Saudi Arabia Reports More Than $141 Billion in Global Aid to 173 Countries
Kingdom underscores its humanitarian role with thousands of projects spanning relief, development and medical support worldwide
Saudi Arabia has announced that it has provided over 141 billion US dollars in aid, humanitarian relief and development support to 173 countries around the globe.
The figures — published in conjunction with the observation of World Humanitarian Day — reflect nearly eight thousand projects spanning crises response, long-term reconstruction, medical relief, refugee support and infrastructure efforts.
The bulk of this support has been carried out through the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief), the Kingdom’s official humanitarian arm.
Since its establishment in 2015, KSrelief has implemented thousands of projects — including food, medical and shelter aid, mine clearance, prosthetics for war-injured civilians and emergency response initiatives in countries affected by conflict, natural disasters or economic hardship.
Among its wide-ranging efforts, the Centre has undertaken programmes delivering medical treatment to patients worldwide, carried out hundreds of mine-clearance operations in war-torn regions, and provided critical relief to refugees and displaced people.
It has also mobilised international volunteer efforts and digital donation platforms to expand its reach.
Saudi Arabia’s latest aid disclosure reaffirms its role as one of the world’s largest bilateral donors, with a long-standing commitment to international humanitarian and development cooperation.
Officials say the record highlights Riyadh’s dedication to global solidarity, especially toward countries facing acute crises.
The scale and diversity of the assistance underscore a sustained strategy aligned with the Kingdom’s international outreach priorities and its broader agenda of promoting stability, development and international cooperation through humanitarian diplomacy.