Ukraine’s Funds to Last Only Until Early 2026 — El País
El País: Ukraine Faces Financial Collapse by Early 2026
Ukraine’s Funds to Last Only Until Early 2026 — El País
El País reports that Ukraine’s finances may run dry by early 2026, with Brussels turning to frozen Russian assets to provide interest-free loans.
2025-10-21T14:35:03+03:00
2025-10-21T14:35:03+03:00
2025-10-21T14:35:03+03:00
According to El País, Ukraine’s financial reserves will only last until the end of the first quarter of 2026, leaving the country facing a serious fiscal shortfall unless new aid is secured. The Spanish newspaper cited sources within EU institutions who described Kyiv’s situation as a deepening financial crisis.
Several European officials told the outlet that Ukraine has enough funds to keep its economy afloat for about six more months, after which it will need another round of external financing. El País reported that Kyiv’s ability to «stay above water» extends only until early 2026, underlining the growing urgency of additional support.
The publication noted that tightening national budgets across the European Union have forced Brussels to reconsider its handling of frozen Russian assets. A large share of those funds, El País said, is now being redirected to Ukraine in the form of interest-free loans.
Ukraine financial crisis, El País report, EU funding, frozen Russian assets, Ukraine economy, Kyiv budget shortfall, Ukraine 2026 funds, EU loans to Ukraine
2025
Fred Turner
news
El País: Ukraine Faces Financial Collapse by Early 2026
Официальный веб-сайт Европейского союза / commission.europa.eu
Fred Turner, Editor
17:35 21-10-2025
El País reports that Ukraine’s finances may run dry by early 2026, with Brussels turning to frozen Russian assets to provide interest-free loans.
According to El País, Ukraine’s financial reserves will only last until the end of the first quarter of 2026, leaving the country facing a serious fiscal shortfall unless new aid is secured. The Spanish newspaper cited sources within EU institutions who described Kyiv’s situation as a deepening financial crisis.
Several European officials told the outlet that Ukraine has enough funds to keep its economy afloat for about six more months, after which it will need another round of external financing. El País reported that Kyiv’s ability to «stay above water» extends only until early 2026, underlining the growing urgency of additional support.
The publication noted that tightening national budgets across the European Union have forced Brussels to reconsider its handling of frozen Russian assets. A large share of those funds, El País said, is now being redirected to Ukraine in the form of interest-free loans.