Dnipro strikes (2022–present)

[38] On 28 June, Russian forces fired six 3M-14E Kalibr cruise missiles from the Black Sea to Dnipro at around 5:30 local time.

[55] On 25 October 2022 two people were killed, including a pregnant woman, and four injured due to a fire at a petrol station in Dnipro after fragments of a Russian missile had hit it.

[56] In the early hours of 9 November 2022 Russian forces deployed kamikaze drones in an attack hitting a logistics business and causing a large fire.

[57] Around 08:30[58] in the morning of 15 November, while people where commuting to work, Dnipro was hit by a strike on (according to Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal) the PA Pivdenmash missile plant.

[59] Governor of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Valentyn Reznichenko stated that an industrial company, houses, trolleybuses and a "lively street" were damaged.

[60][59] Dnipro mayor Borys Filatov claimed a city hall employee was wounded in the attack while out helping elderly women.

[74] Local police told neighbours (of the victims) that fragments of one of them, shot down by air defences, appeared to have fallen on the house.

[76] Ukrainian Air Defence Forces reported that they had shot down 7 missiles flying over Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, and that this one drone had (still) hit its target.

[13] During the night of 21–22 May the premises of a private firm were hit by a Russian missile strike; eight people were injured (three of them hospitalised) and three buildings were damaged as a result.

[14] Ukraine's air defence forces reported that they had shot down 15 Russian drones and four cruise missiles during the attack on Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.

[77] During the night of 3–4 June a Russian missiles struck a residential area killing a two-year-old girl and injuring another 22 people, including five children.

[78][nb 2] According to the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces one Iskander-K missile had hit a two-story apartment building.

[79] (According to local police) 10 private houses, cars, shops and gas pipelines were destroyed after a fire broke out as a result of the explosion.

[80] In the nighttime of 24 June 11 people, including three children, were injured in a missile attack that destroyed four homes in a residential area.

[81] At around 20.30 hour on 28 July 2023 a Russian missiles attack (locals heard two explosions) hit a high-rise building in the centre of Dnipro.

[88] At around 2:30 hour on 24 August 2023 (Ukrainian independence day) multiple rockets hit Dnipro's Central Bus Station [uk; ko].

[91][nb 5] On 23 September Governor of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Serhiy Lysak reported that the previous night wreckage from a shot down Russian drone had damaged "a critical infrastructure facility" in Dnipro.

[93] In a later update Lysak stated that a school, a kindergarten, a petrol station and three apartment buildings in Dnipro were damaged by "fragments of downed Russian junk"; in addition to a warehouse being destroyed by fire.

[94] On 29 December 2023, Russia launched at least 122 cruise and ballistic missiles and 36 drones which struck multiple cities (Kyiv, Odesa, Kharkiv and Lviv and) including Dnipro, in what was one of the largest aerial attacks on Ukraine so far.

[20][95] Local online newspaper Informator reported that at the time of the attack in the maternity hospital there were 12 women giving birth, four newborns and medical personnel.

[100] In the night of 22–23 February a Russian Shahed kamikaze drone hit a high-rise residential building in Dnipro's Amur-Nyzhniodniprovskyi District[5][101] and an unnamed businessfacility.

[103][104] In this 22 March nightly attack high-rise buildings and private houses were damaged by falling wreckage of shot down rockets and kamikaze drones, no injuries were reported.

"[113] Later in the afternoon the Ukrainian Air Defence Forces claimed to have shot down a Russian Kh-59 cruise missile that was destined to destroy an unknown target in Dnipro.

[114] At (as reported) 17.50 hours on 14 April the debris of a destroyed cruise missile fell down in Dnipro and Lyubymivka hromada injuring 13 people.

[117][118] The shockwave of the explosion (also) damaged Dnipro's Central Bus Station [uk; ko], its operations were also temporarily suspended.

"[124][123] In the early evening (of 19 April) President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited the site of the Russian attack where he thanked the city's emergency workers.

[26] On 28 June a Russian missile strike hit a nine-storey residential building in Dnipro, killing one person and injuring 13 and two women considered missing.

[30] In the afternoon of 1 November Dnipro was hit by a missile attack, other then it causing a fire and windows have being blown out, no casulties were reported.

[139] Overnight and in the early morning of 17 November Russia launched a massive air attack with over 200 missile and drones on cities across Ukraine.

"[145] Speaking during an unannounced televised in the evening of 21 November Russian president Vladimir Putin claimed the morning strike was carried out using "a new conventional intermediate-range missile" called Oreshnik.

Houses in Dnipro after the strike on 26 November
Aftermath of the 15 January attack
The house destroyed on 28 April
Clinic in Dnipro after the strike on 26 May
The building, hit on 28 July
Palace of water sports damaged on 15 August
Bomb shelter in Dnipro, August 2023
Aftermath of the missile strike on a shopping mall
Video by the National Police of Ukraine of a Shahed drone "type 136" landed by air defense in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast on 9 February 2024.
The nine-storey residential building hit on 28 June after the attack.