EU granted temporary protection to 4.3M Ukrainians through October
Germany, Poland, Czech Republic host the most Ukrainians
BRUSSELS
Amid the ongoing war, a total of 4.3 million non-EU citizens who fled Ukraine were under temporary protection in the European Union as of Oct. 31, according to Eurostat.
Compared to the end of September, the total number of Ukrainians benefiting from temporary protection fell slightly, by 6,170 people.
Germany, Poland, and the Czech Republic hosted the largest numbers of beneficiaries, with about 1.3 million, 965,000, and 393,000 respectively. These figures account for 28.6%, 22.5%, and 9.1% of the EU total.
In October, EU countries issued 74,175 new temporary protection decisions, the second-highest monthly total in 2025, following a peak in September when 79,525 decisions were issued.
The rise in numbers comes after a decree by the Ukrainian government at the end of August allowing men age 18-22 to leave Ukraine without hindrance.
Ukrainian citizens accounted for over 98.4% of all temporary protection beneficiaries in the EU. Adult women represented 43.8% of beneficiaries, minors made up almost one-third (30.8%), and adult men accounted for 25.5%.
The temporary protection status recognized a mass influx of displaced persons from Ukraine due to the ongoing war – now nearing the four-year mark – and introduced temporary protection measures.
In June, the European Council extended temporary protection for Ukrainians from March 2026 to March 2027.
