The Government of Liberia says it will receive an estimated US$312.84 million in Official Development Assistance for fiscal year 2026, a funding package the administration presents as a signal of renewed international confidence and a critical enabler of planned investments in infrastructure, human capital and governance.
According to the FY2026 budget documents, US$160.76 million of the ODA will come as grants and US$80.08 million as concessional loans.
The government says US$72 million of the total will be recorded on the national budget — strengthening fiscal stability and enabling more predictable public spending.
The on budget tranche is made up of US$40 million from the World Bank, US$20 million from the European Union and US$12 million from the African Development Bank.
The remaining US$240.84 million will finance off budget programs aligned with the government’s ARREST Agenda for Inclusive Development.
Those resources are slated across sectoral priorities, with humanitarian and long-term development objectives distributed as follows: US$119.88 million for human capital development; US$53.07 million for economic transformation; US$36.60 million for infrastructure; US$18.99 million for environmental sustainability; US$12.23 million for governance and anticorruption; and US$0.70 million for rule of law initiatives.
Taken together with other partner financing, the government projects US$1.451 billion in sectoral interventions during FY2026, a figure it says reflects growing credibility and a shift toward greater self-reliance.

