Somalia: IPC Acute Food Insecurity and Malnutrition Snapshot | January - June 2025
Publisher: Integrated Food Security Phase Classification
Date: 2025
Topics: Assessment, Climate Change, Humanitarian Assistance, Programming
Countries: Somalia
Nearly 3.4 million people or 17 percent of Somalia’s population are experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity, classified in IPC AFI Phase 3 or above (Crisis or worse) driven by floods, conflict, and poor rainfall. This includes 2.9 million people (15 percent) in IPC Phase 3 (Crisis) and around 442,000 (2 percent) in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency). Malnutrition analysis also indicates that 1.7 million children aged 6–59 months suffering from acute malnutrition through December 2025.
Poor rainfall has led to low crop yields and rapid depletion of pasture and water sources, while localised flooding has damaged food crops and displaced riverine communities. Conflict and insecurity in central and southern Somalia, as well as parts of the northern regions, have continued to displace communities, disrupt farming and livestock livelihood activities as well as restrict market access.
Compared to the same period last year, when 4 million people were in IPC Phase 3 or above due to prolonged drought, the current figure reflects a 15 percent reduction in acute food insecurity. This improvement is largely due to better rainfall over earlier seasons, which has supported livelihoods, and ongoing humanitarian assistance, though at a lower level than before.