Country exposure · UA

Ukraine
Europe · Kyiv (Kiev is the transliteration from Russian) · semi-presidential republic
What Ukraine means for your money — the prices you pay, the tariffs in motion, and where U.S. policy could change both.

$1.4B
U.S. imports, 2025
+22.6%
change in one year
$2.4B
U.S. exports, 2025
36M
Population
$190.7B
GDP
In your house
What you buy that Ukraine makes
America bought $1.4B in goods from Ukraine in 2025 — up 22.6% in a single year. Of every $100 of it, here's where the money went.
Steelmaking materials
Food oils, oilseeds
Drilling & oilfield equipment
Household appliances
household appliances
Chemicals-organic
Fruits, frozen juices
fruit and frozen juices
Apparel, textiles, nonwool or cotton
synthetic and performance apparel
Telecommunications equipment
phones, routers, networking gear
Iron and steel products, n.e.c.
Stereo equipment, etc
speakers and audio equipment
2026 so far (through April): $492M in imports. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Trade in Goods (customs basis).
The other direction
What America sells to Ukraine
$2.4B in 2025 — a trade rupture cuts both ways, for American producers as well as American prices.
Passenger cars, new and used
$310Mnew and used cars
Tanks, artillery, missiles, rockets, guns and ammunition
$252MTelecommunications equipment
$246Mphones, routers, networking gear
Metallurgical grade coal
$235MAgricultural machinery, equipment
$144MOther industrial supplies
$76MGenerators, accessories
$74MOther parts and accessories of vehicles
$69Mcar parts and accessories
Toys, games, and sporting goods
$61Mtoys, games, sporting goods
Where you stand
U.S. tariff posture toward Ukraine
Ukraine lost its wartime steel exemption — which had shielded Ukrainian steel since 2022 — when the U.S. terminated it on March 12, 2025, putting Ukrainian steel and aluminum at 25% and then 50% from June. Most other Ukrainian goods sat at the 10% reciprocal baseline. No bilateral deal was reached (a Congressional exemption bill for Ukraine remained only a proposal). Executive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions, Feb 20, 2026) terminated the IEEPA reciprocal duties, and Proclamation 11012 replaced it with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge effective February 24, 2026; Section 232 metals at 50% are unaffected.
Section 232 sectors
Steel
Steel, aluminum, autos, and similar national-security tariffs that name this country.
Policy in motion
Tariff status: a moving target
U.S. tariff policy toward Ukraine has changed 4 times since 2025. This page tracks it.
2026-02-24
IEEPA reciprocal tariffs terminated — replaced by 10% Section 122
In effectExecutive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions) terminated the IEEPA tariff duties effective February 24, 2026, replacing the reciprocal regime with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge (Proclamation 11012) — leaving Ukraine's baseline unchanged at 10%. Section 232 metals at 50% are unaffected.
91 FR 9437 →2025-06-04
Section 232 steel and aluminum doubled to 50%
In effectProclamation 10947 raised the Section 232 steel and aluminum tariff to 50% for all countries except the UK. Ukraine received no carve-out, so its metals rate moved from 25% to 50%.
90 FR 24199 →2025-04-05
10% reciprocal baseline applies
In effectExecutive Order 14257 imposed a 10% universal reciprocal duty. Ukraine was not assigned an elevated country-specific rate and remained at the 10% baseline for non-metal goods.
90 FR 15041 →2025-03-12
Wartime steel exemption terminated — Ukrainian metals at 25%
In effectProclamations terminated Ukraine's temporary steel exemption (Proclamation 10403), which had shielded Ukrainian steel during the war, subjecting Ukrainian steel, aluminum, and derivatives to the 25% Section 232 tariff. The White House argued the exemption's benefits had accrued mainly to EU processors of Ukrainian semi-finished steel.
Federal Register · 2025-02833 →
Made for America
What Ukraine makes for America
Ukraine is a direct U.S. source of 12 essential goods Americans rely on — the items themselves, shipped finished off the line.
materials
1% of U.S.Steel and iron products
$129M to the U.S.
food
1% of U.S.Cooking oils
$55M to the U.S.
home
Small kitchen appliances
$37M to the U.S.
food
Soft drinks & juices
$31M to the U.S.
digital
Fiber optic cables and networking
$29M to the U.S.
materials
Clothing and apparel
$26M to the U.S.
digital
Headphones, speakers & home audio
$25M to the U.S.
health
Diagnostic tests and lab supplies
$18M to the U.S.
materials
Auto parts and repairs
$17M to the U.S.
food
1% of U.S.Condiments, sauces & dressings
$16M to the U.S.
home
Towels & home linens
$15M to the U.S.
home
Sporting goods & fitness equipment
$14M to the U.S.
Go deeper
The supply chain view
Ukraine sits upstream of 17 essential American goods through 12 tracked inputs.
chemical
65%Atmospheric Air
chemical
30%Neon Gas (Semiconductor-Grade, for Excimer Lasers)
agricultural
29%Sunflower seeds
chemical
22%Krypton Gas — Satellite Propulsion & Insulating Glass
chemical
20%Crude Neon (ASU Byproduct)
chemical
20%Xenon Gas — Space Propulsion & Electronic Grade
Reference
The country itself
Europe · Geography, people, economy, and government — public-domain data from the CIA World Factbook.
Ukraine was the center of the first eastern Slavic state, Kyivan Rus, which was the largest and most powerful state in Europe during the 10th and 11th centuries. Weakened by internecine quarrels and Mongol invasions, Kyivan Rus was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and eventually into the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The cultural and religious legacy of Kyivan Rus laid the foundation for Ukrainian nationalism. A new Ukrainian state, the Cossack Hetmanate, was established during the mid-17th century after an uprising against the Poles. Despite continuous Muscovite pressure, the Hetmanate managed to remain autonomous for well over 100 years. During the latter part of the 18th century, the Russian Empire absorbed most Ukrainian territory. After czarist Russia collapsed in 1917, Ukraine -- which has long been known as the region's "bread basket" for its agricultural production -- achieved a short-lived period of independence (1917-20), but the country was reconquered and endured a Soviet rule that engineered two famines (1921-22 and 1932-33) in which over eight million died. In World War II, German and Soviet armies were responsible for seven to eight million more deaths. In 1986, a sudden power surge during a reactor-systems test at Ukraine's Chernobyl power station triggered the worst nuclear disaster in history, releasing massive amounts of radioactive material. Although Ukraine overwhelmingly voted for independence in 1991 as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) dissolved, democracy and prosperity remained elusive, with the legacy of state control, patronage politics, and endemic corruption stalling efforts at economic reform, privatization, and civil liberties. In 2004 and 2005, a mass protest dubbed the "Orange Revolution" forced the authorities to overturn a presidential election and allow a new internationally monitored vote that swept into power a reformist slate under Viktor YUSHCHENKO. Rival Viktor YANUKOVYCH became prime minister in 2006 and was elected president in 2010. In 2012, Ukraine held legislative elections that Western observers widely criticized as corrupt. In 2013, YANUKOVYCH backtracked on a trade and cooperation agreement with the EU -- in favor of closer economic ties with Russia -- and then used force against protestors who supported the agreement, leading to a three-month protestor occupation of Kyiv's central square. The government's use of violence to break up the protest camp in 2014 led to multiple deaths, international condemnation, a failed political deal, and the president's abrupt departure for Russia. Pro-West President Petro POROSHENKO took office later that year; Volodymyr ZELENSKYY succeeded him in 2019. Shortly after YANUKOVYCH's departure in 2014, Russian President Vladimir PUTIN ordered the invasion of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. In response, the UN passed a resolution confirming Ukraine's sovereignty and independence. In mid-2014, Russia began an armed conflict in two of Ukraine's eastern provinces. International efforts to end the conflict failed, and by 2022, more than 14,000 civilians were killed or wounded. On 24 February 2022, Russia escalated the conflict by invading the country on several fronts, in what has become the largest conventional military attack on a sovereign state in Europe since World War II. Russia made substantial gains in the early weeks of the invasion but underestimated Ukrainian resolve and combat capabilities. Despite Ukrainian resistance, Russia has laid claim to four Ukrainian oblasts -- Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, and Zaporizhzhia -- although none is fully under Russian control. The international community has not recognized the annexations. The invasion has also created Europe's largest refugee crisis since World War II, with over six million Ukrainian refugees recorded globally. It remains one of the two largest displacement crises worldwide (the other is the conflict in Syria). President ZELENSKYY has focused on boosting Ukrainian identity to unite the country behind the goals of ending the war through reclaiming territory and advancing Ukraine’s candidacy for EU membership.

Geography
- Location
- Eastern Europe, bordering the Black Sea, between Poland, Belarus, Romania, and Moldova in the west and Russia in the east
- Area
- 603,550 sq km
- Climate
- temperate continental; Mediterranean only on the southern Crimean coast; precipitation disproportionately distributed, highest in west and north, lesser in east and southeast; winters vary from cool along the Black Sea to cold farther inland; warm summers across the greater part of the country, hot in the south
- Terrain
- mostly fertile plains (steppes) and plateaus, with mountains found only in the west (the Carpathians) or in the extreme south of the Crimean Peninsula
- Natural resources
- iron ore, coal, manganese, natural gas, oil, salt, sulfur, graphite, titanium, magnesium, kaolin, nickel, mercury, timber, arable land
- Coastline
- 2,782 km
- Natural hazards
- occasional floods; occasional droughts
People & society
- Population
- 35,661,826 (2024 est.)
- Nationality
- Ukrainian(s)
- Ethnic groups
- Ukrainian 77.8%, Russian 17.3%, Belarusian 0.6%, Moldovan 0.5%, Crimean Tatar 0.5%, Bulgarian 0.4%, Hungarian 0.3%, Romanian 0.3%, Polish 0.3%, Jewish 0.2%, other 1.8% (2001 est.)
- Languages
- Ukrainian (official) 67.5%, Russian (regional language) 29.6%, other (includes Crimean Tatar, Moldovan/Romanian, and Hungarian) 2.9% (2001 est.)
- Religions
- Orthodox (includes the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU), Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church (UAOC), and the Ukrainian Orthodox - Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP)), Ukrainian Greek Catholic, Roman Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, Jewish (2013 est.)
- Median age
- 44.6 years (2025 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth
- 70.5 years (2024 est.)
- Literacy
- 100%
Economy
- Economic overview
- lower-middle-income, non-EU, Eastern European economy; key wheat and corn exporter; gradual recovery after 30% GDP contraction at start of war; damage to infrastructure and agriculture balanced by consumer and business resilience in western Ukraine; international aid has stabilized foreign exchange reserves, allowing managed currency float; continued progress on anti-corruption reforms
- Industries
- industrial machinery, ferrous and nonferrous metals, automotive and aircraft components, electronics, chemicals, textiles, mining, construction
- Agricultural products
- maize, wheat, potatoes, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, milk, barley, soybeans, rapeseed, tomatoes (2023)
- Exports - partners
- Poland 12%, Romania 9%, Turkey 7%, China 6%, Spain 6% (2023)
- Imports - partners
- China 16%, Poland 14%, Germany 8%, Turkey 6%, USA 4% (2023)
Government
- Government type
- semi-presidential republic
- Capital
- Kyiv (Kiev is the transliteration from Russian)
- Independence
- 24 August 1991 (from the Soviet Union); notable earlier dates: ca. 982 (VOLODYMYR I consolidates Kyivan Rus); 1199 (Principality (later Kingdom) of Ruthenia formed); 1648 (establishment of the Cossack Hetmanate); 22 January 1918 (from Soviet Russia)
- Constitution
- several previous; latest adopted and ratified 28 June 1996
- Executive branch
- President Volodymyr ZELENSKYY (since 20 May 2019)
- Legislative branch
- Parliament (Verkhovna Rada)
Full reference data
Every field, by section — CIA World Factbook. Open a topic to expand it.
Introduction
Travel Facts
Please visit the following links to find further information about your desired destination.
CDC - To learn what vaccines and health precautions to take while visiting your destination.
US State Dept Travel Information - Overall information about foreign travel for US citizens.
To obtain an international driving permit (IDP). Only two organizations in the US issue IDPs: American Automobile Association (AAA) and American Automobile Touring Alliance (AATA)
How to get help in an emergency? Contact the nearest US embassy or consulate, or call one of these numbers: from the US or Canada - 1-888-407-4747 or from Overseas - +1 202-501-4444
Page last updated: Saturday, November 16, 2024