People continue to be evacuated from the frontline areas of Ukraine to safer regions. From June 1 to October 24, 2025, more than 118,000 people were evacuated, including about 14,000 children and nearly 4,000 people with limited mobility.
Evacuation data by region:
Donetsk region — more than 82,400 people evacuated, including nearly 8,700 children and more than 580 people with limited mobility;
Dnipropetrovsk region — more than 22,500 people evacuated, including more than 4,000 children and nearly 1,000 people with limited mobility;
Sumy region — over 4,100 people evacuated, including more than 350 children and over 700 people with reduced mobility;
Kherson region — over 3,400 people evacuated, including more than 300 children and almost 230 people with reduced mobility;
Kharkiv region — nearly 4,900 people evacuated, including more than 260 children and nearly 1,500 people with reduced mobility;
Zaporizhzhia region — more than 800 people evacuated, including more than 80 children and nearly 20 people with reduced mobility.
Today, there are 20 transit centers operating in several regions of Ukraine. Most of them are located in the Dnipropetrovsk region — eight, including in the cities of Pavlohrad, Dnipro, and the villages of Stepove and Voloske. Five transit centers operate in the Sumy region, two in the Kharkiv region, three in Volyn, one in Mykolaiv, and one in Zaporizhzhia.
At transit centers, people receive comprehensive assistance: humanitarian, medical, psychological, legal, and social. They are helped to restore their documents, apply for benefits and social services, and receive financial support from the state and humanitarian organizations.
Since the beginning of August this year, the transit point in Pavlohrad has received more than 35,400 people. Since August 19, more than 9,000 people have passed through Lozova, and since August 23, more than 4,300 people have passed through Volosky.
After the transit center, evacuees can take advantage of free temporary accommodation (MTP). On October 20, 2025, the Ministry of Development approved an updated list of MTPs by order No. 1499. Their number has increased, and there are now 1,111 such facilities in Ukraine. They provide more than 80,500 beds for IDPs. Currently, more than 7,800 places remain vacant. More than 3,500 places have been created for people with disabilities and the mobility-impaired, of which 93 are vacant.
The largest number of MTPs were created in the following regions: Dnipropetrovsk – 135; Zakarpattia – 111; Kharkiv – 78; Kirovohrad – 77; Lviv – 68; Poltava – 64; Chernivtsi – 63; Vinnytsia and Ivano-Frankivsk – 60 each; Rivne – 58; Khmelnytskyi – 57.
The evacuation of the population is carried out in close cooperation between the State Emergency Service, the National Police, local communities, volunteers, and international partners. Specialized units—the State Emergency Service’s Phoenix group and the National Police’s White Angel group—are working directly in the frontline territories.
They are equipped with armored vehicles, medical supplies, and equipment for transporting people from all population groups. At the same time, the Ministry of Social Policy, Family, and Unity, together with local communities, is organizing the transportation of citizens with limited mobility to hospitals and specialized institutions immediately after their evacuation.
The main task remains to ensure adequate living conditions for vulnerable groups and to open new temporary accommodation centers in safer regions of the country.

