German military spending on Ukraine
- Matthew Parish
- 4 hours ago
- 5 min read

Germany’s wartime spending on Ukraine has shifted from emergency generosity to a structured, multi-year programme that mixes immediate deliveries with industrial rearmament at home and in Ukraine. This evolution matters for Kyiv’s staying power. It determines how reliably Ukraine can keep her lights on under missile attack, sustain artillery fire along a thousand-kilometre front, and protect critical nodes while she rebuilds her own defence industry.
Germany’s current commitments are large by European standards and increasingly predictable. The federal finance ministry’s 2025 draft budget sets support for Ukraine at roughly €8.3 billion, alongside a core defence budget of about €62.4 billion that lifts Berlin above NATO’s 2 per cent benchmark in 2025; importantly, the Ukraine line is intended to remain “at a high level”. Recent Reuters reporting indicates the government plans to raise dedicated Ukraine aid by a further €3 billion in 2026, bringing the envelope for next year to about €8.5 billion and cementing Germany’s position as Europe’s leading military donor since 2022. Independent tracking by the Kiel Institute confirms both Germany’s prominence and a recent summer dip in new military pledges, underscoring why firmer multi-year budget lines matter.
Where is the money going? In the near term, Berlin has concentrated on air defence, artillery ammunition and tracked armour—capabilities that immediately reduce Ukrainian casualties and protect her critical infrastructure. The federal government’s public ledger of delivered and pending equipment lists three Patriot air-defence batteries and additional launchers, at least six IRIS-T systems with more in the pipeline, TRML-4D radars, two Skynex short-range air-defence systems, sixty Gepard self-propelled guns and over 330,000 rounds of Gepard 35 mm ammunition, plus hundreds of thousands of 155 mm shells, Leopard and Marder fleets, PzH 2000 howitzers, MLRS (multiple launch rocket systems), and a very substantial portfolio of reconnaissance and attack drones. That emphasis has deepened in recent weeks: Germany has just delivered further Patriot assets ahead of winter strikes and announced new funding packages that again privilege air defence and munitions.
At the operational level, this spending changes outcomes in three ways.
First, it raises Ukraine’s ceiling on air defence density around defended assets. Patriots and IRIS-T SLM provide the high-end and middle layers against cruise missiles and many ballistic threats, while Gepard and Skynex swat drones and low-flying cruise missiles cheaply. The effect is visible in Kyiv’s ability to keep power generation and transmission working even during large-scale raids, although Russian adaptation has made interception harder of late. Germany’s continued Patriot and IRIS-T deliveries and missiles directly mitigate that pressure and buy time for domestic hardening of the grid.
Secondly, German spending closes Ukraine’s artillery-ammunition gap. Rheinmetall’s new Unterlüß plant, opened this summer, is slated to ramp from initial output in 2025 towards 350,000 155 mm shells annually by 2027, with total corporate capacity projected near 700,000 shells per year across sites. In parallel, Berlin is backing Rheinmetall joint ventures to produce 155 mm shells inside Ukraine from 2026, shortening logistics and hardening supply. These industrial moves—partly financed through German orders and Ukraine-support lines—turn episodic aid into a sustainable munitions pipeline. Germany has also financed repeated tranches of Gepard 35 mm ammunition, which has proved one of Ukraine’s most cost-effective counters to Shahed drones.
Thirdly, spending on tracked vehicles and spares holds together brigades that would otherwise hollow out. Leopard 1 and 2 tanks, Marder infantry fighting vehicles and PzH 2000 howitzers only matter if ammunition, repair parts and trained crews arrive as a package. Germany’s delivery lists show the unglamorous but decisive items that keep these fleets running—engineer bridging, recovery vehicles, depot-level toolkits, SatCom, and thousands of minor items that increase unit availability. That improves Ukraine’s capacity to rotate, rest and reconstitute units for offensive and defensive cycles.
Looking ahead to 2026-27, three features of Berlin’s approach will shape Ukraine’s resilience.
The first is budgetary regularity. If the Bundestag locks in multi-year authorisations at the €8–9 billion level and protects them from domestic trade-offs, Ukraine can plan air-defence siting, grid protection and training pipelines on a two-winter horizon. That is especially important as Russia adapts her missiles and glide-bomb carriers to stress Ukraine’s intercept capacity. Regular German outlays on missile stocks for Patriot and IRIS-T, plus continued provision of launchers and radars, blunt the risk that a single bad quarter of deliveries translates into a strategic blackout.
The second is industrial embeddedness. Germany’s choice to scale ammunition output at home while helping Ukraine stand up local shell production diversifies risk. Domestic European capacity insulates Kyiv from transatlantic political cycles; Ukrainian capacity reduces transit times and raises wartime repair and resupply rates. Together with contracts for propellants and charges and an expanding European powder base, this reduces the chance that Ukraine faces a shell-starvation crisis in 2026.
The third is coalition leverage. Germany’s procurement weight and convening power within the EU and NATO allow her to stitch joint packages—Leopard refurbishments with Denmark and the Netherlands, Zuzana howitzers with Norway and Denmark, and pooled missile buys for air defence. In a world where overall Western pledges dipped in mid-2025, Germany’s ability to anchor group purchases and delivery schedules is a force-multiplier.
There are, of course, constraints. Russian adaptation has reduced interception rates against certain ballistic profiles at moments in 2025, forcing Ukraine to expend more interceptors to defend the same targets and raising the cost per raid. That increases the premium on timely resupply of Patriot and IRIS-T missiles and on dense short-range layers such as Gepard and Skynex that can defeat cheaper threats without exhausting high-end stocks. Europe’s wider aid tempo also wobbled in the summer, which argues for Berlin to lock in quarterly delivery cadences rather than headline sums. Finally, purely financial totals understate delivery risk: bottlenecks in powder, fuses and rocket motors can delay outputs despite generous appropriations—hence the strategic importance of the ammunition and propellant investments now underway.
What difference does this make to Ukraine’s resistance? In the winter of 2025–26, two outcomes flow directly from German spending. The first is a higher survival rate for Ukraine’s power and heating network under mass strikes, because additional Patriot launchers, IRIS-T batteries, sensors and Gepards shrink the attacker’s effective salvo and close some of the seams Russia has sought to exploit; the latest German deliveries are timed for precisely this purpose. The second is a steadier artillery tempo in the field from mid-2026 as German-backed shell plants at Unterlüß and inside Ukraine ramp up. That allows Ukraine to keep pressure on Russian logistics nodes and counter-battery targets while preserving precious long-range missiles for operationally decisive strikes.
The broader political consequence is that Berlin’s money, if kept steady, buys time: time for Ukraine to expand her own drone and missile output; time for Europe’s rearmament to mature; and time for Kyiv to harden critical infrastructure. It does not remove the need for American contributions in specialised areas, nor does it guarantee battlefield breakthroughs. But it materially raises the floor under Ukraine’s defences and reduces the odds that a single winter of Russian bombardment can coerce strategic concessions. In that sense, the most valuable German spending may be the least dramatic: predictable quarterly tranches of interceptors, shells and spares, alongside a rising European munitions base that ensures the next winter—and the one after—will not be decided by stock outs.

