GAO Report: DOD Natural Disaster Tracking and Resilience Planning Needs Improvement
Summary
The GAO released a report finding that the Department of Defense (DOD) needs to improve its tracking of natural disaster costs and resilience planning. The report highlights gaps in data collection for various natural disasters and potential inaccuracies in cost reporting, recommending DOD expand its scope and ensure data completeness.
What changed
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has identified significant shortcomings in the Department of Defense's (DOD) approach to tracking natural disaster costs and planning for resilience. The report, GAO-26-107786, notes that while DOD has begun tracking extreme weather effects, its data collection is incomplete, excluding events like earthquakes and potentially containing inaccurate or incomplete cost data due to reporting timing. This lack of comprehensive data hinders DOD's ability to effectively track recovery costs and understand the full impact of natural disasters on military installations.
GAO recommends that DOD expand its data collection to encompass all types of natural disasters and establish processes to ensure the accuracy and completeness of cost data. Furthermore, while DOD has implemented resilience improvements and is working to integrate resilience into master plans, existing guidance does not adequately address how to use this resilience information during disaster recovery. The GAO suggests that incorporating this into guidance will better equip installations to restore capabilities while integrating resilience measures. Regulated entities within DOD will need to review and potentially revise their data collection and planning processes to align with these findings and recommendations.
What to do next
- Review current data collection processes for natural disaster costs to ensure inclusion of all disaster types (e.g., earthquakes).
- Implement procedures to verify the accuracy and completeness of reported disaster recovery costs.
- Incorporate resilience information from master plans into disaster recovery guidance and operational procedures.
Source document (simplified)
GAO-26-107786 Published: Feb 23, 2026. Publicly Released: Feb 23, 2026.
Fast Facts
Natural disasters have caused billions of dollars in damage to military installations over the past decade.
Military installations we reviewed have taken steps to improve resilience to prevent or minimize future damages, such as elevating buildings or designing roofs to withstand high speed winds. But DOD's data collection doesn't include all natural disasters—for example, earthquakes—which makes it harder to track recovery costs and effects of extreme weather.
In some cases, installations hadn't planned for the data and resources they would need to pursue certain resilience improvements.
Our recommendations address these issues.
Damage from Hurricane Michael at Tyndall Air Force Base, 2018
Piles of rubble and twisted metal sit in front of a building with broken windows. A sign on the building says 325th Maintenance Group.
Highlights
What GAO Found
Natural disasters at military installations have resulted in significant costs and damages since 2015, but the Department of Defense (DOD) has not comprehensively tracked data related to those costs. In 2024, DOD began an effort to track the effects of extreme weather at military installations. However, GAO identified gaps in the scope of DOD’s data collection and its ability to collect complete and accurate data on disaster recovery costs. Specifically, DOD’s data collection is limited to the effects of extreme weather, which does not include the full scope of natural disasters, including seismic events such as earthquakes. Also, data DOD collects on the cost of extreme weather at installations may be inaccurate or incomplete in some cases, in part due to the timing of when installations are expected to report the information. Expanding the scope of its data collection to include all types of natural disasters and establishing a process to ensure cost data are complete and accurate can improve DOD’s ability to anticipate future disaster recovery needs.
Figure: Examples of Natural Disasters at Military Installations
DOD has taken steps to increase installations’ disaster resilience—including implementing resilience improvements at the 12 installations GAO examined—but gaps in planning may limit these efforts. GAO identified some instances when installations were unable to pursue resilience improvements due to not having necessary data or sufficient funding. Installations are working to implement a statutory requirement to include resilience information as part of their master plans. This includes the identification of current and future risks and ongoing or planned projects to mitigate those risks. DOD policy reflects this requirement and addresses how resilience should be incorporated into construction projects, such as by adhering to Unified Facilities Criteria (DOD’s standards for design and construction of facilities). However, existing DOD and military department guidance does not address how installations should use the master plan resilience information when recovering from a disaster. By including such information in guidance, the military departments can help ensure that installations affected by disasters are better able to incorporate resilience improvements while quickly restoring essential capabilities.
Why GAO Did This Study
Extreme weather and natural disasters have resulted in billions of dollars of damages to military installations over the past decade. Such damages can affect DOD’s ability to execute its mission and disrupt installation resources that support service members and their families.
Senate Report 118-58, accompanying a bill for the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024, includes a provision for GAO to assess DOD’s recovery from natural disasters at military installations. GAO examined the extent to which DOD has (1) tracked costs and damages associated with natural disasters since 2015 and (2) increased resilience of selected installations affected by natural disasters.
GAO reviewed documentation and interviewed officials from a non-generalizable sample of 12 installations on disaster damages and resilience improvement efforts and conducted in-person site visits at three of these installations. GAO analyzed annual and supplemental appropriations to identify funds designated for disaster recovery. GAO also reviewed documentation and interviewed DOD and military department officials related to installations’ recovery efforts and collection of related data.
Recommendations
GAO is making five recommendations, including that DOD improve its efforts to collect data on the effects of extreme weather at installations and that the military departments issue guidance to enhance the use of resilience information in installation master plans. DOD concurred with GAO’s recommendations.
Recommendations for Executive Action
| Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Department of Defense | The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment expands the scope of data collection on the costs and effects of extreme weather and incremental change at military installations to include all types of natural disasters affecting military installations. (Recommendation 1) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
| Department of Defense | The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment establishes a process to ensure the collection of complete disaster recovery cost data from installations and that installations update the data as more accurate information and estimates become available. (Recommendation 2) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
| Department of the Army | The Secretary of the Army should issue guidance that clearly identifies how installations should use installation master plan resilience information when recovering from a natural disaster. (Recommendation 3) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
| Department of the Navy | The Secretary of the Navy should issue guidance that clearly identifies how installations should use installation master plan resilience information when recovering from a natural disaster. (Recommendation 4) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
| Department of the Air Force | The Secretary of the Air Force should issue guidance that clearly identifies how installations should use installation master plan resilience information when recovering from a natural disaster. (Recommendation 5) | Open When we confirm what actions the agency has taken in response to this recommendation, we will provide updated information. |
See All 5 Recommendations
Full Report
GAO Contacts
Kristy E. Williams Director Defense Capabilities and Management williamsk@gao.gov
Media Inquiries
Sarah Kaczmarek Managing Director Office of Public Affairs media@gao.gov
Public Inquiries
Topics
National Defense Disaster resilience Disaster recovery Military facilities Natural disasters Military forces Extreme weather Disasters Hurricanes Data collection Military construction
Multimedia
Video
Natural Disasters: Improving Resiliency at Military Installations
Monday, February 23, 2026
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