Description
Prolonged economic deterioration, recurrent drought, and a significant reduction in humanitarian assistance have left large segments of the population unable to meet their minimum food needs. Despite the scale of these pressures, many households have so far avoided more severe outcomes by maintaining some level of food production, retaining livestock, and limiting the use of irreversible coping strategies, supported by largescale lifesaving emergency agriculture and food assistance delivered in recent years. As humanitarian food security assistance declines, these buffers are eroding and vulnerabilities are re-emerging, underscoring the fragility and reversibility of recent food security improvements in Afghanistan.
In the current period (September–October 2025), roughly 13.8 million people (28 percent of the population) were classified in IPC Acute Food Insecurity (AFI) Phase 3 or above (Crisis or worse), including 2.9 million in Emergency (IPC AFI Phase 4) and 10.9 million in Crisis (IPC AFI Phase 3).
Food assistance in Afghanistan is limited, reaching only 2.7 percent of the population. This is compounded by a weak, contracting economy marked by high unemployment and declining remittance inflows, largely due to over 2.5 million returnees from Iran and Pakistan in 2025, placing added pressure on overstretched local resources, services, and livelihoods. These economic challenges are further worsened by severe drought and recent earthquakes.
The situation is expected to deteriorate further during the first projection period (November 2025–March 2026), coinciding with the winter lean season. An estimated 17.4 million people (36 percent of the population) are projected to face IPC AFI Phase 3 or above, including 4.7 million in IPC AFI Phase 4.
Some seasonal improvement is expected during the second projection period (April–September 2026), coinciding with the harvest season. The number of people in IPC AFI Phase 3 or above is projected to decline to around 13.8 million (28 percent), including 2.9 million in IPC AFI Phase 4.
In the current period (September–October 2025), roughly 13.8 million people (28 percent of the population) were classified in IPC Acute Food Insecurity (AFI) Phase 3 or above (Crisis or worse), including 2.9 million in Emergency (IPC AFI Phase 4) and 10.9 million in Crisis (IPC AFI Phase 3).
Food assistance in Afghanistan is limited, reaching only 2.7 percent of the population. This is compounded by a weak, contracting economy marked by high unemployment and declining remittance inflows, largely due to over 2.5 million returnees from Iran and Pakistan in 2025, placing added pressure on overstretched local resources, services, and livelihoods. These economic challenges are further worsened by severe drought and recent earthquakes.
The situation is expected to deteriorate further during the first projection period (November 2025–March 2026), coinciding with the winter lean season. An estimated 17.4 million people (36 percent of the population) are projected to face IPC AFI Phase 3 or above, including 4.7 million in IPC AFI Phase 4.
Some seasonal improvement is expected during the second projection period (April–September 2026), coinciding with the harvest season. The number of people in IPC AFI Phase 3 or above is projected to decline to around 13.8 million (28 percent), including 2.9 million in IPC AFI Phase 4.
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