Save the Children in Ukraine
Save the Children has been working in Eastern Ukraine since 2014, but we have dramatically scaled up our operations across the country since the full-scale war broke out.
During the four years of the full-scale war (February 2022 - February 2026), our team in Ukraine has reached more than 4.7 million people — including more than 1.9 million children.
We have been meeting the immediate needs of children and families by working closely with around 25 partners to provide life-saving assistance such as food and water, and cash transfers. We have also been operating Child Friendly Spaces across the country, to ensure children and families impacted by this crisis have access to safe, inclusive, quality education as well as the mental health support they need to recover, something we have been doing since conflict erupted in 2014.
The situation for children in Ukraine
The full-scale war in Ukraine has changed the lives of 7.5 million children forever. Forced from their homes and schools, separated from loved ones, and living in constant fear of air raid alerts, drones and explosions, children have had their childhoods ripped away.
From those living on the front line to those displaced from their homes, and the 865,000 children no longer in full-time, in-person education, the scale of loss is catastrophic.
Despite playing no part in the war, children are paying the heaviest price. In 2026, an estimated 2.2 million children are among the 10.8 million people inside Ukraine in need of humanitarian assistance. More than half of Ukraine’s children have experienced displacement since the war escalated, and one in five has lost a relative or friend.
The war in Ukraine forced Sofiya* (13) & her mother Nataliia* (44) from their home in Kherson in southern Ukraine. Sacha Myers / Save the Children
The psychological toll on children is also severe. Living in a state of constant distress has become a “new norm” for many, with the risk of long-term harm to their mental health impossible to ignore.
An estimated 1.5 million children are at risk of post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and other mental health conditions. Some children are experiencing nightmares, speech difficulties and physical stress responses, reflecting the sustained fear and trauma of growing up under bombardment.
Children’s rights to safety, education and wellbeing are being violated every day. Thousands of schools have been damaged or destroyed, disrupting learning and cutting children off from safe spaces to learn, play and connect with friends. Repeated attacks on critical infrastructure have left families without heat, power and water, exposing children to further harm during the winter months. Around a quarter of the country is contaminated by mines and explosive remnants of war, placing children at constant risk of death or injury in their communities.
This war is robbing children of their childhood.
Our Impact on Children
Since the full-scale war began in February 2022, we have been working closely with around 25 partners to provide life-saving assistance to children and their families.
News & Stories
19 Feb 2026
UKRAINE: The demining dog helping children stay safe in the world's most heavily mined country
Trained to sniff out the vapours from explosive devices, the six-year-old German Spitz participates in sessions run by Save the Children’s partner organisation, Ukrainian Deminers Association, in Kharkiv, a frontline area hard hit during four years of full-scale war.
19 Feb 2026
UKRAINE: CHILDREN ANXIOUS, FEARFUL AFTER 4,000 HOURS OF AIR RAID ALARMS IN FOUR YEARS OF WAR
The last quarter of 2025 saw an uptick in the duration of alarms, coinciding with an intensification of the conflict in recent months, further compounding psychological pressure on children and families already living under prolonged strain.
5 Feb 2026
NEWS QUOTE: Families in Ukraine camping in their homes to stay warm during power cuts in one of coldest weeks this winter
Families in Ukraine are turning to increasingly desperate measures to survive power blackouts as attacks on energy facilities have left them without heating and water in one of Ukraine’s coldest weeks this winter.