The number of Ukrainians entering the European Union has fallen back to pre-invasion levels, a senior EU official said on Monday morning, DW reports.
That means a similar number of Ukrainian citizens are crossing the border in both directions for the first time since early February.
"When it comes to the refugee flows, the situation now is stable," the EU's home affairs commissioner Ylva Johansson said from Prague.
"The crossings between the EU and Ukraine, the numbers are pre-war, pre-COVID level, so we are back to like a normal number of people crossing."
Johansson was in Prague to meet with national home affairs ministers to discuss several issues, including migration. Politico reports that Ukraine's interior minister also joined the meeting.
The Czech Republic, where the meeting was held, has the highest number of Ukrainian refugees per capita, followed by Poland, the Baltic states, and Bulgaria.
But around half of the 6 million Ukrainian refugees who fled since February have already returned home, according to data from Frontex.
However, Czech interior minister Vit Rakusan still warned: "We all hope the situation will improve, but we don't see the end of the war yet."