| Association | Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine |
|---|---|
| Head coach | Yevgeniy Alipov |
| Assistants | Oleg Martynov Oleksandr Nikulichev |
| Captain | Valeria Manchak |
| Most games | Yulia Dobrovolskaya (19) |
| Top scorer | Darya Tsymirenko (13) |
| Most points | Darya Tsymirenko (27) |
| Team colors | |
| IIHF code | UKR |
| Ranking | |
| Current IIHF | 34 |
| Highest IIHF | 38 (first in 2021) |
| Lowest IIHF | 40 (2022) |
| First international | |
| Ukraine (Riga, Latvia; 1 November 1992) | |
| Biggest win | |
| Ukraine (Zagreb, Croatia; 11 March 2024) Ukraine (Dunedin, New Zealand; 20 April 2025) | |
| Biggest defeat | |
| Finland (Russia; 7 October 1994) | |
| World Championships | |
| Appearances | 5 (first in2019) |
| Best result | 31st (2025) |
| European Championships | |
| Appearances | 2 (first in1993) |
| Best result | 11th (1993) |
| International record (W–L–T) | |
| 18–22–0 | |
TheUkraine women's national ice hockey team is the women's nationalice hockey team ofUkraine. The team is controlled by theIce Hockey Federation of Ukraine, a member of theInternational Ice Hockey Federation. They made their World Championship debut in 2019 winning all four games to gain promotion to Division II B.
Ukraine played its first game in 1992 in a qualification game againstLatvia for participation in the1993 Women's European Ice Hockey Championships.[2] The game was held inRiga,Latvia with Ukraine finishing with a 3–0 win.[2] The game was part of a four team qualification series againstItaly, Latvia, and theNetherlands but due to the withdrawals of Italy and the Netherlands the series was reduced to three games between Ukraine and Latvia which Ukraine won two games to one.[3] The following year Ukraine competed at the 1993 Women's European Ice Hockey Championships.[3] They played five games in the Group B tournament which was held inKyiv, Ukraine. They finished the tournament with one win out of their four games played, managing only to beat Latvia who finished on top of the Group B table.[3]
In 1994 Ukraine competed at theMoscow Tournament againstFinland, Latvia, andRussia.[2] They lost all three of their games with the 31–0 loss against Finland being recorded as their worst ever result.[2] The following year Ukraine competed at the1995 Women's European Ice Hockey Championships. They were placed in the Group B tournament being held inDenmark and went on to lose all four of their games.[3]