In 2025–2026, corporate support for Ukraine evolved into a systematic recovery tool. Companies are moving beyond one‑off donations toward long‑term programs in medicine, education, energy and infrastructure.
Open sources estimate international support since 2022 at 300–350 billion USD. Corporate contributions are a separate and growing stream; publicly disclosed corporate aid is already above 1 billion USD, excluding non‑financial and non‑public assistance.
SCM and the Rinat Akhmetov Foundation reported more than 11.3 billion UAH in aid, including humanitarian supplies, equipment and targeted support programs. The group also highlights large tax payments as a stabilizing factor for the economy.
Freedom Holding Corp. supported humanitarian aid, medical programs and education projects, including funding for ambulances, hospital equipment and shelter modernization projects. EPAM reports more than 100 million USD in support through direct aid and employee programs, with a strong focus on people and education.
Onur Group combines infrastructure work with rehabilitation and medical initiatives, channeling multi‑million support into veteran rehabilitation, prosthetics and local healthcare. These cases show a shift toward long‑term recovery investment as a core element of business responsibility.
