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Ukraine Restores Mandatory State Statistical Reporting

by Roman Cheplyk
Friday, July 4, 2025
2 MIN
Ukraine Restores Mandatory State Statistical Reporting

New Reporting Rules Take Effect July 5, 2025 to Strengthen Data-Driven Recovery

Snapshot

Starting July 5, 2025, all enterprises and organizations covered by state statistical observation must once again file regular statistical reports. The Verkhovna Rada approved the changes on June 18, and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed them into law on July 3.


Key Objectives

  • Assess enterprise performance across sectors

  • Track labor-market trends and workforce dynamics

  • Measure structural shifts in the post-war economy and society

  • Enable evidence-based policy for reconstruction and long-term growth

“Systematic data collection is crucial for understanding the real state of enterprises and making effective decisions for Ukraine’s restoration,”
Arsen Makarchuk, Head of the State Statistics Service of Ukraine


Compliance Timeline

Date Requirement
July 5 2025 Mandatory reporting resumes for all respondents under state statistical observation
Oct 5 2025 Transition deadline: firms that missed reports during martial law may file outstanding data without penalties

What Businesses Need to Know

  • Who must report?
    Any entity previously subject to compulsory statistical observation before martial law.

  • Grace period:
    Three months to submit backdated reports (for periods during martial law) with no fines.

  • Support materials coming soon:

    • Updated reporting instructions

    • Clarifications on new requirements

    • Technical assistance channels


Next Steps

  1. Review internal data readiness for timely submission.

  2. Monitor the State Statistics Service website for updated guidelines and templates.

  3. Submit any outstanding reports by October 5 to avoid future penalties.


Why It Matters

Accurate, up-to-date statistics will help policymakers, investors, and international partners:

  • Gauge economic health at both national and regional levels

  • Identify labor shortages or surpluses in real time

  • Allocate resources more effectively for infrastructure and social programs

  • Track progress on Ukraine’s recovery and modernization goals

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