Europe

Ukraine

UN staff inspect damaged residential areas in Dnipro, Ukraine, after an attack left civilians, including children, injured and civilian infrastructure compromised
UN staff inspect damaged residential areas in Dnipro, Ukraine, after an attack left civilians, including children, injured and civilian infrastructure compromised. April 2024. Photo: OCHA/Nelia Zablotska-Siennikov
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The war in Ukraine continues to inflict immeasurable human suffering, deaths and destruction, putting millions at risk of serious violations and generating grave humanitarian needs.

Thousands of people have been killed, injured, or maimed, including hundreds of children. 

Throughout 2023, fighting and hostilities continued to ravage parts of Ukraine and cause massive damage to civilian infrastructure - homes, schools, hospitals, and water, gas and power systems are repeatedly hit and, in some cases, directly targeted. 

This compounded the widespread destruction that had already decimated essential services across the country, particularly in the east, where people have now endured 10 years of war, caused by Russia’s invasion. 

The war has forced millions to flee and nearly 4 million people – including nearly 1 million children – are still internally displaced across Ukraine, while over 6 million live as refugees abroad. Prolonged displacement has pushed many to the brink, as they depleted their resources and capacity to cope with loss of job or income

Over 14.6 million people – about 40 per cent of the Ukrainian population – will need humanitarian assistance in 2024. The UN-led response aims to reach about 8.5 million people with assistance.

Although the impact of the war remains far-reaching, needs are more acute in the east and the south, close to the front-line. In these areas, including territories under Russian occupation, over 3.3 million people need aid, and the humanitarian situation is reaching levels of extreme and catastrophic severity. Millions of civilians there struggle every day to have adequate access to water, food, health, housing, protection and other essential services and supplies.

 At the same time, assistance to people living in Russian-occupied areas is extremely limited, and in some cases, impossible. Increased support to these people, who desperately need aid, will depend on improved access for humanitarian organizations.

The humanitarian community has worked intensively to carry out life-saving activities in Ukraine in 2023, building upon the major scale up on the response that followed the escalation of the war in 2022. 

Nearly 11 million people received life-saving and life-sustaining assistance from over 500 humanitarian organizations. Aid organizations made efforts to reach the most vulnerable who are exposed to hostilities on a daily basis, increasing assistance in the front-line communities, including through inter-agency convoys.

 In 2024, the response will continue to focus on people with the most severe humanitarian needs across the country, prioritizing those in the front-line communities and neighbouring areas. The most vulnerable displaced people and returnees will also be prioritized.

 The response also seeks to strengthen the centrality of protection and reduce protection risks. To that end, specific protection activities and services will complement health, shelter, food, water, hygiene and sanitation and education interventions. In addition, gender and age-appropriate mental health and psychosocial support will be integrated into sectoral responses, as well as accountability to affected people and protection from sexual exploitation and abuse.

 

Overview of the humanitarian response in Ukraine

For a full overview of the humanitarian response, visit humanitarianaction.info
Total population
35.8M 2025
People to be covered by assistance
6M 2025
Total requirements (USD)
2.6B 2025
Funding coverage (%)
11.19 2025
Funding gap (USD)
2.3B 2025

The Ukraine Humanitarian Fund

The Ukraine Humanitarian Fund, which was established in 2019, is a rapid and flexible funding mechanism supporting national and international non-governmental organizations and UN agencies responding to the most pressing or critical humanitarian emergencies in a fast-changing environment. The Ukraine Humanitarian Fund is the largest Country-Based Pooled Fund (CBPF) in the world, receiving nearly 17 per cent of the total contributions for the CBPFs globally in 2023 and 7 per cent of the total Humanitarian Response Plan funding for that year.

Resources

Ukraine

Manual and Guideline

Rapid MPCA Targeting Framework as of January 2025 [EN/UK]

Background In June 2024, the Response Analysis and Targeting Task Team (Task Team 1) under the Cash Working Group (CWG) initiated a revision of the Rapid Multipurpose Cash Assistance (RapMPCA)...

Originally published
Sources
  • International Organization for Migration
  • Ukrainian Red Cross Society
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
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Ukraine

Situation Report

Ukraine: Situation Report, December 2024

Highlights In October and November, large-scale attacks on energy resulted in extended blackouts, affecting an estimated one million consumers and impacting health care. The attacks disrupted water...

Originally published
Source
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Read more

Ukraine

Situation Report

Ukraine: Situation Report, November 2024 [EN/UK]

Highlights The humanitarian situation worsened from August to September due to intensified attacks in the north-east, east and south, resulting in increased humanitarian needs near the front line...

Originally published
Source
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Read more

Funding for OCHA Ukraine

Total requirements (USD)
10.5M 2025
Opening balance (USD)
0 2025
Earmarked funding (USD)
0 2025
Total (USD)
0 2025