Class |
Photo |
Type |
Ships |
Displacement[a] |
Origin |
Commissioned |
Decommissioned |
Submarines (3 unlisted) |
Triton-2 (project 908)[176] |
 |
Midget submarines |
V-504 |
15.5[c][177] |
Leningrad Admiralty Association |
1982 |
All decommissioned by the end of 2010 and subsequently scrapped by 2017 (inclusive) at the latest[178] |
V-509 |
1983 |
V-528 |
1984 |
Other warships (11 unlisted) |
Krivak[179] |
 |
Frigates |
U134 Dnipropetrovsk[cl][cm] |
3,190 |
Zaliv Shipbuilding yard |
1978 |
Unlisted in 2000 Sunk in 2005 while being towed in the Black Sea[180] |
U133 Mykolaiv[cl][cn] |
1979 |
Unlisted in 2001 Scrapped in 2001 [181] |
U132 Sevastopol[co][cp] |
3,305 |
Yantar Shipyard |
1974 |
Unlisted in 2004 Sold to Turkey in 2005; subsequently scrapped[182] |
Petya |  | Multipurpose frigate | U132 Otaman Bilyi[cq] |
1,150 | Yantar Shipyard | 1968 | Unlisted: 1993, never really entered service; better known by its previous name Subsequently scrapped |
Grisha |
 |
Anti-submarine ships |
U209 Sumy[cr][cs] |
990 |
Leninska Kuznya |
1974 |
Decommissioned in 1998 Subsequently scrapped |
U210 Kherson[cr][ct] |
Zelenodolsk Shipyard |
1971 |
Decommissioned in 1999 Subsequently scrapped |
U205 Chernihiv[f][cu] |
Leninska Kuznya |
1980 |
Decommissioned in 2005 Sank during scrapping in 2010[183] |
A206 Vinnytsia[f][g] |
1976 |
Decommissioned in 2021 (to become a museum ship) (2018–2021 training ship[184]) Sunk at moorings after being damaged by Russia on February 24, 2022 (see above) |
Pauk |  | Anti-submarine ship | U207 Uzhhorod[h] |
580 | Yaroslavl | 1982 | Unlisted: 2012[185] Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above) |
Tarantul |  | Missile corvette | U156 Kremenchuk[k] |
540 | Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard, Pontonny | 1985 | Unlisted: 2012[23] Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above) |
T43 |  | Gun-ship[cv] | U861 Svitlovodsk[cw] |
544 | Shipyard No. 363, Pontonny | 1954 | Unlisted: 1999 (1991–1995 minesweeper[105]) Subsequently scrapped |
Fast attack craft (4 unlisted) |
Matka[186] |
 |
Missile boats |
U150 Konotop[cx] |
257 |
Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard, Pontonny |
1981 |
1999 given away to Georgia |
U151 Tsyurupinsk[cy] |
1981 |
Decommissioned in 2000 and subsequently scrapped |
U152 Uman[cz] |
1979 |
Decommissioned in 2008 |
U154 Kakhovka[p] |
1980 |
Decommissioned in 2012; subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above) |
Patrol ship (1 unlisted) |
Zhuk 1400 |  | Small patrol gunboat | AK-22 |
40 | More Shipyard | 1968–1973 | 1994[187] |
Landing craft (7 unlisted) |
Alligator |  | Landing ship | U762 Rivne[da][23] |
4,946 | Yantar Shipyard | 1971 | Unlisted: 2004 – sold to a private client[140] (1997–2004 cargo ship[188]) Sunk and then raised in 2006; taken to Turkey to be scrapped in 2007[189] |
Zubr[32] |
 |
Air-cushioned landing craft |
U422 Kramatorsk[db] |
550 |
More |
1988 |
Unlisted in 1999 Subsequently scrapped[190] |
U424 Artemivsk[dc] |
1989 |
Unlisted in 2000 Subsequently scrapped |
U421 Ivan Bohun[dd] |
/ More |
2001 |
2001 sold to Greece |
U420 Donetsk[de] |
1993 |
Unlisted in 2008 Subsequently scrapped |
U423 Horlivka[v] |
More |
1991 |
Unlisted in 2011; subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above) |
(project 1785)[191] |  | Small landing craft | U431 Bryanka[df] |
102 | Azov Shipyard | 1970 | Decommissioned in 2013[23] |
Mine warfare (2 unlisted) |
Sonya |
 |
Base minesweepers |
U331 Mariupol[z][23] |
450 |
Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard |
1978 |
Unlisted in 2012 and 2013 respectively. Both subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea; Melitopol scrapped while under Russian control (see above) |
U330 Melitopol[aa][63] |
1979 |
Auxiliary vessels |
Submersibles (5 unlisted) |
Tethys (project 1605)[53] |
 |
Manned underwater cameras (search and rescue)[54] |
1 vessel[ac][dg][55] |
2.96 |
Leningrad |
1990 |
Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras Most likely decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest, as it was used a monument on this client's territory in 2013[192] |
1 vessel[ac][dh][55] |
1990 |
Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras Decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest[193] |
BK-72-03[ae][55] |
2.95 |
1973 |
Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras Decommissioned and used as a monument in Chornomorsk by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest[55] |
BK-72-05[ae][55] |
1974 |
Decommissioned and used as a monument in Sevastopol by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest;[55] captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above) |
BK-72-06[ae][55][194] |
1974 |
Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras Most likely decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest, as it was used a monument on this client's territory in 2013[194] |
Replenishment (6 unlisted) |
Boris Chilikin |  | Fleet oiler | U757 Makeyevka[di][195] |
22,460 | Baltic Shipyard | 1970 | Decommissioned in 2001[140] and sold to a private client in 2002; subsequently scrapped in 2004[195] |
Type Dubna |  | Medium sea tanker | U758 Kerch[dj][196] |
12,891 | Rauma-Repola | 1979[197] | Decommissioned in 2001[140] and converted to a civil vessel in the same year;[197] subsequently scrapped in 2004[197] |
Toplivo (project 1844) |
 |
Tankers |
U759 Bakhmach[af][ag] |
1,127 |
Alexandria shipyard[60] |
1972 |
Decommissioned in 2013;[23] subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above) |
A760 Fastiv[ah][ai] |
Kherson Shipyard |
1981 |
Decommissioned in 2019;[23] sunk in 2020[198] |
(project 440)[199] |  | Electric power station | U813 Berdychiv[dk] |
1,920 | Okean Shipyard | 1966 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] Sold to a private client in 2005; subsequently sent to Turkey for scrapping[200] |
Boda (project 561) |
|
Depot ship |
A756 Sudak[dl][201] |
2,115 |
Yantar Shipyard |
1957 |
Vessel returned to the Ukrainian Navy from Crimea in April 2014[202] |
Transport (4 unlisted) |
(project 233)[203] | | Large seagoing dry cargo transport | Volga |
6,700 | East Germany | | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
(project 502R) | | Seagoing refrigerator transport | U755 Yalta[dm][204] |
965 | Yaroslavl | 1971 | Decommissioned in 1997,[23] converted to a civil vessel and sold to a private client[205] |
Muna (project 1823) | | Transport | U754 Dzhankoi[al] |
686 | Rybinsk | 1968 | Unlisted: 2013[63] Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above)[13] |
(project 14301)[93] | | Passenger ship | U781 Ostrog |
99.7 | / Kherson Shipyard | 1993[dn] | Decommissioned in 2013;[23] scrapped in 2018 |
Intelligence and research (5 unlisted) |
Moma (project 861) |  | Scout boat | U543 Simferopol[am][23] |
1,560 | Gdańsk Shipyard | 1973 | Unlisted: 2012 (2006–2012 training ship) Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above) |
Niryat (project 522) |
|
Diving support |
U709 Energodar[do] |
119 |
Petrozavod shipyard[68] |
1960 |
Decommissioned in 2004,[23] converted to a civil vessel and sold to a private client[207] |
U707 Vilnohirsk[ao] |
Rybinsk[69] |
1965[69] |
Decommissioned in 2013[23] and subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) |
Stend (project 1236) | | Research boat | U863 Artsyz[dp] |
943 | Zelenodolsk Shipyard | 1972[208] | Decommissioned in 2000;[140] subsequently scrapped[209] |
Vydra (project 106K)[210] | | Research boat | U862 Korosten[dq] |
610 | Soviet Union | 1966 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Command and SAR/medevac (3 unlisted) |
Vytegrales II (project 596P)[211] |
 |
Search and rescue/Control |
U702 Chernivtsi[dr] |
7,230 |
Leningrad[212] |
1968 |
Both decommissioned in 1999;[23] subsequently scrapped |
U704 Ivano-Frankivsk[ds] |
1967 |
Okhtenskiy (project 733S) |
|
Search and rescue vessel/ex-rescue tug |
A706 Izjaslav[dt][213] |
934 |
Petrozavod, Leningrad |
1962 |
Vessel returned to the Ukrainian Navy from Crimea by June 2014 (inclusive) at the latest[214]
Decommissioned in 2015. |
Survey (4 unlisted) |
(project 220) | | Degaussing ship | SR-173[144] |
659 | Wärtsilä Crichton-Vulcan | 1953-1957[du] | Decommissioned and converted to a civil vessel;[215] subsequently decommissioned in this role by 2020 at the latest[216] |
Drofa (project 16830) | | Small hydrographic survey boat | MGK-1694 |
5.4 | Lazarevskoye[81] | 1987 | Decommissioned in 2013[23] Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) |
|
A659 MGK-1877[dv][217][218] |
Sochi[219] |
1989[218] |
Vessel returned to the Ukrainian Navy from Crimea by June 2014 (inclusive) at the latest[217] |
Onega (project 18061) |
 |
Hydroacoustic monitoring |
A812 Sieverodonetsk[dw][220][221] |
1,460 |
Zelendolsk Shipyard[222] |
1987 |
Vessel returned to the Ukrainian Navy from Crimea by June 2014 (inclusive) at the latest[223] |
Fire rescue (2 unlisted) |
Pozharny-I (project 364) |
|
Firefighting |
A722 Borshchiv[az] |
180.8 |
Rybinsk[85][86] |
1954 |
Both decommissioned in 2019[23] |
A728 Evpatoria[ba] |
1954 |
Supply (2 unlisted) |
Shelon (project 1388N) |  | Torpedo retriever[24] | U890 Malin[dx] |
400 | Sosnovka | 1974 | Decommissioned in 2002[23] |
Klazma (project 1274)[224] |  | Cable layer | U851 Novi Bug[dy][225] |
7,031 | Oy Wärtsilä Ab Turku Shipyard | 1968 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[225] |
Tug (6 unlisted) |
Type Z[226] |
|
Harbor tug |
RB-69 |
360 |
Regensburg |
1941[140] |
Decommissioned, renamed and sold to a private client in 1997[227][228][229] |
Type O[230] | | Harbor tug | U944 Mikhalych[dz] | 190 | Linz | 1940[140] |
Leased by the Navy to a private client[140] from 1996[231] Decommissioned, renamed and sold to Romania all between 2002 and 2004 (inclusive)[231][232][233] |
(project T63OZh) | | Towing tug | U943 BUK-300 |
19.8 | Kostroma | 1956 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
A941 BUK-239 |
1954 |
Decommissioned in 2014. |
A942 Novoozerne[ea] |
Rybinsk |
1955 |
Vessel returned to the Ukrainian Navy from Crimea on 19 April 2014[234]
Decommissioned in 2015. |
Goliat |
 |
Seagoing tug |
A831 Kovel[eb][235] |
890 |
Petrozavod, Leningrad |
1965 |
Harbor cutters (23 unlisted) |
Flamingo (project 1415) |
 |
Diving cutters |
U931 RK-1935[s] |
57 |
Sosnovka[107][108][109] |
1979 |
RK-1935 and Konotop decommissioned in 2013[23] Both subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) |
Konotop[s][bq] |
1981 |
A733 Tokmak[br][bt] |
43.2 |
1983 |
Tokmak decommissioned in 2021[23] |
PO-2 (project 376) |
 |
Harbor diving boats |
RVK-5[bu] |
41 |
Sosnovka[236][237][112] |
1959 |
RVK-5, Mirgorod, RK-936 and RK-1036 decommissioned in 2004;[23] Mirgorod subsequently scrapped |
U731 Mirgorod[ec][ed] |
38.2 |
1977 |
RK-936[ec] |
|
RK-1036[bv] |
43.2 |
1973[110] |
RVK-761[bu] |
41 |
Soviet Union[112] |
1971 |
RVK-761 decommissioned in 2008[140] and subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) Sunk at some point after decommissioning, possibly after capture; raised and then scrapped in 2020[113] |
(project 371)[ee][119] |
 |
Patrol cutters |
Shiryaevo |
9.83 |
Vympel Shipyard |
|
Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
A932 RK-1942 |
Rybinsk[238][120] |
1984 |
Decommissioned in 2019[23] |
A925 RK-767 |
1982 |
Decommissioned in 2021[23] |
(project 366) | | Regatta harbor boat | Head no. 7634 |
| | | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Sochi (project RK-26S) | | Harbor patrol | Sochi |
| Lazarevskoye[239] | 1968 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Rhythm-450 (project 299) |
|
Harbor patrol |
Head no. 1370 |
1.5 |
Leningrad Experimental Shipyard |
1984[240] |
Head no. 1370 and head no. 1371 decommissioned in 2004 |
Head no. 1371 |
1984[240] |
Head no. 851385 |
|
Head no. 851385 decommissioned in 2013[23] |
(project 1394A) | | Harbor patrol | RK-603[121] |
8.62 | Lazarevskoye | 1973[241] | Decommissioned in 2005 and converted to a civil vessel in the same year[241] Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) |
Strizh (project 1390) | | Harbor patrol | RK-1346 |
3.2 | Soviet Union | 1968[126] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
|
A923 |
|
|
(project LM-4-87MK)[242] |
|
Harbor patrol |
Head no. 574[ef] |
2.15 |
Svir Shipyard, Nikolsky |
1985 |
Both decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Head no. 578 |
1985[242] |
(project LM-87MK) |
|
Harbor patrol |
Head no. 532[eg][eh] |
2.15 |
Svir Shipyard, Nikolsky |
|
Both decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Borey |
Soviet Union |
1984[242] |
(project 363M)[243] | | Harbor support | RBK-60 |
25.5 | Shipyard No. 345, Yaroslavl | 1960 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Special purpose boats and barges (21 unlisted) |
(project DD-17)[244] | | Barracks ship | PKZ-69 |
| | 1980 | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
Danube-sea (project 1635K) |
|
Target ships |
SM-1[245] |
1,300[246] |
|
1986[ei] |
Both decommissioned in 2021[23] (previously used as target ships for testing the R-360 Neptune anti-ship cruise missile[247]) |
SM-2[248] |
Kiliia |
1988[ei] |
(project 1784) | | Target ship | U948 SM-15 |
823 | Zhovtnevoe | 1963 | Decommissioned in 2012;[23] subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above) |
(project 436B)[249] | | Target barge | Target shield no. 22 |
142 | Soviet Union | 1981–1983[140] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
BAMT-14790 | | Artillery barge | U906 BAMT-14790 |
| | 1942 | Decommissioned in 1996,[23] sold to a private client and renamed in the same year; subsequently scrapped in 2000[250] |
(project 106) | | Dry cargo barge | U904 Bilyaivka[ej][251] |
534 | Kherson Shipyard | 1965[140] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
(project 1526) |  | Dry cargo barge | U761 Novgorod-Siversky[ce] |
392 | Ilyichevsk | 1965[135] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above) |
BSS-35085[252] | | Dry cargo barge | BSS-35085 |
85 | Nazi Germany | 1940[140] | Decommissioned in 2013[140] |
BSS-34125[253] | | Dry cargo barge | BSS-34125 Bryanka |
| Nazi Germany | 1940[140] | Decommissioned in 2013[140] |
BNN-86980[254] | | Barge | BNN-86980 |
| Nazi Germany | 1945[255] | Decommissioned in 2000;[23] sold to a private client, converted to a floating dock and renamed in 2010[255] |
PMR-66[256] | | Floating repair station barge | BSN-188595 |
| Austria | 1926[140] | Decommissioned in 2013[256] |
Sovremenny |  | Floating storage barge[ek] | Vnushitelnyy[257] |
7,940[el] | Mykolaiv | 1987 | Scrapped in 1996[258] |
(project 1515) | | Oil and garbage collector | MUS-857 |
39.12 | Azov Shipyard | 1974[259] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] |
(project 814M) | | Floating warehouse | A955 Zolotonosha[cf] |
2,064 | Gorodets | 1986[138] | Decommissioned in 2019[23] and sunk as a target ship in the same year[139] |
Oskol I (project 300) |  | Floating workshop | Olvia[em] |
2,546 | Szczecin Shipyard[261] | 1964 | Decommissioned in 2000 and scrapped in the same year[261] |
(project SPD-201) |
|
Floating docks |
U950 PD-19 Khmilnyk[en][262] |
|
Mykolaiv |
1979[263] |
Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[264] |
U949 PD-23 Berestechko[265] |
|
1977[263] |
Decommissioned in 2008 and sold to a private client in the same year[265] |
Lama (project 2001) | | Floating dock | U533 Kolomyia[eo] |
4,770 | Chernomorsky | 1971[266] | Decommissioned in 1999;[23] subsequently scrapped |
(project D-9030) | | Crane vessel | U804 Sarny[ep] |
1,060[267] | Budapest | 1983[268] | Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[267] |
(project 4LDG) | | Crane vessel | Kagarlik[eq] |
328[269] | Gheorgiu-Dej | 1965[270] | Decommissioned in 2000[23] and sold to a private client[271] |