Returning & Rebuilding in Tyre
How war-damage help, compensation and unexploded-ordnance safety work in South Lebanon — who to report to, and how to stay safe coming back.
Tyre was hit hard in the 2024 war and again in the fighting of March–June 2026, and like much of the south it is living with damaged homes, a slow and uncertain return, and unexploded ordnance left in the ground. This is a plain guide to how war-damage help is meant to work in South Lebanon, who the responsible bodies are, and how to stay safe coming back — written from what is publicly known as of mid-2026. Where something is not yet settled, it says so honestly. It is information, not legal advice.
My home was damaged in the war. Who do I report it to?
Start with the Municipality of Tyre and the Council of the South — they hold the local record of who has been hit. War-damage assessments in the south are carried out by Lebanese Army engineering teams, and the Council of the South also sends engineers to inspect damaged homes.
Keep your own evidence too: dated photographs of the damage, your ownership or residence papers, and any assessment reference you are given. There is not yet a single national website where an individual files a claim, so a clear local record matters.
Is there money to help rebuild my home yet?
Money has been set aside, but as of mid-2026 there is still no open national process through which an individual homeowner applies and receives rebuilding compensation. In the 2026 state budget, Parliament moved about $90 million from the emergency reserve toward southern relief and reconstruction — roughly $67 million to the Council of the South and $24 million to the Higher Relief Commission.