As the conflict in Ukraine moves into its next critical phase, the reality on the ground shows a powerful dual truth: there is an intensifying medical emergency at the frontline, and alongside it, one of the most sophisticated humanitarian logistics networks operating anywhere in the world today. Hope For Ukraine’s 2025 Impact Report offers a rare, verified, and deeply human look into both of these realities—not through speculation or distant observation, but through measurable action, lives touched, and lives saved.
Across the frontline, where trauma care is needed in the most dangerous environments imaginable, Hope For Ukraine brought innovation directly to the heart of the crisis. This year, 10 Stabnet medical containers were deployed to the “zero line,” where every second matters and survival can depend entirely on how quickly medical help arrives. These advanced mobile trauma units are designed to stabilize the critically injured and treat severe wounds in the precious minutes after injury, drastically increasing the chances that victims live long enough to reach a hospital. In regions where traditional medical access is nearly impossible, these units are rewriting survival odds and giving countless families another chance to see their loved ones again.
Food insecurity continues to define daily life for millions of Ukrainians. For many families, uncertainty about where the next meal will come from is part of daily survival. In response, Hope For Ukraine delivered 88,000 food kits and distributed 200 tons of potatoes to vulnerable households across the country. These are not abstract figures—they represent children who didn’t go to bed hungry, elderly residents who didn’t have to choose between food and warmth, and parents who could finally breathe knowing their families would eat.
Alongside hunger, energy has become one of the most strategic and devastating weapons of the conflict, with targeted strikes against power infrastructure leaving entire communities in darkness. To help families maintain safety, heat, communication, and stability, Hope For Ukraine deployed 1,000 solar energy resilience kits. These systems restore a sense of normal life amid chaos, ensuring that even when the grid fails, hope does not.
Displacement remains one of the most defining and heartbreaking challenges of this war. In 2025 alone, more than 100,000 internally displaced people found safety and shelter at the Hope For Ukraine Refugee Center. These are people who fled destroyed homes, lost everything familiar, and yet still carry the resolve to rebuild their lives. At the same time, Hope For Ukraine supported 210 refugee families resettling in the United States, helping them find stability, community, and dignity as they begin again.
Children have carried some of the heaviest emotional scars of this war. To protect the next generation, Hope For Ukraine provided trauma-informed care and healing experiences to 4,000+ children through its “Summer of Hope” camps. These programs restore laughter, security, and a sense of childhood to young people who have seen and endured too much. Additionally, the organization funded 10 scoliosis surgeries for children who had no other access to medical help, transforming not only their health, but their future.
Unlike many organizations, Hope For Ukraine does not rely solely on fragmented supply lines or third-party providers. Instead, it manages a full humanitarian logistics chain, shipping 200 tons of aid directly from its U.S. warehouse to Ukraine every year. This means faster delivery, higher accountability, and relief that reaches people exactly when and where they need it most.
The 2025 Impact Report proves that even in one of the most challenging humanitarian crises of our time, coordinated logistics, innovation, compassion, and relentless determination can keep communities alive. It shows that support is not abstract—it is measured in meals delivered, children healed, surgeries completed, power restored, refugees sheltered, and lives saved. Most importantly, it shows that hope in Ukraine is not an idea. It is active. It is moving. It is real.
