Today, building on the tremendous success of the Trump Administration’s landmark December 2025 “Humanitarian Reset” framework agreement between the United States and the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the United States announced an additional $1.8 billion in humanitarian funding for OCHA’s country-based pooled funds and hyper-prioritized life-saving humanitarian assistance activities. This new contribution brings total U.S. support for OCHA’s reform, consolidation, and life-saving assistance programs to $3.8 billion across 21 key countries.
The United States and OCHA signed the first Humanitarian Reset agreement on December 29, 2025, in Geneva, Switzerland, alongside an anchor U.S. pledge of $2 billion in support for 18 country-based and crisis-level pooled funds. Since then, both the United States and OCHA have been hard at work operationalizing that agreement – delivering critical assistance to the field in record time, implementing robust new oversight and accountability measures, mobilizing support from major humanitarian donors, and demonstrating effectiveness of a faster, more accountable, efficient, impact-driven, locally-driven and hyper-prioritized model of humanitarian assistance.
Tangible Results Four Months Later: The United States’ initial contribution of $2 billion to OCHA-managed rapid response pooled funds was a resounding success, delivering life-saving assistance to 21.1 million people more quickly, more efficiently, and with greater focus on those facing the most acute humanitarian needs in less than four months.
Continued Demonstration of U.S. Support: Through this additional $1.8 billion in funding, the United States is demonstrating its continued commitment supporting OCHA’s life-saving work, while continuing to hold OCHA accountable to deliver measurable results and promised reforms. Between our first two tranches of funding, the United States is supporting pooled funds in 21 countries, including Bangladesh, Burma, Central African Republic, Chad, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Kenya, Lebanon, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Uganda, Ukraine, and Venezuela, as well as the UN Central Emergency Response Fund.
The United States remains the largest humanitarian donor in the world, and we call on other governments and the private sector to increase their contributions to OCHA-managed pooled funds as part of a more efficient and more accountable UN.
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