements

  • Global financial needs: $800 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -25%

For many forcibly displaced people, shelter is not just a roof, it is a lifeline.

In 2026, we will provide durable, climate-resilient and inclusive shelter solutions; emergency shelter for newly displaced populations; and repairs and rehabilitation of housing, especially in places vulnerable to severe weather events. UNHCR will invest in degraded infrastructure, smart mini-grids and reforestation, and promote access to sustainable energy.

A man fixing a tent

At the Luakdong site in Gambella, Ethiopia, a South Sudanese refugee man sets up the tallest pole of his family’s tent using a UNHCR shelter kit. 

OA10 - Health
SDG3: Good Health and Well-Being

OUTCOME AREA 10

Healthy lives

  • Global financial needs: $387 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -23%

UNHCR aims to strengthen refugees’ access to health services by advancing their inclusion in national systems, building local health system capacities and implementing programmes to sustain their access to essential services, including health, nutrition, mental health, reproductive health and HIV services.

UNHCR supports refugees’ access to primary health care such as treatment of common illnesses, safe motherhood services, and HIV treatment. We provide mental health services and psychosocial support, and we support life-saving referrals such as hospital care for complications during delivery or life-saving surgery. We also aim to improve refugees’ nutritional well-being, including the promotion of maternal and child nutrition and supplementary feeding.

A child sleeping in a hospital bed

At Zaatari camp, IMC emergency clinic, funded by UNHCR, Syrian refugees receive 24/7 primary health care. Hasan Al-Hariri brought his son Saddam for treatment and praised the clinic’s responsive and caring service. 

OA11 - Education
SDG4: Quality Education

OUTCOME AREA 11

Education

  • Global financial needs: $370 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -20%

UNHCR is committed to ensuring that children who are forced to flee do not mean miss out on schooling. However, most refugee children are not in school.

In 2026, we will aim to provide inclusive, equitable and sustainable education for refugees, ensuring that children caught up in new emergencies can return to school as soon as possible, and working to promote refugee children’s inclusion in national education systems. UNHCR is also pursuing the “15by30” goal: to get 15% of refugee youth into university by 2030.

A class of Sudanese refugee students and their teacher sit in the shade of a tree.

Sudanese refugees attending secondary school at the Farchana refugee camp in eastern Chad, face an uncertain future, as cuts to global humanitarian funding have made it impossible to pay their teachers’ salaries. 

OA12 - WASH
SDG6: Clean Water and Sanitation

OUTCOME AREA 12

Clean water, sanitation and hygiene

  • Global financial needs: $196 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -16%

Sustainable Development Goal 6 aims for "clean water and sanitation for all", but in some countries forcibly displaced people have little access to basic drinking water services and sanitation.

UNHCR facilitates displaced people’s access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene services. We partner with national authorities, UN agencies, humanitarian and development partners and the private sector to provide life-saving services and contribute to the protection, health, well-being and dignity of refugees.

A young child carries two jerry cans of water.

Solar-powered water points provide safe, reliable water for refugees and host community in Maban, South Sudan.

OA13 - Livelihoods
SDG8: Decent Work and Economic Growth

OUTCOME AREA 13

Self-reliance, economic inclusion and livelihoods

  • Global financial needs: $489 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -17%

UNHCR works with governments, refugee-led organizations, development partners, international finance institutions and the private sector to expand refugees’ access to decent work, entrepreneurship, financial services and inclusive markets.

When refugees return to their country of origin, UNHCR supports their reintegration with inclusive economic programmes that rebuild productive assets, strengthen access to services and foster community cohesion. These efforts promote productive economic participation, reduce long-term reliance on humanitarian assistance, and enable displaced and host populations to contribute meaningfully to local economies, building a path to a sustainable solution.

A man hanging maize to dry

Bernard Munyaneza, a Congolese refugee, hangs maize to dry in Rwanda. Through a farming project funded by the Government of Denmark, refugee and host community farmers in Nyabicwamba marshland receive seeds, fertilizers, and training to earn an income and build resilience amid rising living costs and reduced cash assistance.

OA14 - Returns

OUTCOME AREA 14

Voluntary repatriation and sustainable reintegration

  • Global financial needs: $561 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: +12%

When it is possible for refugees to make safe, dignified and voluntary returns to their country of origin, UNHCR helps them to do so and to rebuild their lives. UNHCR works to ensure protection, multi-sectoral assistance, and ongoing monitoring of conditions in areas of return. The voices of displaced people are central to this process: UNHCR conducts participatory intention surveys to understand refugees’ hopes and concerns, provides clear and timely information about conditions in their home countries, and works to remove barriers to return.  

A crowd of people gathers behind several trucks filled with passengers

UNHCR and IOM in Lebanon – working in close coordination with the authorities of both countries – facilitated the first voluntary return convoy of 72 Syrian refugees from Lebanon to the Syrian Arab Republic, as part of the Organized Voluntary Return Programme.

OA15 - Resettlement

OUTCOME AREA 15

Resettlement and complementary pathways

  • Global financial needs: $150 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -33%

With millions of refugees unable to go home, resettlement and complementary pathways (such as education, employment, family reunification and humanitarian visas) provide opportunities for long-lasting solutions. UNHCR projects 2.5 million refugees will need resettlement in 2026, down from 2.9 million in 2025.

In 2026, UNHCR will seek resettlement for the refugees most in need. We aim to strengthen data-sharing collaborations with partners involved in resettlement, expand opportunities for complementary pathways, open regular migration systems up to refugees, and build refugees’ skillsets so they can qualify for employment and education pathways. 

A man posing with his wife and two sons

Mahmoud Suji, a Rohingya refugee, poses with his wife Mariam and sons Maher and Mahdi in Athens, Greece, after reuniting through the family reunification program. Fleeing persecution in Myanmar, Mahmoud was granted refugee status in Greece in 2019 and supported by the Greek Council for Refugees and UNHCR throughout the asylum and reunification process.

OA16 - Local solutions
SDG10: Reduced Inequalities

OUTCOME AREA 16

Local integration and other local solutions

  • Global financial needs: $409 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -4%

Integrating locally can be a lasting solution for refugees and a chance to build a new life, while acquiring a nationality is the overarching solution for millions who are stateless. But securing housing, land tenure or social protection is hard, increasing people’s social and economic exclusion and spurring many to move onward.

In 2026, UNHCR will seek to advance refugees’ local integration, advocating for inclusive national laws, policies and systems and facilitating that inclusion where possible. We will support refugees seeking long-term legal solutions, such as permanent residence or nationality in their country of asylum, and we will work with governments to ensure that national social protection schemes benefit refugees and stateless people.

Daria, a Ukrainian refugee and biologist, uses a handheld machine to test soil in a crate.

Senior Chief Mumena of the Kaonde people in Zambia’s Northwestern Province is a strong advocate for refugee inclusion. In Meheba Refugee Settlement, he promotes peaceful coexistence and local integration, urging communities to welcome refugees as neighbors.

Impact Areas

Forcibly displaced and stateless people have fundamental rights, including protection, a safe environment in which to live until they find a durable solution, and an opportunity to influence their own futures and build better lives. In UNHCR’s global results framework, the four Impact Areas aim to measure the extent to which forcibly displaced and stateless people enjoy these overarching rights, and to capture the changes over time.

Protect

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IMPACT AREA 1

Protect: Attaining favourable protection environments

  • Global financial needs: $2.099 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -18%

People fleeing across borders must be able to reach a place of safety and have their claim to asylum recognized, and not be returned to a country where they may face danger or persecution. 

In 2026, UNHCR will deepen its focus on life-saving protection activities, including registration, documentation, asylum capacity, legal assistance, and child protection. These efforts will be increasingly delivered through national and local systems, with UNHCR providing technical support and advocacy for inclusion.

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Respond

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IMPACT AREA 2

Respond: Realizing rights in safe environments

  • Global financial needs: $3.219 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -30%

People who have been forced to flee need basic services, ranging from life-saving emergency aid to longer-term needs such as health and education. If they cannot work and are not included in national services, they may require assistance until they can find a durable solution.

In 2026, UNHCR will maintain its comparative advantage in emergency preparedness and response through pre-positioned supplies and rapid deployment teams. However, emergency operations will become leaner and more mobile, with a stronger emphasis on coordination and technical support. Local actors and national systems will play a larger role in delivering emergency aid, with transitions to other UN agencies and partners initiated within months of onset where feasible.

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Empower

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IMPACT AREA 3

Empower: Empowering communities and achieving gender equality

  • Global financial needs: $1.195 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -16%

Forcibly displaced and stateless people are best placed to build their own futures, if the tools and opportunities are available. This means having the right to decent work, access to education, gender equality, and the chance to participate in decisions that affect their lives.

In 2026, UNHCR will strengthen efforts to promote community empowerment, self-reliance, and economic inclusion. There is a move toward more targeted initiatives integrated within broader protection and solutions strategies, with empowerment being central to resilience and solutions programming. Community engagement will be reinforced through participatory approaches and feedback mechanisms, including partnerships with community-led organizations – especially those led by women – and will support two-way communication to ensure feedback and accountability.

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Solve

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IMPACT AREA 4

Solve: Securing solutions

  • Global financial needs: $1.575 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: +2%

Forced displacement and statelessness must come to an end. For stateless people, that means acquiring a nationality. For displaced people, it could be a voluntary return; integration or naturalization in their place of exile; or resettlement or another pathway to a new country.

In 20256, UNHCR will intensify efforts to support national leadership in delivering durable solutions by, for example, strategically expanding support for return and reintegration in places such as Iraq, Lebanon and the Syrian Arab Republic, where efforts are shifting towards area-based approaches; in Asia and the Pacific, growth is driven by investments in voluntary return, complementary pathways, and regional cooperation; and in West and Central Africa, UNHCR is strengthening collaboration with governments and development partners to support return and reintegration in countries such as the Central African Republic, Chad and Nigeria.

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Areas of Strategic Focus

In its Strategic Directions 2022-2026, UNHCR identified several priority Focus Areas requiring sustained attention and pledged to address them with discipline and unwavering commitment. This section highlights UNHCR’s strategic engagement across key areas, including climate action, internal displacement, statelessness, collaboration with development actors, accountability to affected populations, and advocacy for alternatives to dangerous journeys.

Internal displacement

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FOCUS AREA

Internal displacement

  • Global needs for the IDP response: $1.155 billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -24%

Millions of people remain displaced within their own countries, often in fragile contexts where protection systems are weak and resources scarce.

In 2026, UNHCR will strengthen legal frameworks, expand access to documentation, enhance protection monitoring, and deliver life-saving assistance while promoting durable, nationally led solutions that uphold rights and reduce dependency.

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Accountability to affected people

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FOCUS AREA

Accountability to affected people

Forcibly displaced and stateless people are not passive recipients but central actors in shaping humanitarian response. Anchored in the Age, Gender and Diversity Policy, UNHCR listens to, engages and works with communities, recognizing their diverse capacities, priorities, and aspirations.

In 2026, UNHCR will focus on participation and inclusion, communication and transparency, feedback and response, and organizational learning and adaptation.

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Statelessness

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FOCUS AREA

Statelessness

  • Global financial needs: $100 million
  • Change from 2025 budget: -35%

Millions of people are stateless, which makes it hard to live a dignified life and exercise basic rights. Most countries have no safeguards against childhood statelessness and many do not allow women to confer nationality on their children in the same way as men.

In 2026, we will support governments to reform nationality laws and policies and provide technical assistance regarding introduction and implementation of legal safeguards against childhood statelessness, and measures to protect stateless persons. We will help stateless people access nationality, legal aid, and essential documentation, ensuring their rights are recognized and protected. We will generate and promote data and evidence to inform policies and build visibility of statelessness, promoting the inclusion of stateless people and the resolution of stateless situations.

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Climate action

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FOCUS AREA

Climate action

  • Global financial needs: $770billion
  • Change from 2025 budget: -36%

People who have been forced to flee are especially vulnerable to the devastating impacts of climate change.

Around the world, some 120 million people have been displaced by conflict, violence and persecution; three quarters of these people are living in countries with high-to-extreme exposure to climate-related hazards, placing them at additional risk. While refugees and other displaced people are finding themselves on the frontlines of conflict and climate change, they often lack the resources to adapt, prepare for, or recover from the impacts of extreme weather and recurring disasters.

In 2026, our climate-related efforts will focus on law and policy, partnerships and building displaced people’s resilience.

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Working with development actors

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FOCUS AREA

Working with development actors

UNHCR is increasingly working with development actors such as the World Bank to progress towards solutions and sustain government-led responses, since humanitarian funding alone cannot meet the challenge of unprecedented and protracted displacement.

In 2026, UNHCR will encourage commitments to improving legal and policy environments, investments to support equitable access to services in displacement-affected areas, greater economic inclusion and expanded access to employment entrepreneurship, agribusiness, and financial services for forcibly displaced and stateless people.

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Route-based approach

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FOCUS AREA

Route-based approach

People with a valid claim to protection often undertake desperate and dangerous journeys, during which they face severe threats, including gender-based violence, trafficking, torture, and physical harm.

UNHCR aims to make such journeys unnecessary, by emphasizing the fundamental safeguards of refugee protection and solutions, by supporting the capacity of State asylum systems, by combating misinformation, by ensuring people are warned about the dangers, and by advocating access to regular pathways. We also seek to leverage the widespread support for the Global Compact on Refugees, which promotes international cooperation, shared responsibility, and support for countries hosting large refugee populations. 

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Sustainable responses

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FOCUS AREA

Sustainable responses

Most people who have been forced to flee remain in low- and middle-income countries that continue to provide safety and support despite mounting economic and social pressures, upholding a vital global public good in an increasingly fractured world.

Sustainable responses are nationally-led and inclusive ways of working that strengthen protection, support durable solutions, and bring humanitarian, development, peace and private sector actors together under government leadership to ensure coherent, predictable and nationally-owned responses to displacement.

This approach promotes economic and financial inclusion, ensuring that forcibly displaced and stateless people can access work, livelihoods, and financial services alongside nationals. By expanding opportunity and participation, these efforts strengthen local economies and make asylum more sustainable.

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Kenya: Newly arrived refugee families in Kakuma are facing growing food shortages as funding cuts continue to strain assistance. Despite limited resources, many are finding ways to cope, but without additional support, the situation is likely to worsen.

© UNHCR/Eric Bakuli

Support from the private sector

Girls in a classroom

Fondation de Luxembourg strengthens schools to help refugee children learn in Yemen and Pakistan

Massvoll Stiftung, hosted by the Fondation de Luxembourg, has been engaged in supporting the futures of refugee children in Yemen and Pakistan since 2021. This partnership is expanding access to quality primary education by upgrading school infrastructure, creating inclusive learning pathways for over-age learners and children with disabilities, and strengthening teacher training and community engagement. By the end of 2026, the initiative will directly support 7,000 children and 130 teachers, and improve learning environments by renovating more than 50 school units – including classrooms, libraries, and water, sanitation, and hygiene facilities.

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Chad. Thousands of Sudanese refugees continue to flee across the border.

Strengthening inclusion through education, livelihoods and policy reform across Africa

The Mastercard Foundation and UNHCR are joining forces to transform education, livelihoods, and inclusion for refugees and host communities across Africa. With a new $300 million investment, the partnership will expand opportunities in eight countries, aiming to reach over 500,000 young people with quality secondary education, support 10,000 learners in pursuing higher or technical studies, and help 200,000 people transition into dignified work – with a strong focus on women (70% of participants) and persons with disabilities (5%). Over the next 4.5 years, the initiative will also strengthen 100 local and refugee-led organizations, train teachers, and advocate policies that make education and employment more accessible and inclusive across the continent.

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Kids playing golf

LIV Golf’s ongoing support to displaced and host communities across four continent

In 2024, UNHCR partnered with LIV Golf to use the power of sport to create safe spaces for refugee and host community children and youth across six countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America. The partnership invests in multi-year sport and play-based activities, alongside essential support like education, job opportunities, and capacity building and collective learning activities where girls and young women are included. In its first year, the initiative has already helped improve well-being, social connections, and a sense of belonging for young people, while making sure they can still access vital services.

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Two people in an office

Employment and skills development for forcibly displaced people

Outsource Global, a leading pan-African Business Process Outsourcing company, is teaming up with UNHCR to create sustainable employment pathways for internally displaced people, refugees, and local community members in Nigeria. Through this collaboration, participants receive tailored pre-onboarding training to prepare them for diverse professional roles, such as in customer service, data management, accounting, legal support, HR, software development, and more. With Outsource Global’s growing footprint across Africa, including Nigeria and Kenya, these opportunities will also be available to refugees and host communities there. This initiative builds on Outsource Global’s commitment at the Africa Forum on Displacement 2025 to help 1,000 forcibly displaced people access direct, income-generating jobs across the continent.

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Afghan women in Portuguese class

From emergency aid to lasting resilience, IRUSA helps refugees rebuild their lives

Islamic Relief USA (IRUSA) is a strategic partner in UNHCR’s global efforts to support refugees and displaced communities. Together, they deliver urgent and long-term assistance to vulnerable families in countries like Afghanistan, Brazil, Colombia, Jordan, Mexico and Sudan. For example, in Brazil, IRUSA and UNHCR are working to help over 2,000 Afghan refugees overcome language barriers and access essential services, so they can rebuild their lives with dignity. Thanks to this partnership, thousands of families worldwide are receiving critical emergency aid and support for long-term resilience, livelihoods, and self-reliance.

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People fixing houses

Revolut’s continued support empowers refugees through global emergency response

Revolut, has been a key corporate partner to UNHCR since 2020, enabling fast and flexible responses to humanitarian emergencies. Through its global financial app, Revolut empowers customers to support refugees by rounding up spare change, making one-time gifts, or setting recurring donations. Over £2 million has been raised to date, with funds supporting urgent relief operations including in Ukraine, Türkiye, Libya and beyond. These contributions help provide shelter, protection, and emergency aid to families forced to flee. Revolut’s innovative giving platform and global reach play a vital role in strengthening UNHCR’s ability to respond to crises swiftly and effectively – making it easier for individuals around the world to stand with refugees when it matters most.

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A girl holding a ball

ANTA’s Moving for Change brings education and play to displaced youth

Through the “Moving for Change” initiative, UNHCR and ANTA Group are partnering to bring education and play to displaced children and youth. Over three years, ANTA is donating at least 1.2 million items of clothing and $1.5 million to support access to primary education, learning resources, and play-based programs that boost well-being and resilience. By 2025, the initiative aims to reach 300,000 displaced children across Kenya, Ethiopia, and Burundi. This collaboration directly supports Sustainable Development Goals for quality education and strong partnerships, and both UNHCR and ANTA Group plan to expand its impact even further in 2026 and beyond.

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The Global Appeal outlines UNHCR's programmatic plans for the year and the funding required to protect, assist and find solutions for the world's forcibly displaced and stateless people. Explore the data and narratives underlying the global picture.

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