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Ukraine
Humanitarian
Appeal

Ukraine
Humanitarian
Appeal

The DEC appeal raised over £445 million and is still supporting millions of people in Ukraine and neighbouring countries.

This appeal is now closed for donations, but funds will continue to be spent until the end of August 2025, providing essential aid to people affected by the conflict.

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Social worker Yana (left) provides psychological support to people like Ivanna* (right) at a community centre in Mykolaiv, Ukraine, established by the local partner of DEC charity Christian Aid. Photo: Katya Moskalyuk/DEC/Fairpicture

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In this section

  • CARING FOR COMMUNITIES
  • REBUILDING LIVELIHOODS
  • KEEPING FAMILIES SAFE
  • SUPPORTING REFUGEES

One of the largest ever DEC appeals

Cash icon

£445 million

raised by the UK public including £25 million matched by the UK Government

People in need

8.2 million

people estimated* to have been helped so far with appeal funds

How you can support

Many DEC charities are continuing longer-term programmes and welcome your donations

Read more

Three years on

watch the video

Tamara* plans to start her own business after receiving vocational training from the local partner of DEC charity Oxfam in Mykolaiv, Ukraine. Image: Katya Moskalyuk/DEC

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Watch Three years on - DEC Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal on YouTube.

our longest running appeal has now closed for donations but aid will continue to reach people affected by the conflict, thanks to your generosity.

From delivering essential supplies and services to communities in Ukraine, to helping refugees settle into a new country, your donations have made a huge difference to millions of people whose lives have been devastated.

Since the launch of our appeal in March 2022, DEC charities and their local partners have helped more than 8 million people*, responding to their changing needs throughout the crisis.

Recently funds have helped to restore children’s access to education, rebuilt community spaces destroyed by shelling and provided small business grants, helping people to regain their independence.

Our humanitarian response work will continue until the end of August 2025, thanks to the incredible amount raised.

*While efforts have been made to avoid counting people more than once, some individuals may have received assistance from multiple member charities offering different types of support.

Timeline of the crisis

24 Feb 2022
3 Mar 2022
8-10 Mar 2022
17 Mar 2022
20 Mar 2022
29 Mar 2022
Apr 2022
20 May 2022
13 Aug 2022
Sep-Nov 2022
14 Nov 2022
24 Feb 2023
6 Jun 2023
24 Feb 2024
31 Dec 2024
24 Feb 2025

24 Feb 2022

Conflict escalates in Ukraine

Ukraine’s long-running conflict with Russia dramatically escalates with large numbers of Russian troops crossing the border from Russia and Belarus and air strikes reported across Ukraine.

DEC launches Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal

The DEC launches the Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal to help civilians affected by the conflict in Ukraine and neighbouring countries, in what would become one of the largest ever DEC appeals.

TV appeals are presented by Adrian Lester on the BBC and Kit Harrington on ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5 and Sky. £55 million is raised in the first 24 hours.

8-10 Mar 2022

Two million refugees flee Ukraine

Less than two weeks after Russian forces entered Ukraine, two million refugees have fled the country, with half estimated to be children. DEC charities are on the border helping people as they cross with a range of support.

Mariupol hospital bombing

The city of Mariupol quickly becomes a flash point in the conflict. On 10 March a maternity and children’s hospital is hit by an airstrike causing severe damage and killing several people. Images of the aftermath of the strike are broadcast around the world. On 16 March, Mariupol’s theatre, in which many civilians took shelter, is hit causing many casualties.

DEC appeal raises £200m in two weeks

The DEC’s Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal raises £200 million in just two weeks, including £25 million matched by the UK Government.

The total represents the equivalent of £3 for every person in the UK, reflecting the hugely generous response of the public, with fundraising events held across the country.

20 Mar 2022

Quarter of Ukraine’s population flee homes

Less than a month after the escalation of the conflict, a quarter of Ukraine’s population have fled their homes. The majority have fled to other parts of the country, with many settling in the west, further from the fighting. DEC charities provide temporary accommodation, food and other support to people arriving in Ukrainian cities.

Concert for Ukraine

ITV airs a two-hour concert live from Birmingham to raise funds for the DEC's Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal. It features Ed Sheeran, Camila Cabello, Paloma Faith, Nile Rodgers & Chic as well as many others.

The concert is organised by ITV, Livewire and Global Radio, and raised over £13.4 million in 24 hours.

Apr 2022

Russian troops withdraw from Kyiv

On 6 April, after fierce fighting to the north of Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, Russian forces withdraw from large areas of northern Ukraine. This allows DEC charities to access communities in the area such as Bucha and Borodyanka with much needed support.

Delivering food in a city under fire

In Kharkiv, Ukraine, DEC charity CAFOD are working with volunteers who are delivering food and medicine to vulnerable people by bicycle due to the fuel shortages, despite the frontline being nearby, and Kharkiv coming under frequent fire.

Cyclist Alexander sends his family away moves into the warehouse for safety. “As bicycle delivery volunteers, we are united by a common goal - to help,” he says. “We are alive, and that is enough to be happy.”

Refugees helping others

Having found their feet in new countries, many refugees begin volunteering to help others. At a warehouse run by a partner of Plan International using DEC funds in Chisinau, Moldova, many of the people sorting and packing food and other items, as well as offering advice, area refugees themselves.

“I feel great here,” says Tatiana (right). “Our team is very kind and sympathetic. How can you not help people? Of course we can’t sit doing nothing, we want to work.”

Sep-Nov 2022

Ukraine retakes parts of Kharkiv

In September, Ukrainian forces retake large areas of the Kharkiv region, increasing humanitarian access there and in Kharkiv city. DEC charities adapt their programmes to deliver aid to the newly accessible areas.

Targeting of Ukraine’s power grid

As winter approaches, Ukraine’s civilian power infrastructure is increasingly targeted, affecting heating and electricity. DEC charities and their local partners use the DEC’s flexible funding to adapt their plans to keep people safe and warm, providing generators, fuel, blankets and warm clothing.

Russian forces withdraw from Kherson

In November, Russian forces withdraw from the city of Kherson to the left bank of the river Dnipro, expanding humanitarian access.

Keeping people safe and warm

After Ukraine's power grid come under attack, many people are left without electricity or heating in freezing winter conditions. DEC charities work to provide winter clothing, fuel and generators for people living in shelters.

In Kharkiv, a local partner of CAFOD and Plan International provide generators, repairs, food and other items to the shelter where Olesia* is living. "We have electricity here so there’s an opportunity for our children to have an education," says her mum.

Paloma Faith and Simon Pegg visit refugees

As we approach a year of humanitarian response, singer Paloma Faith and actor Simon Pegg visit refugees in Poland and Romania to see how DEC charities are helping.

“Many families came to Poland expecting to be here only for a short period but one year on from the start of the conflict, people are struggling with the reality of living in limbo for such a long time. Thanks to the generosity of the British public, there are so many different kinds of support that DEC charities are funding through local partners," says Paloma.

Kakhovka dam breach response

In the early hours of 6 June, an apparent explosion destroys the Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro river. The breaching of the dam causes water from the Kakhovka reservoir, which is at a 30-year high, to flow downstream flooding large areas, including parts of Kherson city.

DEC charities scramble to help thousands of people who were forced to flee their homes, both in Kherson itself and when they arrived in other cities such as Mykolaiv and Odesa.

6.9 million people helped

Two years after the escalation of the conflict, donations to the DEC appeal reach £426 million. The funds continue to enable member charties and their local partners to help an estimated 6.9 million people.

The majority of aid spending (58%) has been focused inside Ukraine, with funds also being spent to help refugees in Poland, Romania, Moldova and Hungary.

Appeal closes for donations

The DEC appeal has now raised over £445 million and helped an estimated 8.2 million people.

Our longest-running appeal closes for donations at the end of December 2024 but donations will continue to be spent until the end of August 2025.
Amount raised:
£445 million

24 Feb 2025

3 years on, DEC charities still responding

Three years on from the escalation of the conflict, DEC charities and their local partners are continuing to support those impacted within Ukraine and in neighbouring countries thanks to the incredible £445 million raised by the DEC’s appeal. DEC funding remains flexible, and our member charities will be able to use the remaining money wherever it’s needed most, until the end of August.

How the money is being spent

The majority of DEC funds (58%) have been spent in Ukraine, and the rest in neighbouring countries.

In Ukraine, DEC charities and their local partners have been providing cash payments, food, shelter, hygiene items, healthcare, psychological support and repairing damaged water and sanitation infrastructure. In neighbouring countries, refugees have received cash payments, accessed protection services, education support and food assistance.

Tap segments to see a breakdown

How funds were spent over two years from March 2022 to February 2024

Cash
37%
Shelter
16%
Food
13%
Protection
9%
Healthcare
8%
Water, sanitation, hygiene
7%
Other
4%
Education
3%
Capacity-strengthening
3%

CARING FOR COMMUNITIES

When the conflict escalated in early 2022, many of those who remained in Ukraine were cut off not just from their families who fled to safety but from their wider communities. Among them were older people who stayed behind in unsafe environments or moved to areas where they were isolated and lonely, unable to access practical help or psychological support.

DEC charity Age International has been working with its local partner to provide 'community safe spaces’ for older residents and displaced people across the eastern and western regions of Ukraine. DEC funds are also providing home-based care to people who are unable to leave their homes, providing assistive mobility devices, hygiene items and psychological support.

 

This centre is everything to me. Here people know how to help so much. There's unity here," - Hanna

Hanna practices needlework at a DEC-funded 'community safe space' for older people in eastern Ukraine. Photo: Katya Moskalyuk/DEC/Fairpicture

Hanna, aged 69, lives in Dnipro and has struggled with her mental health since the conflict escalated. "The war was like a big shock to me," she says. "It felt like the ground was slipping under my feet. I didn’t know what to do."

Hanna was told about the HelpAge community centre by her neighbours, and says it has helped her immensely. "I’ve been coming here since the beginning of the conflict. This centre is like the sunrise to me. I came here and started singing. Now I am into drawing and embroidering. We have a lot of nice people here."

Your donations to the DEC appeal are providing a place for people like Hanna to socialise, take part in fitness, music and craft activities, and to access support from social workers and psychologists. For many it also helps foster a sense of identity, a space to build confidence, make friends, and create a new community. 

REBUILDING LIVELIHOODS

Over the past months, your donations have been helping people to earn a living once again. DEC funds are supporting vocational and entrepreneurial training, as well as providing small business grants to those who lost their jobs, helping them regain their independence and the opportunity to contribute to society once again.

In Mykolaiv city, Ukraine, residents have started to return home since the initial months of the conflict when the area came under heavy bombardment. Internally displaced people from other regions closer to the frontline have also been arriving to build new lives. DEC charity Oxfam is supporting them through its local partner, ensuring your donations help restore livelihoods - and a degree of normality.

 

"It would have been very difficult for me to raise the money to purchase all the equipment myself," - Anastasia

Anastasia* tries out one of the specially equipped taxis her new business will soon provide for people with disabilities in Mykolaiv. Photo: Katya Moskalyuk/DEC/Fairpicture

When the conflict in Ukraine escalated, Anastasia* and her husband, both wheelchair users, stayed in their adapted home, unable to access bomb shelters. The first six months were the hardest, with the city in disarray and basic services unavailable.

Now, she is setting up a taxi service addressing the need for accessible transportation in the city, thanks to a grant from DEC charity Oxfam.

Anastasia is purchasing essential equipment for the vehicles and setting up office premises for the taxi hotline. In future, she hopes to provide facilities to support bedridden patients, and plans to grow the taxi service into a social enterprise, employing people with disabilities and eventually opening a rehabilitation centre.

*Name changed to protect identity

KEEPING FAMILIES SAFE

Since the conflict escalated in 2022, millions of people have been displaced, unable to stay in what was once the safety of their own home. Within Ukraine, some families have been hosted by local residents, while others have sought refuge in more temporary shelters.

DEC funds have provided warm blankets and generators for electricity during power outages, and been used to repair shelters for displaced people, especially during the winter months. At a public bomb shelter in Kharkiv, the local partners of DEC charities have also been providing psychological support to adults and children.

 

"When we couldn’t go outside they would bring us what we needed through the bombings," - Yulia.

Schoolteacher Yulia and her son Kolia* in a public bomb shelter in Kharkiv, where her children are able to study online and she is able to teach through her mobile phone, thanks to the DEC-funded generators providing electricity. Photo: Maciek Musialek/DEC

When Yulia and her family first fled their home they hid in cold, damp basements for days with no lights or electricity, surviving on just water and cookies. They then moved to a public bomb shelter where a local partner of DEC charities provided aid to keep families safe and warm.

"We know that we're not forgotten," says Yulia. "It's not just about the help; it's about the understanding and compassion. Words cannot describe how grateful we are."

DEC charities are continuing to address the changing needs of families in Ukraine, including food and shelter, as well as multi-purpose cash so they can buy what they need. Social workers help tailor the support to individuals, from specific dietary requirements for older people to education support for children with special needs.

SUPPORTING REFUGEES

DEC member charities have used appeal funds to support refugees from Ukraine in Poland, Romania, Moldova and Hungary. This includes cash support and supermarket vouchers to help people make choices about what they buy with dignity. DEC funds have also helped provide hot meals, food packages and essential items through collective centres.

DEC charities have also been running education and protection programmes, ensuring children have shelter, accommodation, education, and other crucial services they need to adjust to life in a new country, as well as supporting people to find sustainable employment as they start to build a future.

 

this centRE helps my son IMPROVE AND forget about what we went through back in Ukraine," - ANNA

Five-year-old Daniel with social educators Tatiana (right) and Hetsyu (left) at a child-friendly space in Romania supported by DEC funds. Photo: Christopher Lete/World Vision

Five-year-old Daniel is one of the many children who attend a child-friendly space in Romania that provides refugee children from Ukraine with a place to learn, play, and make friends. "I'm very thankful that even though we are away from our country, we feel at home and safe in Romania," says Daniel's mother Anna, pleased that he has started to socialise.

The project is run by DEC charity World Vision and funds from the DEC appeal have also provided psychosocial and child protection training for social educators like Tatiana, who herself fled Ukraine in difficult circumstances. 

"This opportunity not only allowed me to revive my career but also provided me with a path to healing from the traumas I endured and the heartbreak of losing my former students," says Tatiana.  

Latest report

Read our latest update on how DEC charities and their local partners have been delivering aid over the first two years

Read more
Read more

Latest updates

The latest on the appeal and the humanitarian situation in Ukraine.

Jump to

Appeal closes for donations but programmes continue
Three ways DEC charities' work in Ukraine has changed
DEC launches in-depth report on how Ukraine donations are helping
UK public's generous response to DEC’s Ukraine appeal sets new Guinness World Records title
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge meet DEC aid workers as Ukraine appeal reaches £300 million
DEC Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal reaches £260m after stars perform at Concert for Ukraine
Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal raises £150m in first week
£100m raised to support DEC’s Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal as charities scale up response
DEC Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal raises £55m in its first 24 hours following extraordinary outpouring of public support
DEC launches Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal

Appeal closes for donations but programmes continue

1 January 2025

The DEC Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal closed for donations on 31 December 2024 but programmes will continue until the end of August 2025, thanks to the incredible amount raised - over £445 million. 

DEC appeals are designed to be time-limited emergency appeals, boosting our member charities’ ability to respond to a crisis at scale. Find out more about when and why the DEC closes fundraising appeals, what happens next, and how you can continue to support people affected by the conflict in Ukraine through our member appeals.

Read more

Three ways DEC charities' work in Ukraine has changed

22 February 2024

Two years on from the escalation of the conflict in Ukraine, the needs and ways in which DEC charities deliver aid have changed. 

Whilst some elements of the response have stayed the same, other needs have changed over time. For example food, water and medicine are still needed by many, but others outside of Ukraine have settled in their neighbouring countries, and are looking for more long term forms of support. 

In the article below, we detail three ways people’s needs are changing, and how DEC charities are adapting their programmes to meet them.   

READ MORE

Thank you fundraisers

24 February 2023

The UK response to the DEC Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal has been truly extraordinary.

Individual fundraisers, community groups, academic institutions, employees and companies, arts organisations, trusts and foundations, celebrities and sports clubs all dedicated time and effort to raise money for the appeal.

Thanks to your support, we set a new Guinness World Record for the most money raised online in one week (£61,997,547) when we launched the appeal. A year on, that figure has risen to over £400 million.

Read more for a snapshot of some of that incredible support.

Read more

A year in pictures

24 February 2023

Yulia and her son in a bomb shelter

In February 2022 conflict erupted in Ukraine causing widespread damage and loss of life - and triggering a massive humanitarian crisis.

Millions of lives were turned upside down and families were torn apart. Facing impossible decisions, many were left cold, hungry and homeless. But they were not alone.

Each image in the gallery is an example of how millions of acts of generosity are delivering real impacts for people affected by the conflict, thanks to your donations.

See gallery

Moving film 'Never Alone' highlights UK public's contribution to Ukraine humanitarian response

24 February 2023

The DEC has released a powerful 60-second TV ad highlighting the UK public's hugely generous response to the Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal which has raised over £400 million one year since the conflict escalated.

The film was shot in Ukraine in February 2023 by a mostly Ukrainian crew and features the Ukrainian cast reciting lyrics from ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’. Although the people in the film are actors, they represent real stories of people who have been helped by DEC charities using funds from the appeal, and have all themselves been affected by the conflict.

“The UK public have been incredibly generous in donating to this appeal," said Simon Beresford, Director of Fundraising and Marketing at the DEC. "We are committed to showing people how their donations are helping, and we wanted to make a film that had an emotional impact while inviting viewers to find out more.

"We’re really proud of the fact that we could work with a Ukrainian cast and crew to make this film. Everyone who worked on the film in Ukraine has been affected in some way by the conflict and their creative input has been invaluable to the project.”

Simon Pegg talks about visiting DEC-funded projects in Romania

21 February 2023

Actor and writer Simon Pegg appeared on the One Show last night to talk about his recent visit to Romania to see how UK donations are helping Ukrainian refugees there. Watch a clip below.

"These people are not only having to assimilate into Romanian society but also come to terms with what they've left behind"

A year on from the conflict in Ukraine, @SimonPegg tells us how the refugees are integrating into Romanian society.#TheOneShow 👉 https://t.co/W1kpjcYZDt pic.twitter.com/8BZWMAk8sC

— BBC The One Show (@BBCTheOneShow) February 20, 2023

DEC launches in-depth report on how Ukraine donations are helping

2 February 2023

A Ukrainian girl sits in a classroom in Poland

Yevheniia*, attends a school for Ukrainian refugees in Poland. Image: Paul Wu/DEC

The DEC has launched a major report on its response to the ever-changing humanitarian crisis in Ukraine over the first year of the conflict.

Based on programmatic data, detailed interviews with aid workers and testimonies gathered from people affected, the report provides a powerful insight on how donations from the UK public have enabled DEC charities to provide vital aid to millions of people in need, both inside Ukraine and in neighbouring countries.

The incredibly generous response of donors in the UK means that the Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal has now raised over £400 million, making the DEC the biggest charity donor to the response inside Ukraine and for the regional refugee response, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) Financial Tracking Service.

DEC charities have used funds to work directly while also supporting a range of local organisations across five countries, reaching vulnerable and marginalised groups such as women and children, older people, those with disabilities, ethnic minorities and the LGBTQ+ community.

Examples of aid delivered by DEC charities and their local partners included in the report are:

  • Projects to provide food to people in war-torn areas, including a team of volunteer cycle couriers delivering food and medicines to vulnerable people in their homes.
  • Working with Ukraine’s Ministry of Health to deliver 75,000 life-saving trauma kits for civilian use and 34 incubators for premature babies.
  • Providing generators for people in bomb shelters to keep them safe and warm over winter as the targeting of Ukraine’s power grid leaves them without electricity and heating.
  • Programmes giving refugees and displaced people cash payments so that they can decide how best to meet their own needs.
  • Supporting special schools in Poland for refugee children with Ukrainian teachers, as well as 20 ‘digital learning centres’ for children and parents.
  • Providing mental health support to people recover from their experiences of the conflict.
Read the report

Jon Snow narrates documentary on DEC Ukraine appeal

2 February 2023

The journalist and broadcaster Jon Snow has narrated a 15-minute documentary on the DEC's Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal. The film shows how people across the UK came together to raise money for the appeal, and how those donations have gone on to help millions of people in Ukraine and neighbouring countries since the conflict began. Featuring interviews with aid workers and people who have benefitted from DEC funded projects, it tells the story of how the crisis has unfolded, and how DEC charities have responded.

If you can't spare 15 minutes, there is also a five-minute version available here.

Aid workers say 'Thank You' from Ukraine and neighbouring countries

21 December 2022

This year, thanks to your donations, DEC charities have been supporting people affected by conflict in Ukraine and neighbouring countries. 

Zelenskiy: Generators ‘as important as armour’ to protect civilians

14 December 2022

A generator being distributed near Kharkiv

A local partner of DEC charities distributing mobile generators near Kharkiv. Image: Maciek Musialek

Generators are as important as armour in helping the civilian population survive this winter in Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has told an emergency conference in Paris convened to coordinate infrastructure and humanitarian aid to the country over the next four months, reports Patrick Wintour for The Guardian. 

"Most of our power plants are damaged or destroyed by the bombings,” said Zelenskiy. "That’s why the generators have become as important as armour to protect the population.” Strikes to key infrastructure have caused power outages across the Ukraine as temperatures are falling in a country where it can reach -20C.

DEC charities are working with local partners to distribute and install generators, from small portable models to larger ones to power shelters, as well as other essential items like food, clean water and medical care to people across Ukraine this winter.

READ MORE

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The DEC brings together 15 leading UK aid charities to raise funds quickly and efficiently at times of humanitarian crisis overseas.

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© Disasters Emergency Committee 2025. Registered Charity No. 1062638. Company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales No. 3356526.

© Disasters Emergency Committee 2025. Registered Charity No. 1062638. Company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales No. 3356526.