A woman, smiling at the camera, and surrounded by people.

Resources

OCHA/ReliefWeb

Reports on the situation in Haiti

You will find all reports on Haiti on Relief Web, including situation reports from various entities, key facts and figures, humanitarian response, etc.

Infographics

Relief Web also provides the latest infographics and maps on population movements, vulnerability of individuals and families, etc.

A patient is laying on a makeshift bed waiting for care.

The limitation of access to healthcare in Haiti has direct consequences on the population, particularly for women, children, and people living in areas affected by insecurity. Photo: OCHA Haiti

A woman, looking exhausted, walks between a car and a sidewalk, both overloaded with personal items of displaced people.

Many neighborhoods in Haiti’s capital have been emptied, with homes looted and burned. Together with its partners, IOM teams support site improvement and management efforts to help ease the burden on families forced to rebuild their lives from nothing. Photo: IOM Haiti

 
 

Haiti: 2026 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan

Haiti’s humanitarian crisis continues to worsen at an alarming pace, driving a sharp rise in humanitarian needs. Growing political instability and insecurity, economic hardship, the collapse of essential services, and the spread of armed violence have further weakened the country. Alongside forced displacement, sexual violence, and acute food insecurity, Haiti remains structurally and institutionally vulnerable to climate shocks.

An estimated 6.4 million people, more than half of Haiti’s population, will require emergency humanitarian assistance in 2026, up from 6 million in 2025, an increase of 6.7 per cent.

The humanitarian response in 2026 seeks to reduce immediate risks to affected populations, stabilize households hardest hit by repeated shocks, and strengthen access to essential services in a context marked by insecurity, displacement, and recurring natural hazards.