In 2025, PEPFAR supported 17 million fewer people in receiving HIV testing and counseling than in 2024. This correlated to a drop in positive HIV tests from 1.7 in 2024 to 1.3 million people in 2025.

Date: 2/26

Region: Global

Country: Global

Topic: Health

Policy Lens: Global Health Security

Entry Type: System Impact

Additional Context: In February 2026, the U.S. government released partial annual data for the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR. The Center for Global Development analyzed the data as available at the time but cautioned that the dataset likely contains reporting errors and underreporting. Because the analysis relies on aggregated indicators, it may also miss important shifts in how services were delivered on the ground over the past year.

The data shows 67 million people received testing and counselling in 2025, as compared to 84 million in 2024.

Devex Researcher Note: Though funding was initially frozen in early 2025, many of the "lifesaving" PEPFAR programs rebounded globally while other non-medical but vital support services ended for good. The confusion and disruptions of the initial funding freeze have led to mistrust, misinformation, and harmful coping strategies. Without the auxiliary programs that once were prevalent, reaching those most marginalized will continue to be difficult.

Source: CGD