The global hunger crisis 2026 is not a prediction. It is already here. According to the World Food Programme’s 2026 Global Outlook, 318 million people currently face crisis-level hunger or worse. That number is more than double what it was in 2019. Two simultaneous famines have now been confirmed, in Gaza and parts of Sudan. This is the first time this century that two famines have been declared at the same time.
Yet most news cycles barely pause on it. The scale of suffering and the relative silence around it are both worth examining.
Who Is Starving and Where
The UN’s latest Hunger Hotspots report names Sudan, Gaza, South Sudan, Yemen, Haiti, Afghanistan, Mali, and the Democratic Republic of Congo among the countries with the highest concern levels. In Sudan alone, 25 million people face acute food insecurity. That is half the country’s population.
In Gaza, approximately 86 percent of cropland has been destroyed or damaged. Food aid access is blocked across much of the territory. In Afghanistan, food assistance now reaches less than 10 percent of people who need it, according to WFP figures from late 2025.
Children bear the worst of it. Nine million people die from hunger-related causes every year. Roughly one-third of them are children under five. In West and Central Africa alone, 13 million children are expected to suffer from malnutrition in 2026.
These are not distant projections. These deaths are happening now.
Why It Is Getting Worse, Not Better
Three forces are driving the 2026 hunger crisis, and they reinforce each other.
First, conflict. The UN’s Global Report on Food Crises attributes 69 percent of all acute food insecurity cases directly to war. Armed conflict destroys crops, displaces farmers, blocks supply routes, and shuts down markets. Sudan’s civil war, which began in April 2023, has internally displaced 10 million people. Yemen has now been in conflict for over a decade. Each year of fighting deepens food system collapse.
Second, climate. Last year was the hottest on record globally. Extreme weather events, once episodic, have become a near-constant threat in many of the world’s most food-insecure regions. The 2024 floods in Nigeria destroyed 1.1 million hectares of farmland. Somalia’s drought worsened precisely as funding cuts forced aid organizations to scale back. These two trends converged and pushed millions closer to famine.
Third, and least discussed, is the funding collapse. The WFP received $10 billion in 2024. In 2025, that dropped to $6.4 billion — a 40 percent cut. Response plans across multiple crises were funded at less than 50 percent of what was needed to meet bare survival thresholds.
The consequences are direct and measurable. In Somalia, WFP reached 2.2 million people with emergency food assistance in 2024. By late 2025, that number had fallen to 350,000. In Nigeria, WFP planned to assist 1.3 million people during the 2025 lean season. By February 2026, it reached 72,000.
Why the World Is Looking Away
Part of the answer is structural. Hunger in conflict zones is harder to film than explosions. It accumulates slowly, then accelerates. By the time famine is officially declared, months of warning signs have already passed without sustained media attention.
Part of the answer is political. Military spending globally has surged in the same period that humanitarian aid has contracted. Concern Worldwide and others have noted this inversion directly: governments are spending more on weapons while cutting contributions to food programmes.
Part of the answer is what WFP calls “crisis fatigue.” When every year brings a new emergency, donors and publics grow numb. Humanitarian response plans have been underfunded by more than 50 percent in recent years, even though those plans are designed around the bare minimum needed for survival.
The world produces enough food to feed all 8.2 billion people on earth. That fact, confirmed repeatedly by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, makes the current situation a policy failure rather than a supply problem.
What Happens If Nothing Changes
The WFP has projected that the Middle East conflict could push 45 million additional people into acute hunger by mid-2026. Fertilizer prices surged by 46 percent month-on-month in early 2026 as trade routes through the Strait of Hormuz faced disruption. These price shocks hit import-dependent countries like Yemen, Afghanistan, and Lebanon the hardest.
WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain said in late 2025: “We are at risk of losing decades of progress in the fight against hunger.” That progress was real. Between 2021 and 2024, the number of people facing acute hunger fell from 828 million to 673 million. That progress is now reversing.
The data is not hidden. The organizations tracking it publish it monthly. The question is not whether we know. The question is whether knowing will be enough.
Frequently Asked Questions(FAQs)
- How many people face hunger in 2026?
According to the WFP’s 2026 Global Outlook, 318 million people face crisis-level hunger or worse — more than double the figure recorded in 2019. Separately, approximately 673 million people globally live with chronic hunger. Two famines have been formally confirmed this century for the first time simultaneously: in Gaza and parts of Sudan.
2. What is causing the global hunger crisis in 2026?
Three overlapping drivers are responsible: armed conflict, which the UN attributes to 69 percent of all acute food insecurity cases; climate shocks including record heat, floods, and drought destroying food systems; and a collapse in humanitarian funding, with WFP receiving 40 percent less in 2025 than in 2024, forcing severe cuts to aid programmes across six critical countries.
3. Which countries have the worst hunger in 2026?
The UN’s Hunger Hotspots report lists Sudan, Gaza, South Sudan, Yemen, Haiti, Afghanistan, Mali, and the DRC as the countries with the highest concern levels. Sudan has 25 million people facing acute food insecurity. In Gaza, over 86 percent of cropland has been destroyed. In Afghanistan, food assistance reaches less than 10 percent of those who need it.