Somali Parliament Passes $1.39 Billion 2026 Budget After Joint Vote
Somalia’s Federal Parliament has approved a nearly $1.4 billion national budget for 2026, slightly higher than 2025, to fund development, jobs and social services amid ongoing security and climate pressures.
Somalia’s Federal Parliament has given the green light to a nearly $1.4 billion national budget for 2026, marking another step in the country’s slow but steady push toward economic recovery and state-building.
In a joint session of both houses, lawmakers approved a budget totaling $1,386,807,242, with 174 MPs voting in favor, four opposing, and one abstaining. Democracy math—clear majority, decision made, gavel down.
The newly approved budget represents a modest increase from last year’s $1.359 billion, and the government says the extra funding will go toward development projects, job creation, and expanded social services—the bread-and-butter issues ordinary Somalis feel every day.
The process itself followed the parliamentary playbook. The first reading kicked off on November 15, 2025, laying out the framework. That was followed by heated second-reading debates on December 21, attended by 169 lawmakers, before Tuesday’s final vote sealed the deal.
Officials say the 2026 budget is designed to strengthen government institutions, support economic growth, and improve service delivery—ambitious goals in a country still juggling security pressures, climate shocks, and humanitarian needs.
The numbers are approved, the calendar has flipped, and now comes the hard part: turning budget lines into real change on the ground. As Somalis like to say—warqaddu way fududahay, fulintuna waa dagaal (The letter is easy, but the execution is a battle).