Ukraine has approved a medium-term public investment plan for 2027 through 2029, setting priorities for projects across 18 sectors. The plan forms a framework for how state budget resources, international financing and guarantees should be directed during the next stage of recovery.
The total envelope is about two hundred seventy one billion hryvnias. The largest annual share is planned for 2027, with smaller volumes in 2028 and 2029. Funding will come from the state budget, international financial institutions, partner governments, grants, technical assistance, state guarantees and special funds.
Where the money goes
The largest priorities are education and science, transport and postal infrastructure, municipal infrastructure, healthcare and energy. Together, these areas reflect the practical needs of reconstruction: safe learning spaces, roads and logistics, water and heat systems, hospitals, power assets and digital modernization.
The plan also includes cross-cutting criteria. Projects should support energy efficiency, digitalization, climate resilience, gender equality and accessibility. That matters because Ukraine is trying to move from emergency spending toward a more disciplined investment pipeline.
Only projects that match approved priorities and enter the Unified Project Portfolio will be eligible for budget funding. This is intended to reduce fragmentation and make public investment more transparent, although the real impact will depend on project selection, procurement quality and the ability of local authorities to prepare bankable proposals.
