WHO’s Contingency Fund for Emergencies (CFE) allows WHO to respond rapidly to disease outbreaks and health emergencies -- often in 24 hours or less. This saves lives and helps prevent unnecessary suffering. A quick response dramatically reduces the costs of controlling outbreaks and emergencies, as well as the wider social and economic impacts. WHO also funds its emergency responses from specific appeals as well as allocations from joint funds such as the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) and Humanitarian Response Plans.
WHO gets its funding from two main sources: Member States paying their assessed contributions (countries’ membership dues), and voluntary contributions from Member States and other partners.
Assessed contributions (AC) are a percentage of a country’s gross domestic product (the percentage is agreed by the United Nations General Assembly). Member States approve them every two years at the World Health Assembly. They cover less than 20% of the total budget.
The remainder of WHO’s financing is in the form of voluntary contributions (VC), largely from Member States as well as from other United Nations organizations, intergovernmental organizations, philanthropic foundations, the private sector, and other sources.
The importance of flexible funding
WHO is extremely grateful to all contributors, particularly those who provide flexible funding and thematic and strategic engagement funds as it allows WHO to be agile and strategic in efforts to promote, provide, and protect health for all. As part of WHO's progress towards becoming a predictably, sustainably, flexibly funded Organization, Member States approved recommendations from the Sustainable Financing Working Group to increase Assessed Contributions to cover 50% of WHO's base budget by 2030, and to launch an Investment Round.
The Investment Round was launched in May 2024 with the goal to mobilize predictable and flexible resources for WHO's core work as approved in WHO's Fourteenth Programme of Work (GPW14 2025-2028) and expand WHO's donor base. It will culminate in a financing moment at the G20 Leaders' Summit chaired by Brazilian President Lula da Silva in November 2024.