Eastern European Hockey League
| Sport | Ice hockey | 
|---|---|
| Founded | 1995 | 
| Ceased | 2004 | 
| No. of teams | 9 | 
| Countries | Belarus Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia Ukraine | 
| Last champion(s) | Keramin Minsk | 
| Most titles | Sokil Kyiv, Berkut-Kyiv, Keramin Minsk (2 each) | 
Eastern European Hockey League (EEHL) was a regional ice hockey league which existed from 1995 to 2004.
History
The league was formed in 1995 by Belarus, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine, to provide a higher-level competition for teams from those countries. In some years, the league also included teams from Poland and Russia. Besides the main tournament for professional ice hockey teams, the league also had junior championships in several age groups.
In 2004, it was dissolved. Instead, two teams from Latvia (Metalurgs Liepāja and Rīga 2000) and one team from Ukraine (Sokil Kyiv) joined the Belarusian Extraliga. There was temporarily a period where the Belarusian Extraliga was closed to foreign teams, but that has since changed as Metalurgs Liepāja, Dinamo/Juniors Rīga, and Sokil Kyiv became members of the league.
Teams of the last season (2003–04)
- Division A
 HK Rīga 2000 HK Rīga 2000
 HK Metalurgs Liepāja HK Metalurgs Liepāja
 ASK/Ogre ASK/Ogre
 Sokil Kyiv Sokil Kyiv
 HK Neman Grodno HK Neman Grodno
 Keramin Minsk Keramin Minsk
 HK Gomel HK Gomel
 Khimvolokno Khimvolokno
 Titan Klin Titan Klin
- Division B
 HK Vitebsk HK Vitebsk
 HK Kyiv HK Kyiv
 Junior Minsk Junior Minsk
 HK Gomel HK Gomel
 Riga 85 Riga 85
 Khimvolokno Mogilev Khimvolokno Mogilev
EEHL champions
- 1995–96:  HK Neman Grodno HK Neman Grodno
- 1996–97:  Juniors Rīga Juniors Rīga
- 1997–98:  Sokil Kyiv Sokil Kyiv
- 1998–99:  Sokil Kyiv Sokil Kyiv
- 1999–00:  Berkut Kyiv Berkut Kyiv
- 2000–01:  Berkut Kyiv Berkut Kyiv
- 2001–02:  Metalurgs Liepāja Metalurgs Liepāja
- 2002–03:  Keramin Minsk Keramin Minsk
- 2003–04:  Keramin Minsk Keramin Minsk
EEHL Cup winners
- 1997–98:  Sokil Kyiv Sokil Kyiv
- 1998–99:  Sokil Kyiv Sokil Kyiv
- 2000–01:  Berkut Kyiv Berkut Kyiv
- 2003–04:  Titan Klin Titan Klin