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Ukraine Donor Platform

The Ukraine Donor Platform was established following a decision of G7 leaders taken on 12 December 2022.

Through this Platform, partners coordinate existing mechanisms to provide support, coordinate further international funding and expertise, and encourage Ukraine’s reform agenda as well as private sector led growth.

The objectives of this Platform are to coordinate support for Ukraine’s immediate financing needs and future economic recovery and reconstruction in a coherent, transparent, and inclusive manner.

The Platform works with the Ukrainian authorities to identify and prioritize Ukraine’s key needs. This is done in line with the reform plan, donor cooperation terms, and Ukraine’s European path.

At its launch, the Ukraine Donor Platform brought together Ukraine, the members of the G7 (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union), as well as international financial institutions and organizations (the Council of Europe Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the European Investment Bank, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, the World Bank, the International Finance Corporation and the International Monetary Fund).

Throughout 2024–2026, the Platform has actively expanded its composition by adding partners with the status of temporary members and observers.

In February 2024, the Republic of Korea, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden became temporary members of the Platform, while Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Spain received observer status. In April of the same year, three more observers joined – Belgium, Finland, and Switzerland.

In October 2024, Denmark, previously an observer, gained the status of a temporary member of the Platform, and Luxembourg joined as a new observer. In September 2025, Austria and Iceland also joined the Platform as observers.

In January of 2026 the Platform upgraded Poland's status to a temporary member in light of its role hosting the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2026 (URC 2026). This temporary status will enable Poland to participate in the Platform’s structures and processes during its engagement as URC host, facilitating closer coordination on strategic priorities, donor planning, and key recovery objectives

So far, the Platform has brought together 25 permanent and temporary members and observers and 7 participants, including IFIs and organizations.

Senior officials from Ukraine, the United States, the European Commission co-chair the Steering Committee, notably Minister of Finance of Ukraine Serhii Marchenko, the Acting Coordinator of U.S. Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia, Christopher Bergaust on behalf of the United States, and Director General Gert Jan Koopman of the Directorate-General for Enlargement and Eastern Neighbourhood of the European Commission, on behalf of the European Union. The three chairs collaborate in close coordination with the G7 Presidency.

The Platform and its Steering Committee are supported by a Secretariat, which provides administrative assistance and coordination across the Platform.

The Secretariat operates both in Brussels and Kyiv. The Brussels office is hosted by the Directorate General for Enlargement and Eastern Neighbourhood of the European Commission, and the Kyiv office by the Reform Delivery Office of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine.

As of July 2025, 14 meetings of the Steering Committee have been held, the last of which was on the margins of and in coordination with the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2025 in Rome (URC-2025). (link)