AFIN
America First.
DATA
NATIONAL DEBT$36.21TFYINFLATION (CPI YoY)3.2%S&P 500GOLDOIL (WTI)NATIONAL DEBT$36.21TFYINFLATION (CPI YoY)3.2%S&P 500GOLDOIL (WTI)
Foreign Aid Tracker · FY 2024

Where your dollars go,
explained simply.

A calm, factual look at how the United States invests abroad — country by country, category by category, agency by agency. Every number traces back to a primary source.

The Big Picture

A global overview

Total FY24 obligations
$71.9B
USAID + State + DoD
Recipients
204
Agencies
20+
Programs
6,400+
By region
  • Europe & Eurasia38%
    Ukraine support drives the share
  • Middle East & N. Africa22%
    Israel, Jordan, Egypt
  • Sub‑Saharan Africa18%
    Health, food security
  • Indo‑Pacific12%
    Security partnerships
  • Western Hemisphere6%
    Migration, narcotics
  • Global / Multi‑region4%
    UN, global programs
Sources: ForeignAssistance.gov · State Dept. CBJ · OMB Function 150
By Aid Type

How it's categorized

Military
FMF, IMET, peacekeeping, security cooperation
38%
Humanitarian
Disaster relief, refugees, food assistance
24%
Economic
Development, infrastructure, trade capacity
18%
Health
PEPFAR, PMI, maternal & child health
14%
Governance
Rule of law, elections, anti‑corruption
6%
Source: USAID Foreign Aid Explorer · sector classifications
By Agency

Who delivers the aid

USAID41%
U.S. Agency for International Development
State Department27%
Bureau of Political‑Military, INL, PRM, ECA
Department of Defense22%
Security cooperation under Title 10 authorities
MCC5%
Millennium Challenge Corporation compacts
Treasury / Other5%
Multilateral contributions, Treasury OTA, etc.
Source: ForeignAssistance.gov · agency obligations, FY24
Top Recipients

Tap a country to open its profile

Category breakdown
  • Military64%
  • Humanitarian18%
  • Economic14%
  • Governance4%
Five‑year trend
FY20 → FY24, $B
0.5FY200.6FY2114.5FY2226.1FY2322.9FY24
Peak: $26.1B

Security assistance peaked in FY23; FY24 includes economic support and humanitarian relief.

Source: USAID Foreign Aid Explorer + DSCA security cooperation reports
Always Sourced

Where this data comes from

We use only primary, publicly available U.S. government sources. Every figure on this page traces back to one of these:

Figures shown are illustrative aggregates pending live integration. Methodology notes, definitions, and the full data table will be published with each release.