Your donation matters
Emergencies come in many forms: armed conflicts, disease epidemics, natural disasters, malnutrition crises, and more. Your gift ensures that when an emergency happens, our teams are there to relieve suffering and save lives.
Your donations at work
A lifeline for mothers-to-be on Yemen’s west coast
Around 250 women give birth every month at our maternity ward in Mocha General hospital.
Providing support to victims and survivors of sexual violence in Port-au-Prince
MSF provides treatment to victims and survivors of sexual violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, but further services are urgently needed across a city wracked by violence.
Babies in Gaza at risk of disease and death as winter approaches
As temperatures drop and living conditions deteriorate in Gaza, Palestine, babies are at increased risk of disease and death.
South Sudan receives thousands of displaced and injured people fleeing intensified war in Sudan
We are scaling up our response in Renk, South Sudan, to provide urgent medical care to the influx of people arriving from Sudan.
Improving access to healthcare for people in Benin
MSF improves access to healthcare and strengthens medical capacity in Atacora, Benin, amidst security challenges, high prevalence of malaria, and displacement.
Levels of global acute malnutrition have doubled since last year in parts of northwest Nigeria
A survey conducted by MSF has found that there are 'extremely critical levels of malnutrition' in areas of northwest Nigeria.
A personal commitment to HIV care in Mozambique
After Dr Filomena Januário’s mother passed away from HIV, she dedicated herself to making sure no one else faces barriers to care.
Providing holistic care to Ukraine’s war injured
In Cherkasy hospital in central Ukraine, MSF is working with the Ministry of Health to provide war-wounded patients with physiotherapy and psychological support.
Promising results from study on mosquitoes has researchers buzzing in Honduras
A research study that has seen 8 million mosquitoes released into Tegucigalpa, Honduras, to combat dengue fever is showing promising results.
Treating open wounds in Tulkarem, West Bank
In Tulkarem, a town in the West Bank, Palestine, MSF teams address the physical and psychological impacts of military incursions by Israeli forces through first aid training.
FAQs
We pride ourselves on the incredible support of our donors. Our funding structure relies on lots of donations from millions of individuals around the world. It is our donors, who fuel MSF’s work.
In 2023, 98 per cent of our income came from some 7.3 million private donors. It is thanks to the generosity of these private supporters – mainly individuals like you, but also companies and private foundations – that we are able to operate independently and provide humanitarian assistance in some of the world’s most insecure environments and forgotten crises.
The remaining three per cent of our income came from public institutions, other sales and financial transactions.
For more details, see the International Financial Report.
In 2023, we raised a total of €2.37 billion euro: 98 per cent of that came from private donations.
For more details, see the International Financial Report.
Your donations pay for millions of consultations, surgeries, treatments and vaccinations every year.
We are a non-profit organisation and 80% of our financial resources are allocated to fulfilling our social mission: 64% to our humanitarian programmes, 12% to support our projects and programmes, and 3% to our bearing witness (témoignage) activities and Access Campaign activities. The rest is spent on general management and fundraising costs. We also maintain reserves that allow us to respond immediately to a crisis without having to wait for an appeal. The use of MSF funds is tightly controlled and the audited financial reports are publicly available.
The overwhelming majority of our programmes are implemented directly by our teams. In other cases, we provide support to local medical networks who can directly access those in need. This is notably the case in Syria where some areas of the country are not directly accessible to our teams.
For a more detailed breakdown of our sources of income, by activity and by geographic area, see the International Financial Report.
In 2023, 58% of programme expenditure was spent in Africa, 29% was spent in Asia, and the rest in Europe, the Americas, Oceania and for transversal activities, such as search and rescue.
We spent the most in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Yemen, South Sudan, Nigeria, Sudan, Central African Republic, Chad, Afghanistan, Haiti, and Syria.
The International Financial Report gives more details of the geographic distribution of expenditure. It also provides breakdowns of expenses and funding for all the countries where MSF has significant programme activities in a given year.
We don't accept contributions from companies and industries whose core activities may be in direct conflict with, or limit our ability to provide, medical humanitarian work. Hence, we don't accept money from pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, extraction industries (such as oil, natural gas, gold, or diamonds), tobacco companies and arms manufacturers.
Additional limitations may exist in the national giving acceptance policies of the countries where MSF is fundraising.
MSF does not accept in-kind donations of medical products or health technology. Only under exceptional circumstances, and on a case-by-case basis, MSF may consider accepting such donations according to the criteria and conditions set forth in MSF’s Policy for In-Kind Donations of Medical Products and Health Technology (PDF).
We appreciate that some of our supporters may have a particular interest in a country or programme in which we work. While in some circumstances it is possible to have your gift directed toward a specific programme or country, we ask that you contribute with unrestricted funding.
Unrestricted general donations give us the ability to direct funds where the needs are greatest, including under-reported and neglected crises.
MSF would not be able to swiftly respond to emergencies in Central African Republic, South Sudan or Yemen, nor provide lifesaving care to hundreds of thousands of people living with HIV, if not for the general support from our donors worldwide.
Further details on where our money comes from, how much we raise, and how we spend it, can be found in our International Financial Report.
The International Financial Report also gives details on where we spend your money, showing the geographic distribution of our expenditure, and providing breakdowns of expenses and funding for all the countries where MSF has significant programme activities in a given year.
Warning
Please be aware there have been cases of individuals posing as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) staff in order to scam people out of money.
MSF has received reports of third parties attempting to fraudulently obtain money on our behalf via email, social networking websites or apps, or in person at public locations.
The following is a list of scams and hoaxes that have been brought to our attention (please note this list is not exhaustive):
- An individual or individuals carrying out what appears to be fraudulent collections of money in public locations, while pretending to represent MSF.
- People posing as MSF staff in emails asking for reimbursements for donations, sometimes naming actual MSF staff or senior management in their appeals in order to bring a sense of credibility.
- People posing as MSF staff requesting money to pay for individual medical procedures for fictitious patients.
- People posing as MSF staff who have been detained on their way home and asking for money to be transferred in order to secure their release from detention.
- People posing as MSF staff, or acting on behalf of MSF staff, on social networking websites or apps in order to lure unsuspecting members of the public to send funds to cover the travel costs of the alleged MSF staff member to return from a field mission.
- People posing as MSF staff who have been detained on their way home and asking for money to be transferred in order to secure their release from detention.
- People posing as MSF human resources or recruitment staff asking people applying for a job with MSF for money or to pay a fee.
All MSF staff are instructed to call their home MSF office if they find themselves in an unfortunate situation like losing their passport or if they have trouble with a visa. We then provide all the support they need to get home.
MSF staff in the field will also have access to funds in an emergency situation and so have no need to request financial support from anyone, for either themselves or their patients.
MSF does not charge a fee at any stage of the recruitment process (application, interview meeting, processing, training or any other fees).
Unfortunately there is nothing we can do to stop scams such as these and others from happening. If you are unsure if you are the subject of a scam or fraud involving a supposed MSF staff member, please get in contact with your local or nearest MSF office. You can also get in touch with your country’s local consumer commission or fraud reporting office.