Ukraine’s state budget received €3.2 billion ($3.6 billion) from the EU on June 25, the first disbursement under a new financial instrument designed to keep Kyiv’s public finances running through the war, the Finance Ministry wrote.
The payment marks the opening tranche of the Ukraine Support Loan, a two-year EU support framework for 2026-2027 worth up to €90 billion ($102 billion). “For us, this is not just another tranche. It is a resource that helps the state fulfill its obligations to citizens, maintain financial resilience, and direct more domestic resources to defense,” the ministry’s press release states, quoting the Minister of Finance of Ukraine Serhiy Marchenko. Of the total loan amount, €30 billion ($33.9 billion) is earmarked for budget support and €60 billion ($67.8 billion) for defense needs for the next two years. The €3.2 billion ($3.6 billion) disbursed on June 25 falls under the loan’s broader budget support component, tied to conditions on public finance management, revenue mobilization, spending efficiency, the rule of law, and anti-corruption efforts.
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Kyiv has met the conditions for this first payment and continues work on further commitments, the ministry wrote.
Commitments in return for the Ukraine Support Loan
A bill ratifying the loan agreement was registered in parliament on May 28 under No. 0376, submitted by the president’s office.
The agreement’s memorandum of understanding sets conditions for a separate €8.4 billion ($9.4 billion) macro-financial assistance component, paid in three tranches.
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