Ukraine’s 2022 Financial Restrictions:
From $100/Day Limits to Full-Scale Wartime Capital Controls
By Dr. Christoph Lymbersky
November 14, 2025
When Russian tanks rolled across Ukraine’s border on February 24, 2022, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) had less than 12 hours to impose one of the most aggressive capital control regimes in modern history. Within days, Ukraine transformed from a relatively open emerging market into a wartime financial fortress. Daily cash limits, frozen foreign transfers, forced currency conversion, and crypto bans became the new normal.
These measures—activated under martial law and refined over 1,000+ days of war—offer a real-time blueprint for how the EU might impose Point 2-style caps (€1,000/day) in a future conflict. This article breaks down Ukraine’s 2022–2025 restrictions, their evolution, enforcement, and lasting impact.
Timeline: From Invasion to Financial Lockdown
| Date | Measure | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Feb 24, 2022 | Martial Law + NBU Decree #18 | All banks closed; ATMs limited to ₴5,000 (~$170) per card/day. |
| Feb 25 | Foreign Transfer Ban | 100% freeze on outbound payments except critical imports. |
| Feb 26 | FX Market Suspension | Hryvnia trading halted; fixed rate set at ₴29.25/USD. |
| Mar 1 | Cash Abroad Limit | $100 equivalent in foreign currency per person when leaving. |
| Mar 10 | Crypto Restrictions | Binance, Coinbase blocked; ₴100,000 (~$3,300) monthly purchase cap. |
| Apr 2022 | Forced FX Surrender | Exporters must sell 100% of foreign earnings within 90 days. |
| Sep 2022 | Eased to ₴100,000/month | For personal transfers abroad (education, medical). |
| 2023–2025 | Gradual Relaxation | Now ₴500,000 (~$12,000)/month for individuals; full business flexibility. |
Key Restrictions in 2022 (Peak Lockdown)
1. Cash Withdrawal Caps
- ₴5,000/day per card (~$170 at invasion rate)
- ₴100,000/month total across all accounts
- No cash in foreign currency from ATMs
Real-world impact: Queues of 500+ people; ATMs empty by 9 AM. Many slept outside banks.
2. Foreign Transfer Lockdown
- Zero outbound transfers for individuals (except pre-approved)
- Business imports: Only via NBU “critical list” (fuel, medicine, weapons)
- SWIFT access preserved but monitored in real time
3. Currency Controls
- Fixed exchange rate (₴29.25 → later ₴36.57 → ₴41.5 by 2024)
- Black market rate hit ₴50+ in March 2022
- Mandatory conversion of inbound aid/donations into UAH
4. Crypto & Digital Assets
- ₴100,000/month to buy crypto via banks
- P2P crypto trading tolerated but risky
- Binance Ukraine suspended UAH cards in April 2022
5. Cross-Border Cash
- $100 equivalent allowed when exiting
- Customs declarations for >€10,000
- Confiscation risk at Russian-occupied borders
Enforcement Mechanisms (How They Made It Work)
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
| NBU „White List“ | Only 1,200+ importers allowed FX purchases. Updated daily. |
| Bank Software Blocks | Monobank, PrivatBank auto-rejected >₴5,000 transfers. |
| Military Oversight | Soldiers guarded cash depots; curfews limited ATM access. |
| AI Monitoring | NBU scanned 100M+ transactions/month for anomalies. |
| Public Reporting Hotline | Citizens reported black market dealers → raids. |
Economic & Social Fallout
| Metric | Pre-Feb 2022 | Peak 2022 | 2025 Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank Deposits | $35B | → $25B (–29%) | → $38B (recovered) |
| Capital Flight | $1.2B/month | → $50M/month | → $300M/month |
| Inflation | 10% | → 26% | → 7% |
| Black Market FX | ±2% spread | → +70% | → +5% |
| Crypto Use | 12% of adults | → 25% | → 30% |
Success: Prevented total banking collapse.
Cost: Froze $15B in private savings; crushed small exporters.
Comparison: Ukraine 2022 vs. Hypothetical EU 2026
| Feature | Ukraine 2022 | EU 2026 (War Scenario) |
|---|---|---|
| Daily Cash Limit | ₴5,000 (~$170) | €500–€1,000 |
| Foreign Transfer | 0 (individuals) | €1,000/day cap |
| Crypto | ₴100,000/month | Banned or €5,000/month |
| Duration | 3+ years | 6–24 months |
| Legal Basis | Martial Law | Art. 66 TFEU + National Emergency |
| Enforcement | Military + NBU | ECB + National Regulators |
Why Ukraine’s Model Is a Warning for the EU
- Speed: Controls imposed in <48 hours.
- Depth: From open market → near-total lockdown.
- Adaptability: Rules changed weekly based on war needs.
- Public Tolerance: 70% supported restrictions (KIIS poll, 2022).
- Digital Readiness: Ukraine’s Diia app could enforce future EU digital euro caps.
Lessons for EU Citizens & Businesses
If the EU follows Ukraine’s path:
- Expect €500–€1,000 daily caps within 72 hours of crisis declaration.
- Pre-position 3 months of cash in €50 notes.
- Move critical suppliers to EU (avoid USD/Asia dependency).
- Use EU-based crypto wallets (e.g., in Estonia) before bans.
- Keep records: Prove “essential” transfers to unlock exemptions.
Conclusion: The $100/Day Precedent
Ukraine didn’t just survive 2022—it rewrote the playbook for wartime finance. The $100/day foreign withdrawal limit wasn’t a bug—it was a feature of survival.
For the EU, this is no longer theory. If war comes, €1,000/day won’t be the floor—it’ll be the ceiling.
The hryvnia held. The euro might too.
But your freedom to move money?
That’s already on the table.


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