How much foreign aid does the US provide to Kosovo?
Updates published monthly
About $70.3 million in aid was promised for fiscal year (FY) 2023, the most recent fully-reported year. Another $268.9 million has been reported for FY 2024 and $18.5 million for FY 2025.
$70.3M
of foreign aid was committed to Kosovo (FY 2023).
80.6%
of foreign aid was for economic purposes (FY 2023)
The United States gives foreign assistance to provide humanitarian aid and support peace, security, and economic development around the world. According to foreignassistance.gov, investing in global security and stability serves US national security interests by creating strategic and economic connections with other countries.
The more than 20 government agencies that fund or conduct foreign assistance activities report their aid to the Foreign Assistance and Data Reporting Team at foreignassistance.gov, which is jointly staffed by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Department of State. Due to data collection and reporting lags from the agencies providing aid, it can take up to two years for data to be considered “fully reported.” And even once they are, these numbers continue to change.
In FY 2023, $70.3 million in foreign aid was committed to Kosovo.
Obligations by fiscal year, inflation-adjusted dollars
Foreign aid can be either military or non-military in nature. According to foreignassistance.gov, military aid is “... foreign assistance for government armed forces for purposes such as internal security, legitimate self–defense, or to permit their participation in regional or United Nations (UN) peacekeeping operations.” Non-military assistance is any other aid, broadly described by “economic assistance.”
In FY 2023, 80.6% of foreign aid was for economic purposes, and the remaining 19.4% was for military purposes.
Subscribe to get unbiased, data-driven insights sent to your inbox weekly.
What is aid to Kosovo spent on?
Aid starts in Congress and flows to US government agencies, which are responsible for obligating and disbursing funds and managing the implementing partners that conduct aid activities in the receiving country. An assistance activity “... can be a project, program, cash transfer, delivery of goods, training course, technical assistance, research project, debt relief operation, or a contribution to an international organization.”
Implementing partners can be based in the US or not, and are divided into eight categories:
- Businesses
- Church and faith-based groups
- Governments (either foreign governments or US government agencies like the Peace Corps or the Department of Defense)
- Multilateral organizations (international institutions whose members are country governments, like the World Food Programme of the United Nations)
- Networks (a global or regional organization that brings together public, private, and civil society groups with similar goals to facilitate knowledge sharing)
- Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) or not-for-profit organizations
- Public and private partnerships (collaborations between the public sector and a private partner to deliver public services, often infrastructure)
- Universities and research institutes
88% of US aid to Kosovo in FY 2023 went to US-based implementing partners.
The top category of aid delivery partner was US-based businesses, accounting for $32.4 million, or 46.1% of all aid. US-based businesses, the US government, and US-based NGOs were the top three types of implementing partner in terms of funds received, together accounting for 89.4% of total aid.
In FY 2023, funding for US aid to Kosovo was appropriated by Congress to three agencies.
1. | U.S. Agency for International Development | $44.6M |
2. | Department of State | $24.9M |
3. | Peace Corps | $1.23M |
Keep exploring
Methodology
USAFacts standardizes data, in areas such as time and demographics, to make it easier to understand and compare.
The analysis was generated with the help of AI and reviewed by USAFacts for accuracy.
Page sources
USAFacts endeavors to share the most up-to-date information available. We sourced the data on this page directly from government agencies; however, the intervals at which agencies publish updated data vary.