Brussels – Ukraine: aid from the European Union and its member states exceeds €200 billion. Since the beginning of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in February 2022, this is the amount that has been provided to Kyiv in the form of financial, military, and humanitarian aid. The European Parliament’s Research Service has provided a further update on the scale of European support in a working document drawn up for MEPs.
The new framework is current as of February 2026 and therefore does not take into account the €90 billion loan package on which the EU has finally reached a political agreement. Looking ahead, therefore, the European contribution is set to increase even further.
Between February 2022 and February 2026, therefore, Ukraine received a total of €200.4 billion in aid. The bulk of this consists of military aid (€75.2 billion). The second largest category in terms of support is macro-financial assistance (€43.3 billion), followed by contributions from EU’s special programme (€36.8 billion) EPF – European Peace Facility.
The working document highlights a significant political figure: European support has managed to offset the US withdrawal. Annual aid flows reveal that in 2025, European military support, comprising “Team Europe” and non-EU European countries, increased by 67 per cent to €28.4 billion, while US military funding plummeted to €0.4 billion and non-military European aid rose by 59 per cent to a record €32.4 billion. Consequently, the European Parliament’s think tank notes, “European aid to Ukraine has been able to almost completely offset the US withdrawal.”
At the Member State level, Germany (€44.4 billion), France (€24.1 billion), and the United Kingdom (€20 billion) are the main contributors and supporters of Kyiv in terms of financial support. Italy ranks fourth in this particular list (€15.6 billion), followed by the Netherlands (€14.4 billion).
English version by the Translation Service of Withub






