Since Russia declared war on Ukraine about two weeks ago, more than 70 corporations from nearly every industry have severed or pulled back their business links with the country.
Their actions include suspending operations in Russia, breaking ties with Russian clients, closing down online and in-person sales to Russian consumers, and freezing financial transactions, whether mandated by sanctions or just a matter of choice.
This industry-organized list is not meant to be exhaustive, as new companies join on a daily basis.
It will be often updated.
Automotive
- Aston Martin
- Daimler Truck
- Ford
- General Motors
- Harley-Davidson
- Jaguar Land Rover
- Mercedes-Benz
- Nissan
- Toyota
- Volkswagen
- Volvo
Aviation
- Airbus
- American Airlines
- Boeing
- Delta Air Lines
- United Airlines
Energy
- BP
- ExxonMobil
- Shell
Food and beverage
- Coca-Cola
- McDonald’s
- PepsiCo
- Starbucks
- Yum! Brands
Consumer Goods
- Procter & Gamble
- Unilever
Leisure and Hospitality
- airbnb
- Booking.com
- Expedia
Logistics
- DHL
- FedEx
- Maersk
- UPS
Media and Entertainment
- Netflix
- Paramount Pictures
- Roku
- Sony Pictures Entertainment
- Universal Pictures
- The Walt Disney Co.
- WarnerMedia
- WWE
Payment Services
- American Express
- mastercard
- Paypal
- Visa
Professional Services
- Accenture/
- Boston Consulting Group
- Deloitte
- Ernst & Young
- KPMG
- McKinsey & Co.
- PricewaterhouseCoopers
Retail
- Adidas
- Burberry
- Estée Lauder
- H&M
- Ikea
- Inditex
- Kering
- lego
- Levi Strauss & Co.
- Prada
- puma
- The TJX Cos.
- Under Armor
Technology
- Amazon
- Apple
- Dell Technologies
- Electronic Arts
- HP
- IBM
- Intel
- Meta
- Microsoft
- Oracle
- Samsung
- SAP
- Snap
- Spotify
- TikTok