Since October 2022, over 17,000 Ukrainian families have taken advantage of the state e-Housing program, which allows them to purchase housing on preferential loans. As of May 2025, the total amount of loans issued under the program exceeded 28 billion hryvnias, the press service of the Ministry of Economy of Ukraine reports.
As noted by First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy Yulia Svyrydenko, the results of the program are impressive: over a million square meters of housing, about 11,000 children who received a roof over their heads, and 17,000 new mortgages are a concrete social result of the work of the state instrument to support the population.
Ukrainians are actively buying housing on both the primary and secondary markets. Among the purchased properties are 1,274 apartments in new buildings, of which 411 are still under construction, as well as 902 properties on the secondary market. In addition, 174 private houses and townhouses have been purchased since the beginning of 2025, which indicates a growing interest in individual housing construction.
The largest number of preferential loans was issued in the Kyiv region — 4,673 transactions. The capital ranks second with 3,604 loans issued. This is followed by Lviv region (1,024), Odesa (799), Vinnytsia (740), Ivano-Frankivsk (737), Rivne (707), Volyn (681), Dnipropetrovsk (545) and Khmelnytskyi region (543).
The e-Housing program was created to make housing affordable for Ukrainians, in particular representatives of certain social categories, taking into account the difficult conditions of wartime and post-war reconstruction. Its successful implementation demonstrates that even in conditions of economic instability, the state is able to form effective mechanisms to support citizens.
According to representatives of the Ministry of Economy, the state plans to continue developing the program and expand its capabilities, in particular by attracting additional funding and expanding the categories of persons who can take advantage of preferential conditions. The focus remains on families with children, military personnel, displaced persons, and critical infrastructure workers.
e-news.com.ua