British prime minister Rishi Sunak is to visit Northern Ireland to meet the leaders of the new powersharing Executive.
Taoiseach Leo Varadkar will also be at Stormont for meetings on Monday.
The Assembly returned on Saturday following a two-year political deadlock, with Sinn Féin’s Michelle O’Neill making history as Northern Ireland’s first nationalist First Minister.
The institutions were restored following a deal between Mr Sunak’s government and the DUP to allay unionist concerns over post-Brexit trading arrangements.
Sunak will be welcomed to Stormont Castle on Monday by Ms O’Neill and deputy First Minister, the DUP’s Emma Little-Pengelly.
During his visit, his seventh to Northern Ireland, he will also carry out a number of community engagements, meeting people involved in public services.
The British government has pledged £3.3 billion for the new Executive to stabilise finances, including £600 million to settle public sector pay claims.
On Thursday, the British government fast-tracked two pieces of legislation contained in the agreement through the House of Commons as part of its agreement with the DUP, opening the way for Saturday’s return of the Assembly.
The new Executive is due to hold its first meeting on Monday.
Ms O’Neill told the PA news agency that it will need to begin work immediately on tackling public sector funding challenges.
She said: “I am determined to do our very best.
“This place has been starved of public services funding for over a decade because of the Tories in London, we can do much better than that.
“That’s a fight I think we have to fight together and I think there’s a combined effort across the Executive to have a proper funding model for here so we actually can do better public services and invest in the public sector workers.”