Ukraine's Verkhovna Rada approved the EUR 90 billion EU loan agreement on 28 May, the largest single EU financial commitment to Ukraine of the war. The split between defence (EUR 5.9bn) and macro-financial support (EUR 3.2bn) reflects the EU's evolving position: it is now explicitly financing weapons procurement alongside the humanitarian and budgetary support it previously confined itself to.
The first EUR 9.1bn tranche is expected mid-June, converging with GL 134C's expiry on 17 June and Istanbul Round 3's proposed 20-30 June window. Three major financial and diplomatic events in one week make it the most concentrated decision moment of 2026.
Hungary is the watch item: Budapest has previously used EU financial decisions as leverage, and whether the EUR 9.1bn disburses on schedule depends partly on whether it raises new conditions.
Russia's Q1 deficit of 4.6 trillion rubles already overshot its 3.8 trillion full-year target ; the mid-June tranche directly offsets the fiscal pressure Ukraine faces over the same period.
