The Global Fund’s Eighth Replenishment aims to raise US $18 billion to sustain the fight against AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) and malaria for the next three years.
This live tracker follows donor pledges—who has committed, how contributions add up, and how close the world is to reaching the investment target.
Each donor is a piece of the picture. Together, they form the collective effort to fund the fight against AIDS, TB, and malaria. The growing pattern of colours reflects how individual pledges combine to build the Global Fund’s Eighth Replenishment.
Why the Eighth Replenishment matters
Every three years, governments, philanthropies, foundations, and the private sector come together to renew their support for the Global Fund through a replenishment — a collective financing effort that sets the scale of action for the next cycle (2027-2029). The Eighth Replenishment will shape how much progress the world can make against AIDS, TB, and malaria in the next three years.
Over the past two decades, the world has made remarkable progress against these three diseases — much of it enabled by the Global Fund’s investments. Since its creation, the Fund has helped save an estimated 70 million lives, and reduce the death rate from the three diseases by 63% in the countries in which it operates, while strengthening national health systems and expanding access to prevention, testing, and treatment.
Yet the fight is far from over. Progress has stalled since the COVID-19 pandemic, and the three infectious diseases continue to claim lives and strain fragile health systems. Malaria caused an estimated 263 million cases and about 597,000 deaths across 85 countries in 2023, mostly among young children. 630 000 people died from AIDS-related illnesses in 2024—one person every minute. Tuberculosis remains among the world’s deadliest infectious diseases, killing about 1.25 million people in 2023.
A fully funded replenishment could ensure continued progress against AIDS, TB, and malaria. Modelled estimates suggest that an $18 billion Replenishment could help achieve:
The outcome of this replenishment will influence not only the fight against AIDS, TB, and malaria, but also the strength of global health systems and collective preparedness for future crises. Each pledge represents not only financial support, but a shared commitment to strengthen health security and protect lives everywhere.