U.S. Disaster Relief at Home and Abroad
Backgrounder

U.S. Disaster Relief at Home and Abroad

The U.S. government responds to scores of disasters each year in coordination with foreign, state, and local partners, but more frequent and severe storms, fires, and floods are straining resources.
An aerial view of damaged houses in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, after Hurricane Helene.
An aerial view of damaged houses in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, after Hurricane Helene. Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images
Summary
  • The U.S. government responds to dozens of disasters every year, both at home and abroad. The president is responsible for declaring either a major disaster or emergency.
  • The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) coordinates Washington’s response to a disaster on U.S. soil. Several state and local authorities are also involved.
  • As climate change intensifies, major natural disasters are becoming more common, stretching relief efforts and causing billions of dollars in damages each year.

Introduction

The U.S. government is often a rapid responder when disasters—such as disease outbreaks, hurricanes, tsunamis, and terrorist attacks—strike at home or abroad. In the United States, the president declares disasters to unlock vital federal resources for state and local governments. At the same time, the United States regularly provides essential support to foreign countries stricken by tragedy. The growing frequency and intensity of disasters, which many researchers link to climate change and human development patterns, pose pressing new challenges for U.S. preparedness and relief efforts.

When does the U.S. government respond to disasters?

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States and U.S. territories, as well as tribes, typically respond to small-scale disasters and emergencies on their own or with assistance from nearby jurisdictions and volunteer groups. But in cases where the scale of a disaster exceeds local capacity, these authorities can appeal for help from Washington.

What is the declaration process?

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United States Agency for International Development (USAID)

Typically, the federal government only comes in once a governor makes a formal request to the White House. These appeals are generally based on a preliminary damage assessment [PDF] conducted by a team of local, state, and federal officials. FEMA, housed within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), is responsible for coordinating Washington’s response to a disaster on U.S. soil.

The president, upon deciding federal aid is warranted, triggers the government’s physical and financial response by issuing either a major disaster or emergency declaration. Alternatively, the president can deny a request if they determine that the jurisdiction can recover independently, or if the event does not qualify as a traditional disaster.

According to the Stafford Act [PDF]—the principal law governing federal disaster response—“major disasters” are defined as both natural and man-made events, including “any hurricane, tornado, storm, high water, wind-driven water, tidal wave, tsunami, earthquake, volcanic eruption, landslide, mudslide, snowstorm, or drought.” Additionally, severe fires, floods, and explosions can warrant a designation. This category does not generally include disease outbreaks. However, following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, President Donald Trump declared simultaneous major disasters in all fifty states and most U.S. territories, an unprecedented move some experts viewed as a distortion of the Stafford Act. Since taking office, President Joe Biden has issued more than 250 major disaster declarations in response to crises in Alaska, Florida, North Carolina, Missouri, Puerto Rico, and other areas. 

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An “emergency” is a broader classification for relief efforts, defined as any instance in which the president determines that federal assistance is needed to help “save lives and to protect property and public health and safety, or to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe.” Emergency declarations initially unlock up to $5 million in FEMA aid, and the president must notify Congress if spending will exceed this amount. These declarations run the gamut and have included the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and the water crises that began in Flint, Michigan, in 2014, and Jackson, Mississippi, in 2022.

Emergency declarations are often made in advance of a looming disaster to facilitate evacuations and other protective measures. For example, President Barack Obama issued emergency declarations for nine states and the District of Columbia days before Hurricane Sandy struck the East Coast in 2011; seven of these were reclassified as major disasters after the storm made landfall. In the fall of 2024, Biden issued emergency declarations for several states ahead of back-to-back Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Presidents can also declare national emergencies, a step Trump took in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

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Disasters

Humanitarian Intervention

Humanitarian Crises

United States Agency for International Development (USAID)

U.S. assistance for disasters abroad follows a similar blueprint [PDF]. A country’s government typically requests help from a U.S. ambassador or chief of mission, who asks U.S. agencies to provide aid at the president’s discretion. The United States is widely viewed as the leader in international disaster relief, providing aid in response to dozens of disasters in more than fifty countries [PDF] each year.

Does the federal government ever take over response efforts?

In most cases, state and local authorities remain in charge of relief efforts after the president declares an emergency or disaster. The federal government chiefly serves as a coordinator and a resource, supplementing state and local response efforts.

However, Washington does take the lead when events fall under exclusive federal jurisdiction. For example, federal agencies lead responses to disasters that strike U.S government property, such as national parks and coastal waters [PDF].

Which federal agencies are involved?

In domestic incidents, FEMA works with state and local authorities to marshal a response from multiple federal agencies. FEMA’s ability to organize various assets swiftly is critical, experts say. “In the immediate aftermath of a disaster, you have a limited window to save lives,” said former U.S. Coast Guard Captain (Ret.) Michael Trimpert. “FEMA can come in with coordination expertise and set up a command structure that enables that quick and effective response.”

The agencies that participate vary based on the nature of the incident and the needs of the jurisdiction. In assembling an interagency team, FEMA relies on the National Response Framework (NRF) and National Disaster Recovery Framework, which identify the subset of agencies best equipped to respond to a particular challenge. For example, the NRF identifies the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as the primary agency for emergency infrastructure repair. FEMA can also bring in nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) such as the American Red Cross and Mercy Corps.

A small number of federal agencies can administer limited disaster relief [PDF] without a presidential declaration, including the Small Business Administration (SBA) and the Departments of Agriculture, Health and Human Services, and Transportation.

Overseas, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance coordinates most federal disaster relief efforts, while the U.S. Department of State takes the lead in assisting refugees affected by disasters. Both agencies work in close partnership with the Department of Defense and other federal agencies, as well as UN agencies, local and donor governments, and NGOs.

What types of assistance do they provide?

Disaster relief falls into three broad categories: preemptive action—consisting of hazard mitigation and emergency preparation—short-term response, and long-term recovery. In the immediate aftermath of a domestic disaster, responders focus on evacuations and providing food, water, shelter, and medical care where needed. The military also plays a critical role in this phase, carrying out search and rescue operations and providing other support.

Agencies often begin recovery efforts while emergency response activities are still in progress, or once the immediate threat has subsided. This includes working with state and local governments to remove debris and rebuild basic infrastructure. The government generally comes in as an “insurer of last resort,” providing financial assistance to those not covered by private disaster insurance.

“The government generally comes in as an ‘insurer of last resort.’”

Most of FEMA’s financial aid goes to helping affected jurisdictions repair buildings, roads, and other public infrastructure and to provide housing and other crisis services to uninsured or underinsured individuals. Families and individuals could also qualify for tax relief, unemployment compensation, subsidized mental health care, and other aid. For example, the SBA and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) administer long-term recovery loans. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the SBA made approximately $390 billion in disaster-assistance loans available to nearly four million small businesses and nonprofits.

Federal assistance can extend years beyond the disaster itself; New Orleans is still spending FEMA grants more than a decade after Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city, and the U.S. government has allocated more than $23 billion in disaster recovery funding to Puerto Rico to help the island recover from hurricanes in 2017 and earthquakes in 2019 and 2020. 

Abroad, the U.S. government helps to fund the relief efforts of other governments and international organizations by sending emergency responders and supplies, often transported by the U.S. military. USAID also deploys experts and contractors to help countries craft relief and recovery plans. For example, the U.S. government sent more than fifty experts from the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to advise their Japanese counterparts within a week of the Fukushima nuclear meltdown in 2011.

How are federal relief efforts funded?

Disaster relief and recovery costs can be enormous. In recent decades, natural disasters have caused trillions of dollars in damages worldwide. In 2021, twenty disasters cost the U.S. economy $145 billion; in 2022, the combined cost of eighteen separate events totaled more than $165 billion. While total damages from natural disasters dipped to $93 billion in 2023, it is the only year on record to have the highest number of billion-dollar disasters, at twenty-eight. The United States’ costliest recorded year for disasters was 2017, when sixteen events caused more than $306 billion in total damages.

In instances when individuals or companies are found legally responsible for accidents such as oil spills or fires, they bear the cost of relief. For example, London-based oil giant BP and its drilling partners have paid at least $71 billion in clean-up and other costs since the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

In the absence of a guilty third party or adequate private insurance, disaster relief costs fall to the government. The U.S. government typically absorbs at least 75 percent [PDF] of state and local governments’ recovery costs. If damages are extraordinary, Washington can choose to shoulder a higher portion of costs. When category 4 Hurricane Harvey left Texas with $125 billion in damages in 2017, President Trump increased the federal cost share of debris removal from 75 to 90 percent. States tend to cover relief costs through agency budgets, disaster accounts, rainy day funds, supplemental appropriations, and redirected government resources. However, the full financial contribution of state and local governments is unknown, as most do not comprehensively track natural disaster spending.

FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund [PDF] is the primary source of spending for federal domestic relief efforts, which Congress funds through the annual appropriations process. However, Congress is regularly called upon to provide supplemental funds [PDF] after major disasters strike. Days after Hurricane Harvey hit Texas, lawmakers doubled FEMA’s disaster relief budget for 2018. In the wake of Hurricanes Milton and Helene in October 2024, senators from affected states called for Congress to reconvene to replenish FEMA’s disaster relief funds, but House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) refused to bring lawmakers back to Washington until after the November presidential election. Other federal agencies primarily draw from their own budgets for disaster relief efforts.

USAID and the State Department finance most federal disaster relief abroad. In fiscal year 2023, USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance provided nearly $9.9 billion [PDF] in humanitarian aid.

What are some of the biggest challenges?

More disasters. Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and more severe, which many climate experts attribute to global warming. Higher temperatures multiply the number of droughts and heat waves, increasing food insecurity and worsening wildfires. In August 2023, a massive wildfire—one of the deadliest in U.S. history—on the island of Maui, Hawaii, razed the historic city of Lahaina, destroying thousands of homes and businesses. Warmer oceans also intensify storms. As ice sheets and glaciers melt, sea levels rise, leaving coastal populations more vulnerable to flooding. Global disaster damages in recent decades have significantly increased.

Human development patterns. As urbanization continues to trend upward, many cities around the globe are increasingly vulnerable to disasters. Over four billion people, or some 56 percent of the world’s population, live in cities, and that figure is expected to more than double by 2050. However, the COVID-19 pandemic slowed this growth. In recent years, experts have noted a growing trend of U.S. residents moving to more disaster-prone areas, including states such as Arizona and Florida, that are at a higher risk of experiencing events such as heat waves and hurricanes. Additionally, growing economic interdependence ensures that disasters ripple far beyond their point of impact. For example, Hurricane Harvey forced the temporary closure of one-third of U.S. oil refineries, driving national oil prices to a nearly two-year high.

Logistical challenges. Hurricanes such as Harvey, Katrina, and Sandy have exposed major weaknesses in the ability of public agencies to plan for and respond to disasters. Many analysts believe that even with significant reforms, governments will always struggle with relief efforts [PDF] that often bring extraordinary logistical and bureaucratic challenges over long time horizons. Federal recovery loans and grants are often insufficient and can take months or years to reach victims, and government resources are overwhelmed, particularly during severe or consecutive disasters. For instance, Hurricanes Harvey and Irma depleted FEMA’s emergency supplies weeks before Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico, contributing to the agency’s sluggish response. While in 2024, DHS announced a week after Hurricane Helene made landfall that FEMA did not have sufficient funding for the rest of the hurricane season. In response to debates over federal disaster support, some experts and policymakers have called for shifting more responsibility to state and local governments.

Victims of natural disasters have also faced logistical hurdles in applying for federal aid, with FEMA having rejected almost half of all those who have applied for help since 2002. In January 2024, the Biden administration announced a series of changes to expand applicant eligibility and remove certain limitations, such as requiring proof of ownership.

Insurance shortcomings. For reasons including prohibitively high premiums, misperceptions about risk, and reliance on government relief, the majority of disaster victims are uninsured or underinsured. In 2023, the United States suffered an estimated $114 billion in damages from natural disasters, only about $80 billion of which was insured. Even though California experiences 90 percent of the country’s earthquakes, just 10 percent of the state’s residents have earthquake insurance. People without insurance take longer to recover from disasters, and can receive less in FEMA grants than they would in insurance payouts. Closing the U.S. disaster insurance gap can help build national resilience, officials say. Meanwhile, some insurance companies are placing limits on the kinds of hazards they cover or altogether pulling out of states that are more vulnerable to natural disasters, such as California and Florida.

“Every dollar spent on mitigation can save an average of $6 in recovery costs.”


Lack of resilience. Too often, governments and citizens fail to take adequate measures to reduce their vulnerability to common disasters, including by elevating their homes after a storm surge to avoid future flooding or building weather-resistant infrastructure. Resilience building—including hazard mitigation—can be a tough political sell, requiring governments to make long-term investments whose dividends do not follow election cycles.

“The world must pay more attention to adaptation, upgrading infrastructure and policies to withstand extreme weather,” Alice C. Hill, CFR’s senior fellow for energy and the environment, wrote for Foreign Affairs. “If governments and societies do not make adequate preparations, the damaging impacts of climate change will crush lives, livelihoods, and communities across the globe.” For example, Congress amended the Stafford Act in February 2018 to reward state and local governments that are prioritizing hazard mitigation. According to a 2018 report by the National Institute of Building Sciences, every dollar spent on mitigation can save an average of $6 in recovery costs.

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Recommended Resources

The Congressional Research Service outlines FEMA’s public assistance [PDF] and individual assistance [PDF] programs.

CFR Senior Fellow for Energy and Environment Alice C. Hill explores the stormy connection between climate change and U.S. property insurance.

CFR’s Noah Berman and Sabine Baumgartner discuss the extreme weather of summer 2023.

For the New York Times, Samantha Montano argues how the U.S. disaster recovery system is unprepared to respond to worsening climate change.

This episode of the Why It Matters podcast discusses the impacts of climate change on home insurance.

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Esther Sun, Chelsea Padilla, and Nathalie Bussemaker contributed to this Backgrounder. Will Merrow created the graphics.

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