Top crypto officials of Ukraine: the leader has 100 BTC, and the total number of declarations with digital assets has increased by 16%
In 2025, Ukrainian officials submitted 2,861 declarations containing information about cryptocurrency — 16% more than the previous year. Against the backdrop of a total of 654,159 filed documents, the share of "digital" declarations is still small, but the trend is obvious: interest in crypto assets among civil servants is growing, and the amounts they disclose are impressive.
Absolute record holder — 100 BTC
The largest bitcoin portfolio was declared by a deputy of the Khmelnytskyi District Council, Oleksandr Kizlyar. As of June 10, 2026, his 100 BTC were valued at 278.8 million hryvnias — about 500 million rubles at the current exchange rate. In second place is a people's deputy and head of the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Environmental Policy, Oleh Bondarenko, with 80 BTC (223 million hryvnias). Closing the top three is an employee of the Department of Improvement of the Dnipro City Council, Kristina Pavlova — 20 BTC worth over 55.7 million hryvnias.
Leaders in Ethereum and USDT
In the ranking of Ethereum holders, Oleksandr Kizlyar again leads — 1,000 ETH worth almost 74 million hryvnias. Next come Kristina Pavlova (130 ETH, 9.6 million hryvnias) and a representative of the Kyiv City Prosecutor's Office, Iryna Sukhovetruk, with 100 ETH (about 7.4 million hryvnias).
The largest amount of USDT stablecoins was declared by the head of the Zakarpattia Court of Appeal, Anna Fazikosh — over 1.019 million USDT, equivalent to almost 46 million hryvnias. Second place goes to a deputy of the Odesa District Council, Pavlo Shandra (719,000 USDT, over 32.4 million hryvnias), and third to the director of the Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Examinations, Maksym Kyselov (647,000 USDT, over 29.1 million hryvnias).
Notably, six declarations for 2025 with cryptocurrency data were closed to public access for unknown reasons.
Who declares cryptocurrency most actively
Digital assets are most often reported by employees of the National Police — they account for 548 declarations, or 19% of all cases. Next are employees of the prosecutor's office (358 declarations) and servicemen of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (240). A significant share also comes from representatives of the judicial system (223 declarations) and employees of city councils (198). Among people's deputies of the Verkhovna Rada, 16 out of 391 declared cryptocurrency — about 4%.
Geographically, over 25% of all cryptocurrency declarations came from Kyiv — 820 documents. The capital is followed by Kyiv (277), Dnipropetrovsk (215), Kharkiv (200), and Lviv (174) regions.
Analyst's comment: The increase in the number of declarations with crypto assets among Ukrainian officials is not just statistics, but a reflection of the global trend toward legalizing cryptocurrencies in the public sector. However, the appearance of millions of dollars in stablecoins in the top and closed declarations suggests: we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg. The real volumes of digital assets owned by civil servants could be significantly higher — not everyone is ready to disclose them.