Countries sending foreign aid, including humanitarian aid to Ukraine
This is a list of known humanitarian aid, that has and will be provided to Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War. This list does not include financial support to the Ukrainian government unless earmarked for humanitarian purposes.
1,500 t (1,500 long tons; 1,700 short tons) of foodstuffs, medicine and clothing, as of 4 March 2022.[5]
Twelve shipments of supplies through the White Helmets Argentine Agency for International Cooperation and Humanitarian Assistance worth $300,000. (February 2023).[6]
2.5 tonnes of blankets, coats and first aid kits. (March 2023)[3]
5.5 tons of blankets, clothing, diapers, first aid supplies and disposable tableware (March to April 2023).[3]
Over 8,000 relief items, such as blankets, hygiene and kitchen sets, and lighting for Ukrainian refugees facing cold temperatures, in co-operation with the United Kingdom. (March 2022)[16]
In total Australia has given A$65 million in humanitarian aid (as of 26 April 2022).[17][18]
Free fuel for ambulances and vehicles of the State Emergency Service at SOCAR petrol stations.[29]
On 5 July 2022, Azerbaijan delivered 47,000 tons of humanitarian aid consisting of canned food, baby food, clothing and medicine bound for Cherkasy through Poland.[30]
£3 million to the International Committee of the Red Cross which will send medicine, water and, food to Mariupol and Kyiv. (March 2022)[39]
The Belgian First Aid and Support Team has sent generators, tents, blankets, hygiene kits, kitchen sets, camp beds, feminine hygiene products, milk powder and layers. Moldova has been given tents, generators and hygiene kits. The total value of the humanitarian material delivered by B-FAST now amounts to approximately 1.1 million euros. To Ukraine, Slovakia and Poland. (March 2022)[39]
The FPS Public Health has commissioned B-FAST to ship medical equipment worth just over 3 million euros. (March 2022)[39]
€800,000 worth of medical equipment, basic supplies, and medicines.(June 2022)[40]
Humanitarian aid
€69 million in humanitarian aid in January 2023.[41]
3,000 tons of salt to deice public roads in the current winter conditions in January 2023.[42]
Reconstruction aid
In November 2022, a new aid package of €29 million is announced to help with education in Ukraine, rebuild medical infrastructure and support the "Grain From Ukraine program". Then, the total humanitarian aid reached 61.5 million.[43]
€150 million pledged to finance energy and infrastructure reconstruction projects in Ukraine 17 July 2024.[44]
€150 million in technical assistance pledged for restoration and reconstruction of Ukraine through the BE-Relieve Ukraine project lasting until the end of 2028 announced April 2025.[46]
Aid to refugees
€800 million for Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees.[47]
The Brazilian Air Force donated 11.6 tons of food, water purifiers and medicine from humanitarian aid that was destined to Warsaw, Poland, while rescuing Brazilians who are leaving the European country.[51]
Unspecified number of clothes, shoes, tents, sheets, blankets.[53]
350 medical kits, 5000 sets of winter clothes and 5000 winter shoes.[54]
Bulgarian fundraising campaign for humanitarian aid by the Bulgarian Red Cross in co-operation with the Bulgarian government has raised £470,000 for humanitarian aid in 3 days. The cargo includes warm clothes and blankets, winter footwear, bed linen and hygiene products.[55]
CAN $10 million additional funds towards the response to the Destruction of the Kakhovka Dam and CAN 265,500 towards mental health charities for Ukrainians announced on 10 June 2023.[59]
The Chinese Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, said on 9 March that the Chinese Red Cross would provide humanitarian assistance worth ¥5 million RMB ($791,540) to Ukraine, consisting of daily necessities.[70]
Humanitarian aid
Additional ¥10 million RMB ($1.57 million) of humanitarian assistance offered on 21 March 2022.[71]
On 3 March 2022, Government of Croatia approved 1.8 million kn ($264,000/€238,000) of urgent humanitarian aid to Moldova, to help Ukrainian refugees. This aid includes electricity aggregators, tents, blankets, and masks.[73]
On 9 April 2022, Prime Minister Andrej Plenković pledged an additional €100 million to support Ukrainian refugees currently seeking refuge in Croatia.[74]
£4.79 million for the cost of health services for Ukrainian refugees in Croatia.[75]
£863,000 for active employment policies for Ukrainian refugees in Croatia.[75]
£340,000 for transportation for refugees in the country.[75]
Humanitarian aid
On 17 March 2022, The Croatian Medical Chamber (HLK) donated 300,000 kn in humanitarian aid to buy medical products and equipment for Ukrainian people and doctors.[76]
As of 23 February 2023, Croatia donated €37 million of humanitarian aid to Ukraine.[77]
On 31 July 2023 Croatia donated €1 million to the World Food Programme project to demine Ukrainian farmland.[78]
150 tonnes of humanitarian aid on 8 March 2022.[79]
215 tonnes of humanitarian aid on 5 April 2022.[80]
Energy aid
€300,000 grant for the purchase of generators through Poland for the energy needs of Ukraine (on 13 December 2022).[81] The humanitarian aid sent by Cyprus reached €3 million.
68 million crowns for the purchase of propane butane heaters (including propane butane bottles), energy-saving appliances and repairs to damaged energy infrastructure.[82]
DKK 100 million worth of medicine and medical equipment requested by Ukraine (among others, anaesthesia, antibiotics, analgesic drugs and protective medical equipment), as well as 1,700 treatments against tetanus on 3 March 2022 requested via WHO.[91][92][93]
More than 40 tonnes of energy and water equipment including: 4 electrical transformers, relay protection, steel wire, water pumps, heat exchangers, and water tanks.[107]
€7 million to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund [December 2023][108]
Additional €4.7 million to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund. [June 2024][109]
€380 million in support of renewable energy infrastructure.[104]
DKK 130 million in energy infrastructure aid announced 23 September 2024.[110]
€6 million to repair Ukrainian energy infrastructure announced December 2024.[111]
DKK 380 million for mine clearance, rehousing of internally displaced (including temporary housing units sent from Denmark), food security, clean water, securing access to schools for children, and similar things.[112]
11 busses with generators and electrical accessories December 2022[117]
€350,000 to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund [December 2023].[118]
A power unit from the Estonian Auverskaia power plant pledged December 2024.[119]
Humanitarian aid
£120,000 to help the displaced population in the conflict zone of the war, this aid includes generators, air heaters, air conditioners, sleeping bags, and hospital beds [January 2015].[120]
As of 8 April 2022, 344 tons of non-military relief supplies.[121]
Various medical and humanitarian aid, including 15 tons of food aid provided by 15 March 2022 and 45 ambulances provided by 17 April 2022[122]
Total €24,753,085 for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid in 2021–22 financed by Ministry of Foreign Affairs / Estdev[123]
As of 17 April 2022, 8 shipments of rescue equipment (including 10 firefighter and rescue vehicles and 16 all-terrain vehicles). Subsequent shipments will involve bigger technology.[124]
€1 million to support climate projects in Ukraine.[125]
Vehicles
At least 30 Iveco Crossway buses pledged to Bucha and other Ukrainian cities on 13 June 2022.[126]
27 buses to help to restore the transport system [November 2022][127]
4 buses donated to go to Zhytomyr and Kharkiv oblasts [November 2023].[128]
5 ambulances donated to Ukraine by the Tallinn Ambulance Service August 2024.[129]
Aid to refugees
€25.4 million to support Ukrainian refugees (March 2023).[130]
€650,000 in humanitarian aid primarily towards refugees in Georgia, education support and children.[131]
Medical evacuation and treatment of patients from Ukraine.
€29 million of humanitarian aid, including 14 million for development cooperation (March 2023).[136][137]
Nine additional emergency service vehicles delivered October 2023.[138]
€3 million in additional support to improve food security through the World Food Programme November 2023. Total €11 million donated to support World Food Programme efforts in Ukraine since February 2022.[139][140]
€20 million allocated to support Ukrainian education 2025-28.[141]
€500,000 to the World Food Programme’s school meals programme in Ukraine[141]
€8.8 million to the Partnership Fund for a Resilient Ukraine[142]
€16 million in humanitarian assistance through the United Nations and ICRC announced March 2025.[143]
Creation and leadership of a international coalition for bomb shelters for Ukraine announced March 2025.[144]
33 t (32 long tons; 36 short tons) of emergency equipment (500 family tents, 2300 blankets, 1000 hygiene kits, 2000 floor mats, 300 sleeping bags) delivered on 1 March 2022.[145][146]
37 t (36 long tons; 41 short tons) of humanitarian aid (500 tents, 1500 beds, 1500 sleeping bags, 25 large tents) delivered to Moldova to take in refugees fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 2 March 2022.[145][147]
8 t (7.9 long tons; 8.8 short tons) of medical supplies (1 mobile clinic composed of medicines and medical equipment, 36 containers of medication) delivered by 2 airplanes through Poland on 2 March 2022.[146]
4.23 t (4.16 long tons; 4.66 short tons) of medical equipment (batch of medicines, personal protective equipment, 27 respirators and associated equipment) delivered on 5 March 2022.[148]
3.4 t (3.3 long tons; 3.7 short tons) of medicines delivered on 7 March 2022.[148]
7.4 t (7.3 long tons; 8.2 short tons) of medicines delivered on 10 March 2022.[148]
9 t (8.9 long tons; 9.9 short tons) of emergency equipment (10,000 hygiene kits, 17 large-capacity generators) delivered to Moldova to take in refugees on 17 March 2022.[147]
55 t (54 long tons; 61 short tons) of emergency aid (10 oxygen generators, 9 tons of medicines, 31 generators including 6 high-capacity generator, 9 family tents to the Polish Red Cross, 8 tons of IT equipment, 4 tons of baby milk) delivered on 21 March 2022.[149]
21 new ambulances, 11 fire engines, 16 personal rescue vehicles and 49 tons of medical and emergency equipment (protective equipment, hand ladders, fire hoses...) dispatched by a convoy of 23 trucks and 100 firefighters and rescuers through Romania on 23 March 2022.[150]
Dispatch of a unit of 16 gendarmes and 2 forensic experts from the IRCGN with projectable genetic testing system to investigate and capture evidence of alleged war crimes in Ukraine by invading Russian forces since 11 April 2022.[152]
12 fire engines, 12 rescue vehicles and 50 tons of emergency equipment for search and rescue and firefighting delivered on 15 April 2022.[153]
28 t (28 long tons; 31 short tons) of medical equipment (1 oxygen generator, 50 sets of respiratory equipment, a second batch of respiratory equipment, 4.5 tons of medicines, a second batch of emergency medicines, 1 high capacity generator) delivered on 21 April 2022.[151]
6 new or recent firefighting vehicles, 6 new fire brigade ambulances, 1 medical vehicle equipped with a mobile radiology unit, 115 tons of equipment (including 36 km of fire hoses and 56,000 litres of foam) and 20,160 food rations delivered on 10 May 2022.[154]
800 t (790 long tons; 880 short tons) of humanitarian aid have been given as of 17 May 2022.[155][156]
12,000 IT equipment (4G routers, IP phones, desktop and laptop computers, servers, network and wifi equipment) delivered through Poland on 25 May 2022.[157]
600 t (590 long tons; 660 short tons) of potato plants donated by producers from the French Federation of Seed Potato Growers shipped and distributed directly to Ukrainian farmers between April and May 2022.[158]
Evacuation and medical treatment of wounded Ukrainian soldiers. At least 3 operations were carried out (on 20 May 2022, 16 June 2022 and 17 June 2022) to evacuate 13 Ukrainian war wounded.[159][160][161]
1 mobile health post (equipped with medical supplies and medicines) and medical equipment used for anaesthesia and resuscitation delivered on 28 June 2022.[162]
1 mobile DNA analysis laboratory to help investigate Russian war crimes promised by French President Emmanuel Macron during his visit to Kyiv and delivered on 14 July 2022.[163][164][165]
10,000 laptops for Ukrainians doctors provided on 26 July 2022.[166]
Help in mine clearance with the involvement of French specialists and equipment, training of Ukrainian to mine clearance of body water reported after a conference between the head of Chernihiv Oblast Military Administration Viacheslav and representatives of the French Embassy in Ukraine on 16 August 2022.[167]
Dispatch of a new team of experts from the National Gendarmerie Criminal Research Institute (IRCGN) to investigate Russian war crimes in Izium on 27 September 2022.[168]
1,000 t (980 long tons; 1,100 short tons) of humanitarian goods (15 fire and rescue vehicles, 8 motorized semi-rigid watercraft, 19 tons of rescue, clearing and protective equipment, 25 tons of emergency medicine, 1 medical vehicle equipped with a mobile radiology device for carrying out examinations in the field, 60,000 food rations, 48 tons of prepared meals, 13 tons of milk, 5 generators, building materials, tarpaulins, 200 meters of emergency bridges including 3 prefabricated "Bailey" type bridges purchased from Cerema and 3 modular metal bridges purchased from the French company Matière) delivered on 28 September 2022.[169]
100 high-powered generators (with a power of 50 to 100KWA) delivered on 23 November 2022.[170]
1 mobile DNA-analysis laboratory (the second one) delivered to Ukraine on 9 May 2023.[171][172]
Two pilot ships to aid in the export of Ukrainian grain.[173]
28 generators donated to three hospitals in Chernihiv Oblast.[174]
€60 million in support pledged to the Ukrainian energy sector 23 September 2024.[175]
€10 million to the EBRD Chornobyl Fund to help repair the New safe confinement damaged by the Russian invasion.[176]
€200 million to support projects for reconstruction and European market integration announced June 2025.[177]
Six THeMIS ground drones modified for demining and donated to the Ukrainian Emergency Service.[178]
The Republic of Georgia has sent over 1,000 tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine and shelters over 30,000 Ukrainian refugees as of 7 December 2022.[179][180][181][182][183]
The first 100 tons that were sent on 27 February 2022, included 30 types of medicines, oxygen concentrators, additional transfusion equipment and blood. On 6 March 2022, 40 tons of food, beverages, clothes, hygiene products and further medical supplies were delivered.[184] Further 100 tons of non-perishable goods, basic necessities and more medicine were transported on 11 March 2022.[185] Another 120 tons of aid went out on 28 March 2022, which initiated the second phase.[186] A total of 100 tons were also donated by the Georgian Red Cross and Enterprise Georgia state programme on 14 and 30 March 2022 respectively.[187] The Georgian government stated that it would continue mobilising humanitarian aid. On 7 December, Georgian Prime MinisterIrakli Garibashvili stressed that his country would not get militarily involved in Ukraine, but continue to provide aid and that over 1,000 tons of humanitarian cargo were already delivered.[citation needed]
€1.012 million for humanitarian help donated by private citizens in 2022. (The largest sum from individual donations collected for a single cause ever recorded, according to the German National Center for Social Question, DZI)[195]
Equipment donated to the Kherson Regional Universal Scientific Library including a braille printer and equipment for the visually impaired set to arrive in spring 2024.[203]
Federal Agency for Technical Relief delivered five dump trucks, a tractor-trailer and two water tankers and relief supplies worth more than €1.7 million to Kharkiv Oblast on 27 February 2024.[204]
20 Toyota landcruisers donated to explosives technicians of the National Police of Ukraine.[205]
Two Mercedes-Benz Arocs trucks equipped with cranes donated to the Ukrainian Ministry of Energy.[206]
€10 million for the reconstruction of Okhmatdyt children's hospital and the treatment of child patients in Germany.[207]
A convoy of eight firefighting vehicles, six water cannons and 15 tonnes of firefighting equipment dispatched by the State Fire Association of Bavaria August 2024.[208][209]
Six large generators donated to Ukrainian hospital and water facilities announced 27 September 2024.[210]
€200 million in humanitarian aid to provide for Ukrainian civilians during winter announced November 2024.[211]
€390 million towards the Ukraine Energy Support Fund by the end of 2024.[213][214]
Additional €7.27 million towards the Ukraine Energy Support Fund announced March 2025.[214]
€2 million in grants to support energy sustainability for Ukrainian small businesses in cooperation with Norway.[215]
UAH 203.35 million in grants between 700 Ukrainian schools provided by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development through the German Development Bank[216]
20 mobile clinics purchased by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit for six Ukrainian Oblasts with funding from the German government.[217]
Two Mercedes-Benz Zetros trucks, a mini-excavator and a minibus donated to Zaporizhia Oblast by The German Federal Agency for Technical Assistance[218]
Five Volkswagen Amarok pickup trucks donated to Zaporizhia Oblast Regional Administration[219]
Two backhoe excavators provided to Kharkiv Oblast for infrastructure repair.[220]
Eight rescue and firefighting vehicles, four specialised cars an ATV and firefighting tools donated to the State Emergency Service by the German Federal Technical Assistance Agency May 2025.[221]
One air foam fire engine provided to the city of Poltava.[222]
€5 million in funding for The Energy Efficiency Fund for Ukraine.[223][224]
Handed over medicine assistance to the Ukrainian Scientific and Practical Center of Endocrine Surgery, Transplantation of Endocrine Organs and Tissues in Kyiv, Ukraine.[241][242][243]
30 tons of humanitarian aid including firefighting gear, satellites phones and communication equipment delivered at the end of May 2022.[265]
$1.7 million to help transport humanitarian aid (May 2022).[266]
60 generators and over 83,000 solar-powered lanterns in November 2022. 2 other deliveries of generators planned in December and January.[267]
$10 million funding for UNESCO programs in Ukraine and neighbouring countries bringing education support (mental health in particular), aid for protection and restoration of cultural premises and journalism.[268]
$400 million grant to support reconstruction of critical infrastructure in Ukraine and also $70 million for the United Nations Development Programme (30 March 2023). In total since the beginning of the war, $650 million have been allocated towards this objective.[270]
The total contribution of Japan towards Ukraine is over $7 billion as of 21 March 2023. The country also have supported so far more than 2,000 Ukrainian refugees (housing, work, education).[271]
$5 million in humanitarian aid pledged on 9 June in response to the Nova Kakhovka Dam destruction.[272]
40 4x4 vehicles, 50 ALIS hand-held mine detectors and 150 containers of fire extinguishing liquid donated to the Ukrainian State Emergency Services.[273]
$70 million towards the World Bank HEAL Ukraine project helping the Ukrainian state fund medical expenses, as well as $48.2 million towards the World Bank HOPE project helping the Ukrainian state fund the repair of residential buildings.[274]
Six mobile DNA labs, 26 Volkswagen vans and forensics equipment donated to the Ukrainian police 15 May 2024.[275]
20 cars for medical needs donated to hospitals in Kharkiv Oblast.[276]
Two trucks donated to Kherson utility companies through the Japan International Cooperation Agency.[278]
97 pieces of heavy equipment to improve Ukrainian transportation, water supply and waste management services.[279]
$30 million of hospital equipment donated to Ukraine September 2024.[280]
1,089,838 textbooks provided to the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine by the Japan International Cooperation Agency.[281]
11 vehicles for transporting disabled and immobile patients, 22 physiotherapy machines and other rehabilitation equipment provided to the Kyiv region by the Japan International Cooperation Agency December 2024.[282]
Eight excavators and spare parts donated to the city of Odessa by the JICA December 2024.[283]
Equipment and vehicles for inspecting damaged transport infrastructure donated by the JICA to the Ministry of Community and Territorial Development of Ukraine.[284]
Medical equipment worth €29,996 (platelet mass storage equipment, scales for blood preparation, centrifuge, blood separation equipment, and other devices from the State Blood Donor Centre and mobile melting devices, scales for blood preparation and transportation temperature meters from its cooperation partner "ECT Nordic OÜ").[291]
30 buses donated by the city of Riga to Kyiv and Chernihiv.[292]
32 generators donated to educational institutions in Chernihiv Oblast.[293]
€5.3 million towards reconstruction in Ukraine.[294]
A 250 MVA transformer and 60 tonnes of transformer oil donated by Latvenergo.[295]
€100,000 in support of Ukrainian medical institutions.[296]
20,000 litres of firefighting foam and diving equipment for extinguishing oil fires donated to The State Emergency Service of Ukraine.[297]
According to the Lithuanian Minister of National Defence, as of 6 December 2022, the total aid to Ukraine amounted to €660 million, of which the military aid was €240 million.[299]
€4 million in medical assistance sent on early March 2022.[300]
€300,000 allocated for the reconstruction of Dnipro's Taras Shevchenko Theatre by Vilnius Municipality.[302]
Three autotransformers donated to Ukrainian energy facilities.[303]
€1 million allocated for the reconstruction of Okhmatdyt.[304]
€4 million donated by state owned Ignitis Grupė to purchase energy equipment for 120 megawatts of generating capacity for 420,000 Ukrainian households.[305]
100 metal detectors worth €300,000 donated to Ukrainian schools.[306]
Over 124 Ukrainian police officers have undergone medical treatment, rehabilitation or Prosthesis in Lithuania.[307]
Luxembourg has provided €96.2 million worth of humanitarian aid to Ukraine between February 2022 and April 2025.[308]€10 million donated to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund May 2025.[309]
€1 million donated to the Olena Zelenska Foundation to support mental health initiatives supporting children effected by the invasion Mat 2025.[309]
On 2 April 2022, the Government of Moldova has sent its first humanitarian aid package worth 24 million Lei (€1.2 million) to Ukraine.[314]
27 February 2024 Moldova donated 75 tons of humanitarian aid worth Lei 10 million to Ukraine consisting of medical supplies, tinned food and generators.[315]
Montenegro's finance ministry sent €50,000 to the government in Kyiv and Red Cross Montenegro launched a special hotline for donations to fund humanitarian aid for Ukraine.[318]
Aid to refugees
From March 2022, Ukrainians fleeing the war receive a year-long protection to stay in Montenegro.[319]
Initial pledge of NZ$2 million to support health facilities on the ground and providing basic needs – such as food and hygiene items – on 28 February.[327]
Additional NZ$1 million donated to the International Criminal Court.[329]
On 14 December 2022, the New Zealand government announced a further NZ$3 million in humanitarian aid through the International Committee of the Red Cross.[330]
On 3 May 2023, the New Zealand government announced NZ$2 million in aid to the Ukraine Humanitarian Fund, NZ$1.5 million to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, NZ$1.3 million of funding to the International Criminal Court and NZ$500,000 towards a New Zealand Disaster Response Partnership to support Ukrainian refugees.[331]
On 13 July 2023, the New Zealand government announced NZ$3 million in aid to reconstruction assistance for Ukraine, NZ$1.2 million to the United Nations Development Programme's Mine Action Programme and NZ$500,000 to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for its work in Ukraine.[332]
On 22 February 2024, The New Zealand government announced NZ$7 million in humanitarian assistance to Ukraine and NZ$3 million to the World Bank's Ukraine Relief, Recovery, Reconstruction and Reform Trust Fund.[333]
NZ$10 million in humanitarian assistance announced 10 July 2024.[334]
Additional NZ$3 million to the World Bank's Ukraine Relief, Recovery, Reconstruction and Reform Trust Fund announced 24 February 2025.[335]
€65 million contribution to the Ukraine Energy Support fund.[336]
15 tons of humanitarian assistance which include emergency medicines, electro-medical equipment, winter bedding and food items, delivered on 15 March 2022.[348][349]
Another 15 tons of humanitarian aid delivered via PAF C-130 aircraft. 7.5 tons dispatched 31 May with a second delivery of 7.5 tons to be dispatched on 3 June.[350]
As of 23 September 2022, more than 6,500,000 refugees had crossed the border into Poland.[352][353]See Ukrainian refugee crisis. Refugees were covered by the social assistance program, including financial assistance, by the health care system, and school-age children by the education system. As of 30 June 2023, the number of Ukrainian refugees who are beneficiaries of temporary protection in Poland has decreased to 977,400, or 24% of all Ukrainian refugees in Europe.[354]
As of May 2022, the total cost of material and military assistance and social support given by Poland is estimated to reach at least 0.6% of its GDP.[355]
Ukrainian refugees had the right to move free of charge in Poland through the public transport system from 26 February until the end of May 2022.[356]
Wounded Ukrainian soldiers and children evacuated by sanitary trains are in many situations hospitalized in Poland.[357][358][359]
More than 120 wagons, or 1500 tons of food, have arrived in Kharkiv and Zaporizhia in transportation organized by the Chancellery of the Prime Minister and RARS. Transportation is the largest humanitarian shipment sent so far inward Ukraine.[360]
As of 28 September 2022, Polish Institute of Economy (Polski Instytut Ekonomiczny) estimates that 70% of Poles have donated for Ukraine and Ukrainians more than 10 billion PLN (about 0.38% GDP) worth of aid.[361]
In conjunction with the United Kingdom, Poland support the building of two villages in Western and central Ukraine for internally displaced civilians (March 2023).[365]
7 June 2023 Poland pledged 10 water tankers with a capacity of 18,000 litres each and 10 high-capacity pump to aid those effected by the Destruction of the Kakhovka Dam.[366] €25 million donated to the European Investment Bank EU for Ukraine Fund for the reconstruction of Ukraine October 2024.[367]
The Portuguese government launched a comprehensive host programme for Ukrainian citizens on 1 March 2022, ensuring displaced persons reception and response for temporary protection, transport to Portugal, accommodation, health care, employment, education and equivalence of academic degrees, Portuguese language classes, pet animal entry, driving licenses, an electronic platform coordinated with national associations, volunteer groups, assistances offers, etc.) and telephone and email support for Ukrainian citizens.[368]
€100,000 (US$109,000) of medical supplies had been sent by 3 March 2022: 204,000 medicinal units including antibiotics, 416,000 syringes and needles and additional medicinal products.
603 Portuguese hospital beds were made available for infirmary (495), and intensive care (108) for patients transferred from Ukraine.[369]
€2.1 million (US$2.216 million) additional humanitarian aid directly from the Portuguese Government to finance United Nations response programs in Ukraine (€1 million) and direct assistance (€1.1 million) were announced on 5 May 2022, during the High-Level International Donors' Conference for Ukraine.[370]
Portuguese firefighters donated and delivered 11 ambulances to Ukraine, arriving at the Ukrainian border on 14 March 2022.[371][372]
National campaigns began donating clothing, blankets, canned, and packaged food deliveries to Ukraine and refugee transport to Portugal immediately after Russia started its aggression upon Ukraine on 24 February 2022. Campaigns are organised by numerous Portuguese civil society organisations, Roman Catholic Church parishes, the Portuguese Red Cross,[373] NGOs, and the private sector.[374] Portuguese milk and fruit juice is observed being served by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on 4 April 2022, shortly after Bucha was liberated by Ukrainian forces.[375]
As of 30 April 2022, Portugal had received 33,106 requests for residence from Ukrainian refugees and had provided 24,000 residence permits,[376] more than doubling the size of the Ukrainian community in Portugal in the first seven weeks of the invasion.[377]
In December 2022, the government approved aid to Ukrainian refugees in Poland worth €30 million.[378]
As of 8 April, the Romanian government had reported 678,081 Ukrainians entering Romania.[382] Romanian Defense Minister Vasile Dîncu announced on 22 February 2022 that Romania could receive 500,000 refugees if necessary; the first refugees arrived two days later.[383] On 15 March, Minister of Foreign AffairsBogdan Aurescu reported that about 80,000 remained in the country.[384]
Romania is also offering to treat the wounded in its 11 military hospitals.[385]
On 18 April, Romania donated 11 ambulances to the Ukrainian emergency services.[386]
On 22 March 2023, the Romanian government send RON562 million (€112 million) of food supplies to Ukraine.[387]
The Serbian Government donated €3 million in aid to children and displaced persons from Ukraine.[395] On 30 August 2023 the Serbian government delivered 14 trucks filled with humanitarian aid such as medicines, drinking water, water filters and blankets for the residents of Kherson.[396] 5,000 laptops and tablet computers donated to the Olena Zelenska Foundation for Ukrainian schoolchildren.[397]
Singapore sent four tranches of aid through the Singapore Red Cross, totalling US$7.4 million worth of humanitarian assistance.[398]
On 10 June, the Singapore Ministry of Foreign affairs announced it would be sending nine ambulances, two fire engines, firefighting gear, mine detectors and medical supplies to Ukraine.[399]
22 ambulances donated to Ukraine on 7 September 2023.[400]
US$10 million worth of humanitarian assistance announced on 28 February 2022,[413] amounting to 40 tons of medical supplies which prioritizes Ukraine's specific requests including first aid kits, portable oxygen generators, blankets, respirators, etc.[414][415][416]
On 28 February, offered temporary work and residency permits to 3,843 Ukrainian expats living in Korea. The permit is of indeterminate length and lasts until the situation in Ukraine "stabilizes". The offer includes amnesty for Ukrainians whose period of stay has already expired.[417]
Announced plans to open a new KOICA office in Ukraine.[418]
Market release of some of the petroleum which Korea holds as part of its strategic reserve, as well as re-selling LNG to Europe as part of "international efforts to help Ukraine."[419][420][418]
100 tons of medical supplies, vaccines for children and power generators shipped to Ukraine in December 2022. The total humanitarian aid from South Korea to Ukraine reaches US$100 million at the end of 2022.[422]
$130 million of humanitarian aid (February 2023)[423]
10 DOK-ING MV-4 unmanned demining vehicles donated to the State Emergency Services.[424]
200 KIA Bongo ambulance cars delivered to Ukraine by April 2025.[425][426][427]
$5 million to the World Food Programme to support Ukrainian refugees in Moldova.[428]
Two ambulances donated to the Ukrainian Ministry of Health December 2024.[429]
$20 million grant through the UNPD to help rebuild the Kherson, Sumy and Zaporizhzhia regions.[430]
54 pallets (83 cubic metres) of medicines and medical supplies[434]
Two ambulances and 5 tons of medical supplies dispatched by the Spanish Army for Ukraine on 7 October 2022.[435]
As of 25 October 2022, humanitarian assistance amounts to €92 million of goods and €200 of financial donations.[436]
30 more ambulances and multiple generators for medical facilities in Ukraine (November 2022).[437]
107 current transformers, 28 voltage transformers, 26 lightning rods and 2 disconnectors provided to Ukrenergo by The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation and Red Eléctrica de España.[438]
€110 million in humanitarian aid provided in by January 2025.[439]
€400 million in reconstruction aid provided in total by January 2025.[439]
A team of medical trainers sent to train hospital staff at Lviv Hospital.[439]
29 August 2022 the Swedish government announced it would also provide SKr 500 million for the reconstruction of Ukraine.[444]
13 September 2022 the Swedish government announced it would donate 500,000 COVID-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer and BioNTech[445]
27 February 2023 the Swedish announced it would contribute nearly US$30 million to the Energy Support Fund of Ukraine.[446]
26 June 2023 the Swedish government announced a SEK 380 million humanitarian aid package for Ukraine.[447]
1,108 tons of equipment, including generators, transformers, substations and other equipment for carrying out repairs at energy facilities donated as of January 2024.[448]
SKr 40 million in humanitarian aid through the World Food Program.[449]
13 diesel-powered backup power generators from Svenska kraftnät.[450]
SEK 500 million in support for heating and electricity supply in Ukraine[451]
SEK 110 million in humanitarian aid announced October 2024.[452]
35 t (34 long tons; 39 short tons) of aid and medical supplies delivered to Kyiv by the Swiss Humanitarian Aid Unit on 6 March 2022.[457][458]
SFr 100 million (~US$106.2 million) was the approximate total of humanitarian aid that was sent up till August 2022 by the Swiss government to Ukraine and in neighbouring countries that host Ukrainian refugees.[459][460]
100 t (98 long tons; 110 short tons) of mostly medical and sanitary equipment was shipped in August.[459]
A total of 3,500 t (3,400 long tons; 3,900 short tons) relief supplies was sent in the period of March–August 2022 to Ukraine and neighbouring countries.[459]
On 2 November, the Swiss government decided to send an additional SFr 100 million (~US$106.2 million) for Ukraine to prepare for the winter 22/23 under the name of Aktionsplan Winterhilfe. A portion of the money will be to secure energy for Ukraine.[461][462]
Up to 22 February 2023, the Swiss government has donated a total of SFr 1.3 billion (~US$1.378 billion) to help Ukrainians (1.03 billion for refugees in Switzerland and 270 million in Ukraine).[463]
156 hospital beds donated by Geneva University Hospitals.[464]
SFr 900,000 aid package delivered 13 March 2024 containing fire engine spare parts, demining equipment and medical supplies.[465]
$2.6 million donated to Save the Children by the Swiss Solidarity foundation to restore children's access in-person learning in eastern Ukraine.[466]
Three GSC-200 unmanned demining vehicles pledged to Ukraine by the end of 2024.[467]
30 rubble-clearing machines and 30 water pumps for firefighting announced October 2024.[468]
Four pumps donated to Odesa to assist in the cities heat supply November 2024.[469]
Almost SFr 45 million to restore Ukrainian energy infrastructure, renovate damaged homes and meet urgent humanitarian needs December 2024.[470]
$3 million for Kyiv municipality [April 2022] (Funds collected from private citizens).[471]
$5 million for six medical institutions in Ukraine [April 2022] (Funds collected from private citizens).[471]
$25 million for Ukrainian refugees [April 2022] (Funds collected from private citizens).[471]
On 26 October, Taiwan pledged $56 million donation to support Ukraine to rebuild schools, hospitals and other infrastructure.[472]
On 1 June 2023 the Taiwanese government donated $5 million to Lithuania's Central Project Management Agency to help rebuild Ukrainian schools[473]
Additional $5 million to Lithuania's Central Project Management Agency to fund EOD training, education reconstruction and reintegration of wounded soldiers in Ukraine October 2024.[474]
$3.8 million of humanitarian aid pledged to the city of Bucha [November 2023][475]
$1 million to help Ukrainian refugees in Poland.[476]
€4 million to an EBRD initiative to support Ukraine's private insurance market.[477]
$560,000 pledged to help rebuild roads connecting the Kyiv Regional Centre for Mental Health to surrounding areas.[478]
2,000,000 bath (60,000 US dollars) towards humanitarian aid in Ukraine[479]
Funds
Thais and foreigners have donated 5,306,750.00 THB (157,913.54 USD) through the Embassy of Ukraine in Thailand, which will be collected and delivered to humanitarian aid in Ukraine, This money will be transferred to a special account of the National Bank of Ukraine[480]
Supplies
On 6 April 2023, The Thai government has provided 17 units of 20 vK generators via Polish Red Cross for humanitarian aid to the people of Ukraine.[481]
Thailand has continuously provided humanitarian assistance to Ukraine through various channels, such as UNICEF, the Thai Red Cross Society, and the Polish Red Cross Society, with a total value of humanitarian assistance of 22,500,000 baht (approximately 640,000 USD). Thailand will continue to fully support humanitarian assistance and provide assistance to Ukraine related to food security.[482]
Unspecified number of blankets, tents, sleeping bags, cleaning and hygiene materials as well as five specialists, one mobile kitchen for refugees at the Romania-Ukraine border and one disaster response vehicle.[483]
As of 13 April 2022, 67 truckloads of humanitarian aid have been sent to Ukraine, including 46 through NGOs.[484]
On 26 April 2022, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkmenistan announced that Turkmenistan will deliver an unspecified amount of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, which includes medicines and clothing. This was confirmed the same day by Turkmenistan news agency Hronikatm.Com and Uzbekistan news agency Kun.Uz.[485][486]
A cargo of humanitarian aid was sent to Ukraine in March 2023, with medical supplies, food and clothes.[487]
£100 million of humanitarian aid announced on 23 February 2022.[492]
£40 million additional humanitarian aid announced on 27 February 2022.[493]
Additional £80 million in aid to help Ukraine deal with humanitarian crisis on 1 March 2022.[494]
£4 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine on 28 February 2022.[495]
In co-operation with Australia to United Kingdom will send hygiene kits, solar lights, kitchen sets and blankets along with other basic necessities. To displaced Ukrainians.[16]
UK announced the donation of a "fleet of ambulances" to Ukraine, on 6 April 2022.[496]
UK announced the amount it had donated through multilateral donor conferences for humanitarian aid totalled £394m so far on 9 April.[497]
On 6 May, the British government pledged £45 million to UN and humanitarian groups in and around Ukraine and additional medical supplies.[498]
As of 20 May, the British government has donated 11.07 million items of medicine and medical equipment to Ukraine.[499]
4 July – The UK pledged to donate £10m for repairs to the Ukraine energy grid and for reconnecting homes and to guarantee £41m of European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) loans to Ukrenergo, the Ukrainian national grid operator. The UK also committed an undisclosed sum to immediate life-saving assistance and demining operations through the £37m raised by the Partnership Fund for a Resilient Ukraine multi-donor fund.[500] The Partnership Fund for a Resilient Ukraine was launched by the UK in December 2021 with the aim to raise £35m from donors over the next three years for support in the conflict ravaged areas of Ukraine, it is supported by Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States.[501]
On 15 July, the British government provided a £2.5 million package for the training of judges and forensic experts and for sending teams to the scenes of alleged Russian war crimes to aid Ukrainian prosecutors.[502]
On 19 August, the UK pledged £15m of funding to support the basic needs of 200,000 refugees in Ukraine and Poland.[503]
In conjunction with Poland, the United Kingdom support (£10m funding) the building of two villages in Western and central Ukraine for internally displaced civilians (March 2023).[365]
£2 million worth of medical equipment including ventilators, oxygen concentrators, suction pumps, patient monitors, volumetric pumps and heated humidifiers donated 5 April 2024.[513]
£20 million the Ukraine Energy Support Fund announced 8 May 2024.[514]
£800,000 worth of surplus medical equipment donated by the Scottish Government October 2024.[515]
£35 million in support for repairing the Ukrainian energy grid and supporting vulnerable civilians announced December 2024.[516]
£4.5 million in funding for the investigation and prosecution of Russian war criminals in Ukraine.[517]
An additional £400,000 in humanitarian aid donated to Ukraine on 17 February 2023.[526] Donations from Jersey have paid for more than 100 EOD training courses for the Friends of Ukraine EOD.[527]
£500,000 in humanitarian aid announced on 2 March 2022.[528][529] Donation of firefighting gear on 8 March 2022.[530] Donation of around 29,000 knitted blankets and baby clothing donated 24 February 2024.[531]
On 16 June 2023 the US State Department announced it would be providing $205 million worth of humanitarian aid to Ukraine.[545]
9 Skydio 2+ drones donated by USAID to help document Russian war crimes in Ukraine.[546]
$1 million to the International Centre for the Prosecution of the Crime of Aggression Against Ukraine At The Hague.[547]
22 mobile boiler houses donated to Ukrainian communities.[548]
16 grain trailers donated to Ukrainian farmers.[549]
Six armoured four by four vehicles donated by the US Dept. of State to the Office of the Prosecutor General to aid in investigating Russian war crimes.[550]
109 generators, 19 heat and power cogenerations stations and 13 emergency vehicles provided by USAD April 2024.[551]
Seven power transformers provided by USAID on 16 April 2024.[552]
102 diesel generators to UkrGasVydobuvannya to aid in energy infrastructure repair purchased by USAID.[553]
Over $1.5 billion in humanitarian aid announced 15 June 2024. $824 million in energy assistance, $379 million in humanitarian assistance and $300 million in civilian security assistance[554]
Funding for the printing of over 3 million textbooks for Ukrainian schoolchildren through USAID.[555]
Five vans, over 11 km of pipes, three control systems for gas supply and other specialized equipment to Kherson Oblast to restore gas infrastructure through USAID.[556][557]
$700 million additional humanitarian aid announced 11 September 2024, $325 million in energy assistance, nearly $290 million humanitarian assistance and over $102 million in humanitarian demining assistance.[558]
$237 million in humanitarian aid funding announced for Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees by USAID and the U.S. Department of State 2 October 2024.[559]
$1.35 billion grant provided to Ukraine through USAID to sustain core government functions and humanitarian expenditures 13 November 2024.[560]
63 generators as well as transformers, pumps and other equipment to water suppliers throughout Ukraine November 2024.[561]
Three generators provided to Ukrainian border crossing points with Romania and Moldova by USAID December 2024.[562]
10 autonomous welding machines provided by USAID December 2024.[563]
$465 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine through USAID December 2024 with another $20 from The World Bank.[564]
74 charging stations for communities in Zaporizhzhia Oblast provided by USAID January 2025.[565]
On 17 March 2022, Uzbekistan sent 28 tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, and this included medical supplies, bandages and anti-viral pills, which was confirmed by Gazeta.uz and VOA Uzbek-language service (Amerika Ovozi) on the same day. On 8 April 2022, Uzbekistan sent 34 additional tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, including medical aid kits, food supplies and anti-viral pills, which was confirmed on 11 April 2022 by BBC news O'zbek and VOA Uzbek and it was also confirmed by the Uzbek news agencies Kun.Uz and Gazeta.Uz.[566] On 6 June 2022, Uzbekistan sent 19 additional tons of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, which included antiviral pills and other medical supplies. This was confirmed the same day by Uzbek news agency Kun.Uz.[567]
As of March 2022, the Vatican has sent two cardinals to Ukraine to provide "material and spiritual support" to the Ukrainian people.[568]Pope Francis has also donated medical supplies to Ukrainian refugees through the Office of Papal Charities.[569]
260 trucks worth of humanitarian aid provided by February 2025.[570]
Individual EU member states have provided aid since 2014. The following list is the aid collectively provided by the EU. Most of this aid has been coordinated by the European Commission.
€500 million in humanitarian aid, announced on 1 March 2022.[576]
In March 2022, a total of 10,000 free beds from hospitals in the EU were "reserved" for Ukrainians and the first war casualties from Ukraine were transported to various hospitals in the union.[577]
At least 1000 Ukrainian civilians evacuated for medical treatment in hospitals across the union so far.[needs update][578]
5.5 million Potassium Iodide tablets provided to Ukraine though the EU Emergency Response Coordination Centre.[581]
500 electrical generators provided to Ukraine via the EU Civil Protection Mechanism on 27 June 2023.[582]
An additional €110 million worth of humanitarian aid pledged to Ukraine and Ukrainians displaced in Moldova as well as 84 generators on 14 November 2023.[583]
Over 3,000 Ukrainian patients transferred to hospitals in EU nations for specialist care.[584]
€83 million funding towards humanitarian projects helping Ukrainian civilians in Ukraine and Moldova.[585]
157 generators donated by Austria, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands via the EU Civil Protection Mechanism along with 10 large 1MW generators from rescEU stockpiles.[586]
€5 million investment grant from the Eastern Europe Energy Efficiency and Environment Partnership for Ukrainian hospitals.[587]
5,876 solar panels provided by the European Commission to Ukrainian hospitals.[590]
€100 million grant to Ukrenergo from European Commission to support the reconstruction and restoration of Ukraine's energy grid announced 18 June 2024.[591]
Approximately €2 million of IT equipment to Ukraine's Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food and the State Service on Food Safety and Consumer Protection.[592]
68 generators provided to sustain critical infrastructure in Ukraine July 2024.[593]
€35 million towards humanitarian projects in Ukraine and €5 million to projects for Ukrainian refugees in Moldova announced 6 September 2024.[595]
Five Peugeot Traveller vans donated to the State Emergency Service of Ukraine October 2024 by the EU and UNDP.[596]
€26.4 million allocated for the UNHRC's winter aid programme for Ukraine announced December 2024.[597]
€15 million towards small NGOs in Ukraine and €10 million to support civil society work on EU integration.[598]
Two specialised vehicles for mobile social services units on Chernivtsi Oblast provided by the EU and UNDP.[599]
€1.7 million additional funding for the International Chernobyl Cooperation Account[62]
€52 million allocated for four Ukrainian transport infrastructure projects announced December 2024.[600]
€16.5 million in funding to renew urban public transport in Kyiv, Mykolaiv, Ivano-Frankivsk, and Odesa by the European Investment bank December 2024.[601]
€140 aid package allocated for humanitarian projects in Ukraine announced January 2025 as well as €8 million allocated for Ukrainian refugees and host communities Moldova.[602]
€10 million funding package for independent media outlets in Ukraine.[607]
16 ambulances valued at €850,000 donated to Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv, Mykolaiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, and Donetsk oblasts March 2025 in cooperation with the UNDP.[608]
Two cogeneration units provided to Zaporizhzhia Oblast to improve the reliable supply of heat and power to homes and infrastructure by the EU and UNDP.[609]
€19.6 billion in grants and loans provided to Ukraine by the EU Ukraine facility to improve economic stability, reform and reconstruction by April 2025.[610]
Four specialised medical vehicles provided to Chernihiv Oblast by the EU and UNDP April 2025.[611]
€166.2 million in funding to support UNHCR's humanitarian response in Ukraine between 2022-2025.[612]
€26.2 million finding for the UNHCR aid for Ukrainian refugees in Moldova.[612]
€36.8 million additional funding for UNHCR activities in Ukraine between July 2025 and December 2026.[612]
A motorboat, trailer and diving equipment with a total value of €140,000 donated to the State Emergency Services through the UNDP.[613]
€30 million allocated for reconstructing the reconstruction of the water supply system in Kryvyi Rih.[614]
€13 million funding for The Energy Efficiency Fund for Ukraine June 2025.[223][224]
Deployed patches against a targeted "wiper" malware used against Ukrainian authorities, placing their Threat Intelligence Center on high alert for such attacks.[615] It has provided over $400 million worth of support from cloud service, cybersecurity to humanitarian aid.[616]
$4 million worth of medical equipment including handheld ultrasound devices, mobile X-ray units, ventilators and patient monitors and $500,000 to the International Rescue Committee and Airlink.[626]
110 million DKK for humanitarian aid via Red Cross, Save the Children and UNICEF.[627] 100 million DKK for rebuilding Ukraine's education system and educating Ukrainian child refugees in Europe.[628]
Provided 100,000 airline tickets free of charge, to refugees, for short-distance flights from Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania in March 2022.[632]
Ukrainian-founded Grammarly stated to donate all the profits it made in Russia and Belarus since 2014. It plans to create a $5 million fund, in addition to already donated $1 million to Ukrainian humanitarian communities.[640]
The videogame company suspended all sales in Russia for the duration of the conflict. The company also pledged to make a matching donation double the value of every donation made by its employees.[642]
Aided the stocking, maintaining, and delivering of items donated to the Ukrainian civilians and military, including food, medical supplies and blankets.[620]
Donated all revenue from in-game sales from Fortnite over a two-week period to Direct Relief, UNICEF, WFP, UNHCR, and World Central Kitchen to support their humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine. Xbox also donated its service fee from in-game sales of Fortnite to the same charities. A total of $144 million was donated.[650]
A Sikorsky S-76 air ambulance hospital donated to Ukraine in partnership with the NGOs Ukrainian World Congress, Maple Hope Foundation and Initiative E+.[664]
$68,000 raised from game sale proceeds from 26 March to 2 April donated to the charity People In need to provide humanitarian aid for Ukraine.[665][666]
Other charities and NGOs such as Come Back Alive, the Hope Bridge Korea Disaster Relief Association, the Seoul-based Good Neighbors International, UNICEF, Save the Children, etc., have also received significant donations from Korean citizens.[683][684]
Citizens globally have provided ₴11.6 billion to special NBU multi-currency fundraising accounts[685] and over $21 million in cryptocurrency, as of 1 March 2022.[686][687]
United Hatzalah of Israel sent a team of 55 medical personnel, doctors, paramedics, and EMTs, on a rotation basis, to assist Ukrainian refugees in Moldova by providing free medical treatment and humanitarian aid to refugees.[688] The EMS organization then began using its Ukrainian based volunteers, as well as those from Israel, to deliver food and medical supplies to hospitals and medical clinics inside Ukraine, while extricating injured and ill people out of Ukraine to receive care in other countries.[689] They airlifted 3,000 Ukrainian refugees to Israel in an operation codenamed Operation Orange Wings.[690]
Additionally, 40 doctors and paramedics from United Hatzalah of Israel, with medical and humanitarian equipment, went to the Moldova–Ukraine border to assist refugees.[691]
Many Airbnb users across the globe have booked thousands of apartments in Ukraine, though they have no intention to visit the country.[692]
Bunq CEO Ali Niknam created a foundation to support Ukrainian refugees in getting to the Netherlands under a highly skilled migrant visa.[693]
In the United Kingdom, the Disasters Emergency Committee, an umbrella group of 15 British charities, launched a public appeal for humanitarian aid to Ukraine on 4 March 2022. It raised £55 million ($72.5 million) the first day, including personal donations from the British royal family.[694] By 17 March, £200 million had been raised.[695] A televised fundraising concert for the appeal on 29 March called Concert for Ukraine raised a further £13.4 million within 24 hours.[696]
In Germany, €752 million have been donated (as of End of April 2022) according to a survey by the "German Center for Social Affairs" ("DZI") among 67 aid groups including the three fundraising campaigns Aktion Deutschland Hilft, "Bündnis Entwicklung Hilft" and "Aktionsbündnis Katastrophenhilfe".[697]
In March 2022, a donation-financed airlift called Ukraine Air Rescue was established under the umbrella of the non-profit German organization European Danube Academy ("Europäische Donau-Akademie"), with more than 100 pilots participating, delivering medical supplies to the Polish-Ukrainian border.[699]
Citizens of Finland donated nearly €60 million to fundraising campaigns organized by the Finnish Red Cross, Finnish Committee for UNICEF, and Finn Church Aid by 19 May 2022.[700]
In addition to private donations, numerous American states and local law enforcement agencies are donating surplus protective equipment through the Ukrainian American Coordinating Council and other organizations.[701]
As of 10 April 2022, Dutch people had donated €160.8 million for Ukraine via a fundraising campaign called Giro 555[702] with one fire brigade donating seven fire trucks on 30 April.[703]
The Serbian Orthodox Church decided to send all the donations collected in the churches to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church[704] Citizens of Novi Sad donated clothes, food, blankets, adult diapers[705] The National Council of the Ukrainian national minority in Serbia initiated an action to collect aid for the war-endangered people of Ukraine, and the action is being carried out in several places in Vojvodina. The Red Cross of Serbia opened a dedicated account to which Serbian citizens can donate to help the endangered population of Ukraine.[706]Serbian Chamber of Commerce asked companies from Serbia to help Ukraine. Companies that responded include MK Group, Nestlé Adriatic, Elixir Group, Tobacco Industry Senta, Coca-Cola HBC – Srbija, and Bambi.
"Blue/Yellow" charity in Lithuania, dedicated for supporting Ukraine, collected over €22.9 million (as of 30 March) from the citizens of Lithuania.[707][708]
On 30 May 2022 Lithuanian citizens raised €5 million for the crowdfunded purchase of a Bayraktar TB2 armed UAV for the Ukrainian military,[709][710] the drone was subsequently given to Lithuania by Baykar Tech free of charge, with the €6 million collected used for aid.[711] It reached Ukraine on 8 July 2022.[712][713]
Lithuanian civilians also crowdfunded 7 Estonian-made EOS C VTOl reconnaissance drones (two of which were crowdfunded in early May, with the other five being later purchased with the money collected from the TB2 crowdfunder),[711][714] 110 Lithuanian-made EDM4S Sky Wiper anti drone weapons,[715] 37 WB Electronics Warmates (including launch/control equipment and ammunition),[716] and 18 UJ-23 Topazs for the Ukrainian military.[711]
On 21 June 2022 Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov auctioned off his Nobel Prize medal for $103.5 million to be donated to UNICEF's Humanitarian Response for Ukrainian Children Displaced by War.[717]
11 August 2022, various fire departments in and around the San Francisco Bay area donated enough fire fighting equipment to fill a forty-foot shipping container to be shipped to Poland and then distributed in Ukraine.[718]
$1.2 million was raised for the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund by the US Open Tennis Plays for Peace exhibition.[719]
30 power generators were donated by a Portuguese football club Benfica[720]
Ukrainian football club FC Shakhtar Donetsk sent 20 power generators to the City of Power organization in Kherson and 10 power generators for a modular city of the Ukrainian Friends Foundation in Lviv.[720]
214 kilograms of medicines were donated by Argentine medical companies[721]
500 tonnes of humanitarian aid was donated by the Croatian DOBRO DOBRIM DoDo Association, for refugees in Croatia[722]
The Argentine National Institute of Yerba Mate donated 128,000 bags of cooked mate for Ukrainian refugees in Poland[723]
The city of Buenos Aires sent a humanitarian aid package to Ukraine.[724]
The city of Vienna sent 15 tonnes of relief supplies to the cities of Kyiv and Odesa.[725]
Austrian citizens sent €124 million via private donations to Ukraine.[726]
A Belgian association sent 33 tons of medical equipment (March 2023).[727]
The mayor of Brussels Philippe Close donated two ambulances to the city of Kyiv (May 2022) and an additional two ambulances one year later (May 2023).[728]
21 million pesos was donated through a solidarity campaign organized by the Chilean Red Cross (April 2022).[729]
£81,400 was donated by Caritas Chile for food, water, hygiene and medicine (June 2022).[730]
Hungarian Maltese Relief Service delivered 570 tons of goods worth 1,5 million euros to Ukraine.[732]
326 tons were donated by Hungarian citizens to the Hungarian Red Cross.[733]
US$7–8 million worth of medicines were donated by Indian pharmaceutical companies as on 3 June 2022.[235]
11 Mercedes-Benz buses were donated by the Riga municipality-owned Rīgas Satiksme to Kyiv filled with medicine, bandages and other medical materials prepared by Riga 1st Hospital along with other donations from the public on 26 April 2022.[734]
The Estonian Lions Region sent 13 electric generators to Ukraine.[127]
The Western Tallinn Central Hospital sent 140 hospital beds to Ukraine. [March 2023][736]
Pro patria Suomi-Ukraina Ry donated six ambulances equipped with defibrillators, ventilators, stretchers and oxygen tanks as well as €150,000 of humanitarian aid to Ukraine.[737]
10 hospital beds, 200 wheelchairs, eight electric wheelchairs and 10 walking frames were donated by The Ukrainian Association of New Zealand.[738]
26 Tatra T4D-M1 trams were donated to the city of Dnipro by the city of Leipzig.[739]
Seven fire engines with additional equipment donated to Ukrainian firefighters by the Tipperary Fire and Rescue Service[740]
Approximately 300 laptops, desktop computers, monitors, and accessories donated to Odessa schools by Tallinn City[747]
400 generators and 70 stoves donated to Ukrainian civilians by the charity New Forest For Ukraine.[748]
Three fire engines and a truck full of humanitarian supplies provided to Ukraine by the charity Scottish Emergency Rescue Association.[749]
$107,590 raised by Russian opposition artists, musicians and writers in the Art Against War charity auction for Rubikus.HelpUA and Let's Do It! providing aid to frontline communities in Ukraine January 2025.[750][751]
Four fire engines donated to Ukraine by West Yorkshire Fire Authority.[753]
3,000 explosive identification manuals provided to Ukrainian sappers by the Canadian charity Mriya Aid.[754]
Two Ford Interceptor police cars donated by Sterling City Council to Ukrainian emergency services via US Ambulances for Ukraine.[755]
149 fire and rescue vehicles and over 215,000 pieces of fire fighting equipment donated to Ukraine by 16 fire and rescue services in England and Wales in eight convoys.[756]
A Božena 5 unmanned demining vehicle, a tractor, trailer, specialised van and a thermal drone for Kharkiv firefighters crowd funded by Czech organisation Gifts for Putin.[757][758]
A 12 cynlinder 600 kVA combined heat and power plant donated by the University of Kassel to an unspecified hospital in western Ukraine.[763]
Two minibuses and projectors, laptops, printers, tablets, generators, folding furniture, thermal blankets, first aid kits and tents donated by The Estonian Voluntary Rescue Association to the psychological units of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine May 2025.[764]
Two firefighting vehicles donated by Swedish volunteers to Ukraine State Emergency Services in Donetsk Oblast.[765]
A 10 metre Scissor lift, a truck and a minibus donated by the town of Borna to the sister city of Irpin for infrastructure repair through the German Society for International Cooperation.[766]
Over 100 lorries of humanitarian has been delivered to Ukraine by the Scottish charity Tayside and Strathearn Help for Ukraine since February 2022.[767]
Beer for Ukraine
At the beginning of the invasion, Ukrainian brewery Pravda Beer Theatre, stopped brewing beer and started making Molotov cocktails. However the brewery shares their recipes and artwork to craft breweries worldwide to start making their beer and asked, if they do so, to make donations to their relief fund efforts.[768] Many beer breweries worldwide began producing special beers whose proceeds would be donated to Ukraine, and spoke out against Putin's illegal actions.[769] A number of breweries including Boston Beer Company brew the Resolve beer brand which donates all of its proceeds to Ukraine.[770] The Boston Beer Company also donated $50,000 to World Central Kitchen, which provides prepared meals in Ukraine.[771] Other breweries are brewing beer where (a part of) the revenue is donated to Ukraine, as shown on the website brewforukraine.beer.[772] Also Untappd started a campaign to support Ukrainian beers.[773]
Appealed and pledged by United Nations
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs made an appeal for $1.7 billion in aid to the 2022 Ukrainian refugee crisis – including $1.1 billion in humanitarian aid to Ukraine – on 1 March 2022.[774]
United Nations's under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths announced that $1.5 billion had been pledged.[775] The United Nations Entity for Gender Equality has allocated over $14.6 million towards financing 120 civil society organisations in Ukraine organisations supporting women and girls in Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees in Moldova.[776] Eight modular heating units are to be installed in Ukrainian hospitals as part of a World Health Organisation initiative.[777] UNICEF has donated 336 medical kits valued at $200,000 to thirteen communities in Zhytomyr Oblast May 2024.[778] The United Nations Development Programme has provided $1 million rehabilitation equipment to Ukrainian healthcare facilities June 2024.[779] By 29 July 2024 the UN Food and Agriculture Organization has donated 114 generators and pledged another 131 generators to food producers and frontline companies in Ukraine with financial support from the German government.[780] In September 2024 WHO opened a modular primary health-care clinic in the village of Tsyrkuny in Kharkiv Oblast.[781] The United Nations Development Programme provided ten specially equipped vehicles to support health care and social services in Ukraine supported by the EU, Canadian and Danish governments.[782] In October 2024, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs along with partner nations announced the allocation of $20 million in support of to support local organizations that help vulnerable categories of displaced civilians in Ukraine.[783] $870,000 worth of equipment provided by the World Food Programme to small bakeries located to frontline regions of Ukraine to aid civilian food supplies.[784] Eight refrigerated vans delivered to the Ukrainian ministry of health with support from the EU.
Ukraine total aid by country
This list shows the number of countries support to Ukraine: Total bilateral allocations incl. EU aid, € billion - Allocations January 24, 2022 to December 31, 2024.[785]
Rank
Donor
Total bilateral allocations incl. EU aid, € billion
Initially, a Kawasaki C-2 of the Japan Self Defence Force had been given permission to land and fly on to the UAE, for carrying aid from India and Singapore. India responded that only civilian planes are allowed to deliver aid. This forced Japan to change how it delivered its humanitarian aid.[786]
Taiwan has kept mainly to humanitarian and financial aid.[787]
^김효정 (28 February 2022). "[우크라 침공] 韓, 우크라에 1천만 달러 인도지원 긴급 제공(종합)" [[Ukraine Invasion] Korea, to send 10 million US dollars to Ukraine as emergency humanitarian aid (General News) (in Korean)]. Yonhap News (in Korean). Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
^이지은 (9 March 2022). ""정부 지원 의료품, 우크라이나로 출발"...곧 현금 지원도" ["Government aid medical supplies, soon heading to Ukraine"... cash support will be offered soon as well]. JTBC News (in Korean). Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^"정부 "러시아 비우호국가 지정 따른 경제영향 주시"" [Government announces "Economic impact following Russia's designation of non-friendly nation being monitored"]. Korea TV (in Korean). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^ ab"우크라이나 사태 관련 우리 정부의 결정" [Our Governments Decision Regarding the Ukraine Crisis]. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea (in Korean). Archived from the original on 2 March 2022. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
^"[속보] 외교부 "러 스위프트 배제 동참...전략비축유 추가방출 추진"" [[Breaking News] Government announces "Joining Russia SWIFT ban... Further release of strategic petroleum reserve]. JoonAng Ilbo (in Korean). 28 February 2022. Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
^"[속보] 정부 "대러 전략물자 수출 차단... 전략 비축유 추가 방출"" [[Breaking News] Government announces "Export ban on strategic materials to Russia... Further release of strategic petroleum reserve]. Seoul Economic Daily (in Korean). 28 February 2022. Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
^"Daily Press Briefing". Department of State. 27 February 2022 [21 November 2014]. Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
^ ab"카카오, 우크라이나 돕기 클레이 코인 300만개 기부…42억원 규모" [Kakao, 3 million Klay coins donated to help Ukraine... ₩4.2 billion worth]. Seoul Shinmun (in Korean). 4 March 2022. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
^"펄어비스, 우크라이나에 긴급 의료 지원금 기부" [Pearl Abyss, donates emergency medical funds to Ukraine]. Maeil Business (in Korean). Retrieved 4 March 2022.
^"SK그룹, 우크라 난민 구호 위해 12억 원 기부" [SK Group, ₩1.2 billion donation for Ukraine refugee rescue]. Donga Ilbo (in Korean). 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
^ ab"국내 기업, 연예인 등 우크라이나 국민에 기부 행렬" [Korean companies, celebrities etc. line up to donate to Ukrainian citizens]. Busan Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved 4 March 2022.
^"현대차, 우크라 긴급구호에 12억 기부" [Hyundai Motors, donates ₩1.2 billion to Ukraine emergency relief]. Donga Ilbo (in Korean). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^ ab"포스코인터내셔널, 우크라이나 인도적 지원 50만달러 기부" [POSCO International, donates $500,000 to Ukraine humanitarian assistance]. News 1 (in Korean). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^ ab"TYM, 우크라이나 대사관에 트랙터 10대 등 총 5억원 규모 기부" [TYM, donates 10 tractors etc. to Ukrainian Embassy for total ₩500 million]. Financial News (in Korean). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^"배우 한지민, 우크라이나 아동에 1억원 기부" [Actress Han Ji-min, donates ₩100 million for Ukrainian children]. Newsis (in Korean). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^"나르샤, 우크라이나 위해 1천만원 기부" [Narsha, donates ₩10 million for Ukraine]. Maeil Business (in Korean). 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
^"임시완, 우크라에 2천만원 기부...현지숙소 '착한 노쇼' 동참" [Im Si-wan, donates ₩20 million to Ukraine... participates in local Ukraine hotel 'Good No Show' movement]. Newsis (in Korean). 4 March 2022. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
^"장항준 감독·김은희 작가 우크라이나 어린이 위해 3천만원 기부" [Jang Hang-jun, Kim Eun-hee writers donate ₩30 million for Ukrainian children]. Yonhap News Angecy (in Korean). 4 March 2022. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
^"진중권, 우크라이나에 100만원 기부 "우크라에 영광을!"" ["Chin Jungkwon, ₩1 million donation to Ukraine "Glory to Ukraine!"]. The Korea Economic Daily (in Korean). 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
^"한음저협, 우크라이나에 긴급 지원금 7천만 원 전달..."평화 노래 울려퍼지길"" [KOMCA, sends ₩70 million donation to Ukraine... "May song of peace resonate widely"]. Yonhap News Agency (in Korean). 10 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
^""죄 없는 아이들 희생 안타까워"...우크라 기부 동참 행렬" ["Sorrow at sacrifice of innocent children"... Lines to join Ukraine donations]. Newsis (in Korean). 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.