Most people have heard the name Irpin. Fewer know exactly what happened there — and why it matters beyond the headlines.
Irpin is a commuter town of about 60,000 people sitting 25 kilometres northwest of Kyiv. Before February 2022 it was entirely unremarkable: residential blocks, weekend dachas, a river, a railway station. On 27 February 2022 — three days into the full-scale invasion — Russian armoured columns entered from the north.
What followed over the next 35 days became one of the defining episodes of the war.
The Russian plan — and why it failed here
Russia’s opening strategy in February 2022 was not a siege. It was a decapitation strike: advance on Kyiv so fast that the Ukrainian government collapses, leadership flees or is captured, and the country falls within days. The northwest axis — through Hostomel, Irpin, and Bucha — was the main thrust toward the capital.
The plan assumed Ukrainian resistance would be minimal. The assumption was catastrophically wrong.
Ukrainian forces destroyed the bridge over the Irpin River on 26 February — a critical decision that slowed the Russian advance and bought time for the defence of Kyiv to be organised. The river became a front line. Civilians evacuated across a makeshift crossing under fire for weeks — photographs of that evacuation ran on front pages worldwide.
Russian forces occupied Irpin but were never able to hold it comfortably. Ukrainian territorial defence units, regular military, and volunteers harassed the occupation continuously. The town changed hands in brutal street-by-street fighting.
On 28 March 2022, Ukrainian forces declared Irpin liberated. It was the first significant Ukrainian recapture of the war — 29 days after the invasion began.
What was found after liberation
When Ukrainian forces and journalists entered Irpin in late March and early April 2022, what they documented was systematic:
- Residential buildings destroyed by artillery and tank fire
- Civilian bodies in streets, yards, and basements
- Evidence of looting on a mass scale — electronics, jewellery, clothing, even food
- Cars shot up on evacuation routes, occupants still inside
- Infrastructure — water, electricity, gas — deliberately damaged
The destruction was not random. Russian forces had occupied houses, used civilian buildings as firing positions, and left behind equipment, documents, and in some cases, the bodies of their own soldiers.
Irpin’s damage was severe but Bucha — the adjacent town — became the name most associated with documented atrocities. The two towns are inseparable in this history: same occupation, same forces, same period, different levels of international coverage.
What you can see today
Irpin has been rebuilding since mid-2022. Parts of the town look almost normal. Parts do not.
What remains visible:
- The destroyed bridge over the Irpin River — the original bridge was not rebuilt; a new crossing was constructed nearby. The ruins of the old one are still there.
- Heavily damaged residential blocks — several have been partially demolished, others are mid-reconstruction, some remain as they were
- The evacuation point — the riverbank area where civilians crossed under fire. A memorial has been placed there.
- Street-level damage — bullet holes, shrapnel marks, and the particular kind of structural damage that comes from tanks firing down residential streets
The town is accessible and residents have returned. Walking through it is a very different experience from reading about it.
Why Irpin specifically matters
Three reasons.
First, it is where Russia’s main strategic objective — the capture of Kyiv — was definitively stopped. The failure on the northwest axis was not only military; it was the moment the “three-day war” narrative collapsed. Every subsequent development in this conflict flows from that failure.
Second, the documentation of what Russian forces did in Irpin and Bucha during the occupation permanently altered the international framing of the war. Before the liberation, there was still significant debate in some Western capitals about the nature of Russia’s objectives. After the images from Bucha were published, that debate became substantially harder to sustain.
Third, it is 25 minutes from central Kyiv. The proximity — a town that looks like any European suburb — is the most disorienting thing about visiting. There is no safe distance here. The war did not happen somewhere remote.
Visiting Irpin
Irpin is part of the Horrors of Russian Occupation tour — the most-requested tour in the Capital Tours Kyiv programme. The full-day route covers Irpin, Bucha, Hostomel, and the key sites on Kyiv’s northwestern front: the airport, the destroyed bridge, the evacuation crossing, the tank cemetery.
Every site comes with context — what happened, when, who was involved, and what the strategic and human significance was. This is not a drive-by tour. It is a ground-level account from a guide who was in Kyiv from the first hours.
If you want to understand this war beyond the headlines, Irpin is where to start.