Economic Growth in Ukraine
Ukraine's economy recorded an average growth rate of -2.3% in the decade to 2024, compared to the 4.0% average for CIS Countries. In 2024, real GDP growth was 2.9%. For more GDP information, visit our dedicated page.
Ukraine GDP Chart
Note: This chart displays Economic Growth (GDP, annual variation in %) for Ukraine from 2014 to 2025.
Source: Macrobond.
Ukraine GDP Data
| 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Economic Growth (GDP, ann. var. %) | 3.3 | -28.2 | 6.0 | 3.5 | 1.7 |
| GDP (USD bn) | 199 | 160 | 181 | 191 | 214 |
| GDP (EUR bn) | 168 | 153 | 167 | 176 | 189 |
| GDP (UAH bn) | 5,451 | 5,239 | 6,628 | 7,662 | 8,931 |
| Economic Growth (Nominal GDP, ann. var. %) | 29.1 | -3.9 | 26.5 | 15.6 | 16.6 |
Economy slips into contraction in the first quarter of 2026
Q1 growth weakest in three years: Ukraine's GDP contracted 0.6% in annual terms in Q1, following a 2.8% expansion in the prior quarter. Q1's reading was the weakest since Q1 2023. On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, the economy contracted 0.7% in Q1, following a 0.7% expansion in the previous quarter.
Power shortages drive downturn: Relative to the previous quarter's data, figures for Q1 worsened for private consumption (+11.0% on a year-on-year basis vs +11.1% in Q4), government consumption (-1.6% vs +0.3% in Q4) and fixed investment (-7.9% vs +7.6% in Q4). In contrast, readings picked up for exports of goods and services (+1.0% vs -1.3% in Q4) and imports of goods and services (+15.6% vs +11.6% in Q4). The downturn was led by power shortages, as infrastructure suffered significant damage from Russian strikes, a lack of expenditure amid delays in external financing and abnormally cold weather. Net exports weighed on the economy, as imports surged due to strong demand for energy and investment goods—including gas clearance, energy equipment and petroleum purchases, as well as farm machinery and intermediate goods ahead of spring sowing—while export growth remained modest. Meanwhile, public consumption declined, as tighter fiscal policy led to lower government spending, while fixed investment also fell sharply, reflecting reduced capital spending, limited fiscal resources and adverse weather conditions that constrained investment activity. Still, private spending growth remained robust amid strong wage growth in both the public and private sectors.
GDP to rebound in Q2: The economy is seen returning to growth in the second quarter of 2026, before gradually accelerating through Q1 2027. GDP growth will be supported by strong private spending amid strong wage growth, ongoing investment in the defense sector and a gradual recovery in production capacity. However, the pace of the recovery will be modest due to high energy and supply costs, persistent power shortages and weaker fiscal support. In 2026 as a whole, GDP growth is seen hovering close to 2025’s print.
Panelist insight: On the 2026 outlook, analysts at EIU commented: “Growth will remain driven by private consumption and fixed investment, both of which should remain robust in spite of headwinds. Fixed investment will be supported by capital expenditure in the defence sector, reconstruction of energy infrastructure and rebuilding of war damage. It will be largely underwritten by external funding and companies drawing down on existing liquidity, making it resilient to higher domestic interest rates. Private consumption will weaken somewhat […], but will remain supported by strong wage rises due to fundamentally tight labour markets. There may also be a jump in consumption in the second quarter as consumers bring forward purchases as inflation expectations increase, followed by a cooling in the second part of the year.”
How should you choose a forecaster if some are too optimistic while others are too pessimistic? FocusEconomics collects Ukrainian GDP projections for the next ten years from a panel of 35 analysts at the leading national, regional and global forecast institutions. These projections are then validated by our in-house team of economists and data analysts and averaged to provide one Consensus Forecast you can rely on for each indicator. By averaging all forecasts, upside and downside forecasting errors tend to cancel each other out, leading to the most reliable GDP forecast available for Ukrainian GDP.
Download one of our sample reports to visualize what a Consensus Forecast is and see our Ukrainian GDP projections.
Want to get access to the full dataset of Ukrainian GDP forecasts? Send an email to info@focus-economics.com.
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