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The world is off track to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11) on sustainable cities and communities, 10 years after its adoption, according to the SDG 11 Global Report 2026, launched on Thursday, July 9, 2026, by UN-Habitat during the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF).
Prepared with the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA), UNDRR, WHO, UNODC, UNESCO, UNEP and other partners, the report presents the United Nations system’s joint assessment of progress towards achieving SDG 11, which aims to make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable.

The report identifies the global housing crisis as one of the greatest barriers to sustainable urban development. Today, more than 3 billion people lack access to adequate housing, including over 1.1 billion living in informal settlements and slums.
“Delivering adequate housing and transforming slums and informal settlements is one of the most important tests of whether we are achieving SDG 11 and its vision of sustainable cities and communities. With only four years remaining until 2030 and the New Urban Agenda at its midpoint, incremental progress is not enough. We must act with urgency,” said Anacláudia Rossbach, Executive Director of UN-Habitat, while presenting the report at a press briefing at United Nations Headquarters in New York
“The report sends a clear and urgent message, which is that despite progress in areas such as public transport, waste management and urban policy, the world remains significantly off track in achieving SDG11,” noted Ambassador Erastus Ekitela Lokaale, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Kenya to the United Nations during the presentation of the high-level results at the press briefing in New York. “The findings reinforce that housing is not only an enabler of SDG11, but indeed all the other Sustainable Development Goals.”
“More than 3 billion people still live in inadequate housing, and over 1 billion people live in informal settlements. These are not simply statistics; they represent millions of families whose daily lives are shaped by exclusion and inequality,” observed Shirley Pryce, Jamaica Household Workers Union, GROOTS Jamaica, Huairou Commission and Member of the UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues.
She emphasised the need to integrate the needs of women and caregivers into urban planning and policymaking, noting that their priorities and lived experiences too often remain invisible.
The report concludes that progress on SDG 11 is possible, but it is neither fast enough nor equitable enough to achieve all the targets by 2030.
The report points out that housing is not an outcome of sustainable development but its foundation. Prioritising adequate housing and transforming informal settlements can drive progress across multiple Sustainable Development Goals, including poverty eradication, health, education, gender equality, climate resilience and economic opportunity.
Since 2020, monitoring of SDG 11 has advanced. Today, 101 countries report more than half of the monitoring data across 10 SDG 11 targets. However, major gaps and challenges remain, particularly in disaggregating data on women, children, persons with disabilities, people living in informal settlements and neighbourhood-level inequalities. The report calls for greater investment in statistics, geospatial information, Earth observation, and other innovative technologies to support decision-making and more targeted public investment.
The report concludes that prioritising adequate housing, transforming informal settlements and building urban resilience are the most effective ways to accelerate sustainable development. Investing in housing and advancing SDG 11 can catalyse progress across the Sustainable Development Goals, helping drive the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.
The SDG 11 Global Report 2026 will inform discussions at the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development and feed into the High-Level Meeting of the United Nations General Assembly on the implementation of the New Urban Agenda, to be held from July 16 to 17, 2026.
