Ukraine War Analytics is an open-source platform providing comprehensive data, analysis, and visualization on the Russia–Ukraine war since February 2022. We welcome media coverage and collaboration with journalists, researchers, and documentary makers working on the conflict.
Site Statistics
As of June 2026, Ukraine War Analytics comprises:
- 7,400+ pages of analysis, battle reports, weapons profiles, and humanitarian data
- 900,000+ documented Russian military losses tracked across personnel, equipment, and vehicles
- 30 content categories covering frontline, weapons, diplomacy, economy, regions, and humanitarian topics
- Data sourced from Ukrainian Armed Forces, Oryx, ISW, UNHCR, UN OHCHR, Kiel Institute, World Bank, and other verified international organizations
- Continuous updates since February 24, 2022 — Day 1 of the full-scale invasion
Press Kit
Our press kit includes site description, key data points, methodology overview, and high-resolution assets. The kit covers:
- One-page project overview (mission, scope, sources)
- Key statistics summary sheet (losses, aid, refugees, frontline)
- Methodology note explaining our data collection and verification approach
- Logo and visual assets (Ukraine War Analytics branding)
- Representative chart exports (Russian personnel losses, refugee numbers, military aid breakdown)
To request the press kit or downloadable datasets, contact us at the address below.
Media Inquiries
For all media and press inquiries — including interview requests, data licensing, editorial collaboration, and fact-checking assistance — please contact:
Email: press@ukraine-war-analytics.com
We aim to respond to press inquiries within 48 hours on business days. For urgent breaking-news requests, please note "URGENT" in the subject line.
Usage Permissions
Ukraine War Analytics data and analysis may be used under the following conditions:
- Attribution required: Cite "Ukraine War Analytics (ukraine-war-analytics.com)" when using data, charts, or analysis in published works.
- Non-commercial use: Journalists, researchers, educators, and NGOs may reproduce data and excerpts freely with attribution for non-commercial purposes.
- Chart and data embeds: Our embeddable widgets (available at ukraine-war-analytics.com/embed/) may be used freely on news sites and blogs with a visible credit link.
- Commercial licensing: For commercial data licensing, large-scale dataset exports, or white-label data products, please contact us at the press email above to discuss terms.
- No misrepresentation: Data must not be presented out of context or altered to misrepresent the underlying figures. Numbers are estimates based on verified public sources and are subject to revision.
All content on Ukraine War Analytics is for informational purposes only. We make no warranty regarding completeness or accuracy of third-party source data. See our Methodology page for full source details.
About Our Data Sources
Our loss figures are primarily sourced from the Ukrainian Armed Forces General Staff daily reports, cross-referenced against Oryx (visual equipment confirmation), ISW (Institute for the Study of War) assessments, and international body reports from UN OHCHR, UNHCR, and the Kiel Institute Ukraine Support Tracker. We do not fabricate figures and flag estimates clearly when exact verification is unavailable.
Coverage Guidelines for Journalists
When covering data from Ukraine War Analytics, please keep the following in mind:
- Russian military loss figures from the Ukrainian Armed Forces represent official Ukrainian claims; Oryx figures represent visually confirmed losses — both are valid reference points for different purposes.
- All figures on this site are subject to ongoing revision as OSINT community verification evolves.
- The conflict began with Russia's full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022; prior fighting in Donbas dates to 2014 and is covered separately under our History section.
- For the most current frontline situation, refer to our Current Frontline page and the latest Analysis articles.