The FAO has developed a monitoring system in 26 food crisis countries to better understand the impacts of various shocks on agricultural livelihoods, food security and local value chains. The Monitoring System consists of primary data collected from households on a periodic basis (more or less every four months, depending on seasonality). The FAO launched a household survey in Honduras through the Data in Emergencies Monitoring (DIEM-Monitoring) System to monitor agricultural livelihoods and food security.The data collection was conducted under the coordination of the Government with technical assistance from FAO, the World Food Programme, Action Against Hunger, Caritas, the Agencia Adventista para el Desarrollo y Recursos Asistenciales, Prawanka and Panapana, World Vision,and with the support of municipal governments and local non-governmental organizations This first-round survey reached 4649 households through face-to-face interviews conducted from 15 November to 27 December 2022. Households were surveyed across 18 departments of the country, and the two biggest cities of the country, Central District and San Pedro Sula. Data collection took place during the post-harvest period. The sample design considered a margin of error of 10 percent and a reliability of 90 percent. For more information, please go to https://data-in-emergencies.fao.org/pages/monitoring