The mission has been reviewing the country's reform achievements since the IMF awarded Ukraine a new four-year, USD 17.5 billion support program in March and released the first tranche of funds.
The second fund release will come once an agreed set of actions, which the IMF did not divulge, "are completed and the conditions are in place for staff to assess that public debt is sustainable with high probability and the program is fully financed," the IMF said in a statement.
The IMF originally conditioned its aid program on the country achieving a deal with private creditors that would reduce its debt payment burden by USD 15 billion over the coming four years.
But with those negotiations still ongoing, the IMF has said it could go ahead and release funds to the country even if Kiev defaults on the private lenders.
After meeting at the IMF headquarters in Washington earlier this week, Ukraine officials and the private creditors' committee said Wednesday that they had reached agreement to launch good-faith and confidential negotiations on restructuring the country's debt next week.
