Ukrainian PM Svyrydenko reports UAH 4.76 million in income and ownership of two apartments.

Svyrydenko declared income and apartments
Svyrydenko declared income and apartments

Svyrydenko's 2025 asset and income disclosure

According to Novyny.live: Ukraine's Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko has released her 2025 financial declaration, revealing substantial earnings and property holdings. The document shows her total income for the year reached 4.76 million hryvnias. The bulk of this came from her official salary in the Cabinet of Ministers, amounting to 1.37 million hryvnias. A significant additional sum of 3.24 million hryvnias was received as a fee from the Kyiv School of Economics. Other income sources include 5,195 hryvnias from the Serhiy Nyzhnyi Kyiv School of Public Administration and 144,000 hryvnias from property rental. Private education expenses totaled 513,212 hryvnias.

Financial assets and real estate

The declaration also details Svyrydenko's financial assets. She held 138,712 hryvnias in a PrivatBank account and just 1 hryvnia at JSC 'Universal Bank'. A rental guarantee deposit amounted to 100,000 hryvnias. Additionally, she possesses foreign currency cash reserves worth $10,000.

Regarding property, Svyrydenko owns two apartments: one in Kyiv measuring 33.5 square meters and another in Chernihiv of 74.3 square meters. She also holds a 25% ownership stake in a 92.7-square-meter apartment in Chernihiv and a land plot of 1,496 square meters in the village of Klochkiv. Furthermore, she rents a 92.7-square-meter apartment in Kyiv. Her assets include a 2016 BMW X3 vehicle.

Overall, Svyrydenko's 2025 declaration highlights significant earnings and a diverse property portfolio, drawing public and media scrutiny.

Publishing such declarations by a prime minister is a crucial step toward ensuring transparency among public officials and building citizen trust. These reports allow the public to assess the financial standing of officeholders and can impact political reputation.

Given Ukraine's ongoing focus on transparency and anti-corruption efforts, Svyrydenko's disclosure is likely to spark further debate in society and the media.


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