Detailed timeline of UK military assistance to Ukraine (February 2022-present)
What military assistance is the UK providing to Ukraine?

The government will publish a Defence Housing Strategy in 2025. What did the Strategic Defence Review 2025 say about service accommodation?
Strategic Defence Review 2025: Armed forces housing (187 KB , PDF)
The government has pledged to spend an additional £1.5 billion on armed forces housing as part of the Strategic Defence Review (SDR), published in June 2025.
The Ministry of Defence will publish a new defence housing strategy later in 2025.
This briefing sets out what the SDR says about housing and accommodation, related measures already announced by the government, and signposts to related Commons Library research briefings.
The armed forces provide subsidised accommodation to personnel and their families. This is considered to be one of the benefits of service and the provision of accommodation reflects the unique nature of service life: the need to move frequently, the lack of choice in location, and the remoteness of some bases. Accommodation varies from single living bed spaces on bases (known as SLA, or single living accommodation) to family housing grouped together on dedicated estates (known as SFA, or service family accommodation).
However, the condition of family accommodation, issues with mould and damp, as well as with the maintenance of and speed of repairs has been a major issue for personnel in recent years and has an impact on retention.
The strategic defence review was commissioned by the government shortly after taking office in July 2024. The review was independently led, by former Defence Secretary and former NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson. The government published the strategic defence review, with a foreword from the Prime Minister and Defence Secretary, on 2 June 2025. The government has endorsed the review and accepted all 62 its recommendations.
The reviewers criticised “shoddy accommodation” and said enhancing the standard of accommodation is “essential to the morale and retention of service personnel”. The review also called on the MOD to end the uncertainty regarding access to SFA by personnel in long-term, non-married relationships (see section 3.6 below). The review said that “years of squeezing funding for the maintenance of SFA and SLA has contributed to a crisis in recruitment and retention”. The review also criticised current plans for investment, saying that they “do not arrest the overall rate of decline”.
The review called on the government to set out, in the forthcoming Defence Housing Strategy, how it will:
(a) improve the overall standard of accommodation, in alignment with commercial best practice for ensuring high-quality, good-value accommodation
(b) widen eligibility for those in long-term relationships.
The review also recommended the MOD explore options to support Service personnel’s aspirations for home ownership.
The condition, maintenance and repair of service accommodation has long been an issue for armed forces personnel. Annual surveys of armed forces personnel reflect dissatisfaction with the overall standard of accommodation and responses to, and quality of, maintenance and repair requests.
Personnel have also identified accommodation provision as a factor influencing their intention to leave the armed forces (though a higher number said accommodation was a reason to stay).
The Defence Select Committee, Public Accounts Committee, and the National Audit Office, have scrutinised the condition, maintenance and provision of service accommodation in recent years, most recently in December 2024 by the Defence Committee: Service Accommodation.
Since taking office in July 2024, the Labour government has announced:
This briefing explains each of these in more detail.
The government is currently working on a new defence housing strategy, which it expects to publish later in 2025. This will “deliver a generational renewal of military accommodation” according to Luke Pollard, the Minister for the Armed Forces.
The strategy will be “driven by an independent review team” led by former MP and housing expert Natalie Elphicke Ross OBE. The review team includes the housing specialist for the Army Families Federation. The three service family federations have launched a survey for serving personnel and families to help inform their contributions to the strategy.
The previous government published its defence accommodation strategy in October 2022.
Further information on issues with maintenance and housing under recent successive governments can be found in Commons Library research briefing Armed forces housing: Maintenance issues.
More information on the sale and subsequent buy-back can be found in Commons Library research briefing Armed forces family housing and Annington Homes.
Further information about the previous government’s proposals for armed forces housing can be found in Commons Library research briefing Armed forces housing: The new accommodation offer.
The National Audit Office (NAO), Public Accounts Select Committee (PAC) and the Defence Select Committee have reported extensively on the provision and maintenance of service accommodation since 2010. Key reports include:
Strategic Defence Review 2025: Armed forces housing (187 KB , PDF)
What military assistance is the UK providing to Ukraine?
This briefing provides information on how UK armed forces personnel statistics are measured and discusses current and historic strength levels. Statistics on the diversity of the armed forces, people joining and leaving, and surplus or deficits of strength against targets are also discussed.
The Armed Forces Commissioner Bill 2024-25 would establish an independent Armed Forces Commissioner. The paper has been updated to reflect Lords amendments.