The EU will extend temporary protection for Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s war until March 2028, while excluding newly arriving Ukrainian men of military age from the scheme.
“This is what Ukraine has asked us to do, and this is what we are doing,” Magnus Brunner, the EU migration commissioner, said while presenting the extension on Friday, June 26.
JOIN US ON TELEGRAM
Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.
Euractiv was first to report in early June that excluding Ukrainian men of military age from any future extension of the bloc’s temporary protection regime – which has sheltered more than four million people since Russia’s full-scale invasion – was under discussion.
Under the European Commission’s proposal, temporary protection would no longer be granted to newly arriving individuals who are not permitted to leave Ukraine because of military obligations under Ukrainian law.
The move comes as Brussels prepares for the eventual phase-out of the emergency framework.
Last year, the European Commission urged member states to start planning for the programme’s end and adopted recommendations for a “coordinated transition” towards more stable legal statuses, though implementation has varied across the bloc.
“The current temporary protection regime is due to expire in March 2027, and March 2027 is actually tomorrow,” the commissioner said. “We need to maintain continuity.”
Other Topics of Interest


