The United States has signed a five-year memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Tanzania, committing more than $1.3 billion to strengthen the East African nation’s health sector through 2030. According to Reuters and The Citizen Tanzania, the agreement forms part of Washington’s America First Global Health Strategy, which aims to help partner countries build more self-reliant healthcare systems while gradually reducing dependence on foreign aid. In return, Tanzania has pledged to invest $1.8 billion in its own health sector over the same period, bringing the total value of the partnership to $3.1 billion.
The joint investment will focus on preventing infectious diseases, strengthening healthcare financing, enhancing disease surveillance, and improving Tanzania’s capacity to independently manage essential health services. The partnership also seeks to sustain progress in tackling major public health challenges, including HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and polio, while expanding maternal and child healthcare services. Tanzanian Health Minister Mohamed Mchengerwa described the agreement as a roadmap toward greater national ownership of the country’s health system, emphasizing that Tanzania will progressively assume more responsibility for financing healthcare.
The Tanzania agreement follows similar health partnerships signed between the United States and Rwanda, Kenya, and Uganda, although some of those arrangements have generated debate over provisions relating to mineral access and the handling of health data. Addressing those concerns, Minister Mchengerwa clarified that Tanzania’s agreement does not include any specimen-sharing provisions, stressing that laboratory samples linked to outbreaks, epidemics, and potential pandemics will continue to be tested, stored, and governed exclusively within Tanzania.
For Tanzania, the agreement represents one of the country’s largest long-term health financing partnerships and is expected to strengthen healthcare resilience while supporting sustainable domestic financing. Analysts say the combined $3.1 billion commitment from both governments could improve public health infrastructure, enhance preparedness for future disease outbreaks, and accelerate Tanzania’s transition toward a more self-sustaining and nationally led healthcare system.

