
“Housing” has emerged as the largest single category of war damage in Ukraine, at a loss value of $61.6 billion.
This data comes directly from the joint damage assessment by the World Bank, the EU, and the UN, covering February 2022 to December 2025.
The data, published in a report named “Ukraine Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment”, places residential housing at 31.6% of all documented war damage.
As we bring this 5-part data storytelling series to a close, the visualization above shows all the estimated total war damage value in Ukraine by key sectors.
TL;DR
- Ukraine has sustained approximately $195.1 billion in documented war damage across 13 sectors since February 2022
- Housing, transportation, and energy account for 65% of the total damages
- Damage to the health sector is recorded at just $1.8 billion despite hundreds of documented attacks on healthcare facilities, suggesting a possible undercount.
| wdt_ID | wdt_created_by | wdt_created_at | wdt_last_edited_by | wdt_last_edited_at | Characteristic | Estimated damage value ($B) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Housing | 61.6 |
| 2 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Transportation | 40.3 |
| 3 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Energy | 24.8 |
| 4 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Commerce & Industry | 19.2 |
| 5 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Education & Science | 13.9 |
| 6 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Agriculture | 12.1 |
| 7 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Water Supply & Sanitation | 7.8 |
| 8 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Culture & Tourism | 4.5 |
| 9 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Municipal Services | 3.1 |
| 10 | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | emmanuel-ashemiriogwa | 09/06/2026 11:22 AM | Telecom, Digital, & Media | 2.5 |
ICYMI: The Recap
We started a five-part series of data investigation to capture the effect of the Russia-Ukraine war in numbers.
- Ukraine War in Data Part 1 confirmed approximately 19,225 civilian deaths in Ukraine.
- Ukraine War in Data Part 2 documented 5.35 million registered Ukrainian refugees and the countries hosting most of them across Europe and Asia.
- Ukraine War in Data Part 3 mapped a military spending gap between Russia and Ukraine that closed from 20-to-1 to 2-to-1 before widening again.
- Ukraine War in Data Part 4 tracked €415 billion in international aid commitments from 23 donors into Ukraine.
- Ukraine War in Data Part 5, the final installment, documents what four years of the war physically did to Ukraine at its center.
The Damage by Sector
Housing leads at $61.6 billion, 31.6% of all documented damage.
The fact that residential housing has sustained more documented war damage than energy infrastructure, transportation, or industry is a specific finding about how this war has been conducted.
- The civilian deaths documented in our Part 1 happened in buildings counted in this $61.6 billion figure. The refugees documented in Part 2 fled from them.
Transportation follows at $40.3 billion. Roads, rail lines, bridges, and port infrastructure have been systematically struck throughout the conflict.
The significance of transportation damage extends beyond its dollar value.
Every other sector on the list depends on transportation to be rebuilt. Damaging transport first multiplies the cost and timeline of repairing everything else.
Energy infrastructure sits at $24.8 billion.
Russia’s targeted campaign against Ukrainian power generation, transmission, and distribution (intensified through 2023, 2024, and 2025) turned electricity into a strategic weapon against civilian morale.
Health’s Sector Damage
Health sector damage in Ukraine due to the war is recorded at $1.8 billion.
That is the second-lowest named category in the entire dataset.
The WHO’s Health Cluster has documented hundreds of attacks on Ukrainian healthcare facilities since 2022.
Hospitals have been struck by missiles, and maternity wards have been destroyed.
The healthcare system’s functional collapse (measured in reduced access to specialist care) and the loss of medical personnel who joined the refugees challenge the $1.8 billion figure.
It is worth noting that the assessment methodology captures physical infrastructure damage.
Functional system deterioration is not the same as, and does not fall under, the same category.
What’ll Reconstruction Actually Cost?
The damage is $195.1 billion. The reconstruction cost is approximately $524 billion.
The gap exists because rebuilding is not the same thing as replacing.
Ukraine must demine the land before building on it.
The UN estimates mine contamination across up to 174,000 square kilometers, making Ukraine one of the world’s most heavily contaminated countries.
Pre-war infrastructure that was already aging must be upgraded to meet modern resilience standards, not merely restored to its pre-war state.
New buildings must meet higher specifications in an active conflict environment.
ELI5 (Explain It Like I’m 5)
This final part of the series puts a dollar amount on what the war destroyed in Ukraine: about $195 billion worth of homes, roads, power stations, schools, and more. Homes suffered the most damage at $61.6 billion. Rebuilding everything properly will cost about $524 billion, nearly three times the cost of what was broken, because land needs to be cleared of mines before anything can be built. The international aid pledged doesn’t fully cover the rebuilding bill.
Source:
World Bank via the Ukraine Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment Report.
