When the air raid siren sounds in Kyiv, the city makes a familiar move: down.
Hundreds of thousands of people — on a heavy attack night — descend into one of the deepest metro systems in the world. Some stations sit 100 metres below street level. Some were designed with exactly this purpose in mind.
Here is what actually happens — and what it tells you about the city.
The metro was built to survive this
Kyiv’s metro was built in the Soviet era, and Soviet infrastructure planners did not think only about commuters. The deep stations — Arsenalna, Khreshchatyk, Olimpiiska — were designed with the understanding that a nuclear war was possible, and that major metro systems would serve as mass shelters.
Arsenalna station holds the record for the deepest metro station in the world, at 105.5 metres underground. Getting there requires two escalator rides. When you descend, you descend into something built for survival.
The deeper stations have blast-resistant doors, their own ventilation systems, and the structural capacity to shelter tens of thousands of people for extended periods. This was not repurposed after February 2022 — it was the original design intention, finally realised.
What an air raid shelter night in the metro looks like
The alert sounds. Within minutes, the metro stations transform.
Trains keep running — at least initially — bringing people down from the streets. Then, once the all-clear is not imminent, the system shifts to shelter mode:
- Trains stop and open their doors on the platforms — passengers and shelter-seekers can sit inside the carriages
- Blankets and folding chairs appear — regular shelter-goers know to bring them
- The platforms fill — families, elderly people, people with dogs, people with laptops, people who simply came down from the street
- Life continues — people charge phones, work remotely, read, sleep
The most striking thing: it does not feel like panic. Kyiv has been doing this since 2022. The rhythm is learned. People are tired of it, but not broken by it.
The regulars and the first-timers
After two years, the metro shelter population has stratified.
The regulars — mostly older people, families with children, people whose apartment buildings have no shelter — have their routines. They know which station platform has the best airflow, which corner is quietest, which train carriage to claim. They bring pillows.
The young professionals — laptop open, AirPods in, continuing whatever meeting they were on. The alert is an interruption, not a crisis. You adapt.
The tourists and newcomers — easy to spot. A little wide-eyed. Looking around to calibrate: is this as serious as it looks? The answer is: it is serious, and it is also completely normal.
One thing visitors consistently report: the atmosphere is calm to the point of being surreal. People help each other. Nobody pushes. There is a collective understanding — we have been here before, we will be here again, we get through it together.
What is actually happening above ground
While Kyiv is in the metro, its air defence is working.
The city is protected by multiple overlapping systems: Soviet-era Ukrainian SAMs, US-supplied Patriot batteries, German IRIS-T units, and domestic Ukrainian systems. The goal is to intercept incoming Shaheds and ballistic missiles before they reach populated areas.
The large majority of threats are intercepted. The ones that are not produce the explosions you sometimes hear — sharp, distant, or closer. The metro shudders occasionally. Then it doesn’t.
Understanding what is happening above gives the underground a different quality. This is not people hiding from something unstoppable. It is people waiting while their city’s defences do their work.
The practical reality for visitors
Should you go to the shelter when the siren sounds? Yes. Every time. The risk any individual attack poses is low — but there is no logic in staying above when going down costs you twenty minutes and could, theoretically, matter.
Will you spend your whole trip in the metro? No. A typical Kyiv visit involves one to three alerts, of which most resolve within an hour. The rhythm becomes clear fast.
Is it an experience? Unambiguously yes. Sitting in Arsenalna station at 2am, 105 metres underground, surrounded by Kyivans who have been doing this for two years — that is not something a news article or a documentary gives you. It is one of those moments that clarifies the difference between understanding something and being somewhere.
The metro as a microcosm
If you want to understand Kyiv’s relationship to the war — not the abstract political version, but the daily human version — the metro during an air raid is one of the most compressed ways to see it.
The underground city is not separate from the city above. It is the same people, the same conversations, the same laptops and dogs and arguments. Just 100 metres lower.
And when the all-clear sounds, they all go back up. The escalators fill. The trains resume. The coffee shop opens.
That is Kyiv.
Visiting Kyiv and want to understand what you’re seeing? Private guided tours with a guide who has been here since February 2022. Reach us directly via WhatsApp.