10/29/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/29/2025 05:59
As of today, the EU and Ukraine will benefit from an enhanced, stable, fair and permanent trade framework, with the entry into force of the EU-Ukraine Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA). The upgraded DCFTA delivers additional, mutually beneficial trade liberalisation, while taking fully into account the sensitivity of certain EU agricultural sectors. It illustrates in a very tangible way the EU's unwavering commitment to supporting Ukraine. At the same time, it limits EU imports of sensitive agricultural products compared to the levels under the autonomous trade measures (ATMs), enshrines a robust new safeguard clause, and provides for the alignment of Ukrainian and EU production standards.
The DCFTA will support long-term economic certainty and stable trade relations for both parties, while contributing to the gradual integration of Ukraine into the EU Single Market.
The upgraded agreement is structured around three key pillars:
Both sides have also agreed on exploring measures to help Ukrainian exporters reach their traditional markets in third countries, thus providing additional commercial opportunities for Ukraine and contributing to global food security.
Background
The Association Agreement between the EU and Ukraine, including a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area, was negotiated between 2007 and 2011, and signed on 21 March and 27 June 2014. The DCFTA removed the vast majority of all tariffs, notably on industrial goods.
Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the EU granted Ukraine trade facilitations and exceptional instruments offering a high level of unilateral liberalisation on a yearly basis in the form of ATMs. These were in force from 4 June 2022, and twice renewed until their expiration on 5 June 2025, after which transitional measures came into effect. Together with the Solidarity Lanes, the ATMs were adopted in the context of the major disruptions caused by the war and against the general trend of a decrease of Ukraine's trade overall.
The Commission consistently aimed to agree on longer term reciprocal tariff liberalisation with Ukraine under Article 29 of the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement, ensuring a seamless transition to a new framework in which all trade arrangements are integrated into the DCFTA regime.
On 30 June, the EU and Ukraine reached an agreement in principle on the review of the DCFTA, paving the way for today's upgrade. On 13 October, the Council authorised the Commission to review the DCFTA with Ukraine on that basis; and on 14 October the Commission and Ukraine formally adopted the decision to review the agreement, with the upgraded text entering into force today.
For more information
EU-Ukraine Association Agreement
Questions and answers
EU-Ukraine trade relations
Factsheet - EU Solidarity with Ukraine at a glance