U.S. officials confirm Russia would be invited to December leaders’ summit as White House weighs diplomatic risks and participation uncertainty
The U.S. government’s planning for the 2026 G20 summit in Miami includes an intention to invite Russian President Vladimir Putin, according to officials familiar with the preparations, marking a significant diplomatic signal amid continuing tensions over Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The summit, scheduled for December at the Trump National Doral resort in Florida, is expected to bring together leaders of the world’s major economies.
Russia remains a formal member of the G20, although President Vladimir Putin has not attended in person since 2019, following the
COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, as well as the international legal and political fallout from the war.
What is confirmed is that administration officials have said Russia will be invited in line with its G20 membership, and that the White House is currently treating an invitation as part of standard summit planning.
Officials have also emphasized that no formal invitation has yet been issued, and the Kremlin has not confirmed whether Putin would attend if invited.
The reports come alongside mixed public signals from President
Donald Trump.
In recent remarks, he has indicated openness to engagement with all G20 leaders and suggested that participation by Russia could be “helpful,” while also saying he was not aware of a finalized invitation being sent.
This reflects an approach that blends preparatory diplomatic inclusion with continued uncertainty over execution and attendance.
What remains unclear is whether Putin will ultimately be formally invited in a finalized diplomatic communication, and whether he would accept such an invitation given his absence from recent G20 gatherings and the political and legal constraints surrounding international travel.
The G20 summit itself is set to be hosted at a Trump-owned property, a detail that has already drawn attention in earlier stages of summit planning.
The broader guest list and participation format are still being finalized, and previous reporting indicates that some country-level invitations and exclusions have already been politically contentious.
If the invitation proceeds, it would represent one of the most closely watched diplomatic decisions of the summit cycle, given the ongoing war in Ukraine and the strained relationship between Russia and many Western governments.
However, the current status remains at the planning and signaling stage rather than a completed diplomatic exchange.