The law firm of choice for internationally focused companies

+263 242 744 677

admin@tsazim.com

4 Gunhill Avenue,

Harare, Zimbabwe

Food Security Outlook: Favorable 2025 harvest drives delays in typical onset of lean season, October 2025 – May 2026


8.11.2025


3:55

Analysis
in
English
on
Zimbabwe
about
Agriculture,
Food
and
Nutrition
and
Drought;
published
on
7
Nov
2025
by
FEWS
NET


Key
Messages


  • Crisis
    (IPC
    Phase
    3)
    outcomes
    are
    expected
    to
    emerge
    in
    November
    across
    many
    typical
    deficit-producing
    areas
     in
    Matabeleland
    North
    and
    South,
    Masvingo,
    Midlands
    and
    Manicaland
    provinces,
    and
    the
    far
    northern
    parts
    of
    the
    Mashonaland
    provinces.Own-produced
    food
    stocks
    this
    year
    are
    likely
    to
    last
    longer
    than
    typical
    following
    the
    above-average
    2025
    harvest,
    driving
    a
    delayed
    onset
    of
    the
    lean
    season.
    As
    households
    exhaust
    food
    from
    their
    own
    production
    and
    become
    market
    dependent
    with
    below-average
    purchasing
    power,
    moderate
    food
    consumption
    deficits
    will
    emerge. In
    early
    2026,
    Crisis
    (IPC
    Phase
    3)
    outcomes
    are
    expected
    to
    expand
    in
    deficit-producing
    areas
    and
    to
    a
    few
    typical
    surplus-producing
    areas.

  • Seasonal
    improvements
    in
    acute
    food
    insecurity
    are
    most
    likely
    countrywide
    in
    April
    and
    May
    2026
    with
    Stressed
    (IPC
    Phase
    2)
    and
    Minimal
    (IPC
    Phase
    1)
    outcomes
    driven
    by
    the
    2026
    harvest.
     The
    forecast
    average
    2025/26
    rainfall
    is
    expected
    to
    support
    crop
    and
    livestock
    production
    and
    income
    from
    agricultural
    labor.
    The
    most
    likely
    2026
    above-average
    harvest
    will
    mark
    a
    second
    consecutive
    favorable
    harvest.

  • The
    areas
    of
    highest
    concern
    are
    the
    worst-off
    typical
    deficit-producing
    areas
    facing
    Crisis
    (IPC
    Phase
    3)
    outcomes.
     Worst-off
    areas
    include
    locations
    impacted
    by
    the
    poor
    performance
    of
    the
    2024/25
    rainfall
    season,
    which,
    combined
    with
    late
    planting
    resulted
    in
    a
    short
    growing
    season
    and
    poor
    maturation
    of
    crops,
    reduced
    crop
    yields.
    In
    the
    south,
    excessive
    rainfall
    also
    negatively
    affected
    crop
    production.
    Typical
    income
    sources
    such
    as
    labor,
    self-employment,
    petty
    trade,
    and
    remittances
    are
    expected
    to
    be
    below
    typical
    levels,
    as
    is
    the Mopane worm
    (Gonimbrasia
    belina)
     harvest.

  • Food
    assistance
    needs
    are
    expected
    to
    increase
    through
    the
    peak
    of
    the
    January
    to
    March
    2026
    lean
    season.
     Overallfood
    assistance
    needs
    are
    expected
    to
    be
    at
    near-average
    levels,
    though
    lower
    than
    the
    atypically
    high
    El-Niño-induced
    needs
    during
    the
    last
    2024/25
    lean
    season.
    Thereafter,
    food
    assistance
    needs
    are
    expected
    to
    declinewith
    the
    availability
    of
    the
    2026
    harvest.

Post
published
in:

Agriculture