ON
← Back to feed
WorldMedicine11 days ago

Refugee numbers drop for first time in a decade, but millions remain trapped

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) reported that global refugee numbers dropped by three percent in 2025 to 41.6 million, marking the first decrease in a decade. The report noted that 5.4 million people fled their homes due to violence and persecution, while 14.7 million displaced individuals returned to their countries or regions of origin. Returns were highest in Afghanistan, Sudan, and Syria, though many occurred under difficult circumstances. Nearly 46,000 stateless people gained citizenship in 24 countries last year. UNHCR High Commissioner Barham Salih emphasized that humanitarian aid alone,

Refugee numbers drop for first time in a decade, but millions remain trapped

10 June 2026

Migrants and Refugees

Global forced displacement has decreased for the first time in a decade, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) reported on Thursday, though the figure remains unacceptably high and tens of millions of people are still trapped in prolonged exile with little prospect of rebuilding their lives.

UNHCR 's flagship Global Trends Report, launched in Geneva by High Commissioner Barham Salih, showed that global refugee numbers fell by three per cent in 2025 to 41.6 million .

Some 5.4 million people fled to other countries to escape violence and persecution during the year.

Heading home

Returns also gathered pace: 14.7 million displaced people went back to their areas or countries of origin in 2025 – including 4.4 million refugees and 10.3 million internally displaced people - with sharp increases recorded in Afghanistan, Sudan and Syria.

Refugee returns were the second highest since records began 60 years ago , though the agency cautioned that many occurred under pressure and to precarious conditions.

In a positive development, nearly 46,000 stateless people acquired citizenship across 24 countries last year.

A paradigm shift

Despite the overall decline, Mr. Salih warned that humanitarian aid alone was no longer sufficient.

With 70 per cent of refugees trapped in exile for years and many living below the poverty line, he called for a fundamental change of approach.

“For too many refugees, displacement starts as a lifeline but lasts a lifetime,” he said. We need a paradigm shift that creates a new sense of hope and opportunity for people fleeing war and persecution.”

Mr. Salih outlined a concrete and measurable goal: to reduce by more than half, over the next decade, the number of refugees in long-term displacement who are reliant on humanitarian assistance – focusing on low and middle-income countries where most refugees are hosted.

The initiative would expand opportunities for voluntary returns, humanitarian visas and relocation, while transitioning refugees from aid dependency to self-reliance through access to education, healthcare, financial services and labour markets.

© WFP/Philip Vinter

Children sit amidst the rubble of a ruined building in Syria.

Fight for the future

The report also flagged a sharp drop in resettlement, with arrivals through resettlement or sponsorship pathways falling by more than half, year on year, to just 81,800 in 2025 – a widening gap between available places and pressing needs.

More than 70 per cent of refugees originated from Afghanistan, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine and Venezuela. The largest hosting countries were Colombia, Germany and Türkiye .

“Asylum and protection are lifesaving and not up for debate,” Mr. Salih said, “but we cannot accept a future in which millions of refugees remain trapped for years or decades without realistic prospects of rebuilding their lives.”

♦ Receive daily updates directly in your inbox - Subscribe here to a topic.

♦ Download the UN News app for your iOS or Android devices.

Read the full article at UN News
Source document: UNHCR Global Trends Report

1 reports

UN NewsState / PublicCenter11 days ago
Refugee numbers drop for first time in a decade, but millions remain trapped

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) reported that global refugee numbers dropped by three percent in 2025 to 41.6 million, marking the first decrease in a decade. The report noted that 5.4 million people fled their homes due to violence and persecution, while 14.7 million displaced individuals returned to their countries or regions of origin. Returns were highest in Afghanistan, Sudan, and Syria, though many occurred under difficult circumstances. Nearly 46,000 stateless people gained citizenship in 24 countries last year. UNHCR High Commissioner Barham Salih emphasized that humanitarian aid alone,

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual data from the UNHCR without overtly biased language or selective emphasis. It reports both the decline in refugee numbers and the ongoing challenges faced by those remaining in displacement, maintaining a balanced tone.

Official sources cited

  • organisation UNHCR Global Trends Report

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationUNHCR Global Trends Report