Business news from Ukraine

Business news from Ukraine

Starting July 15, single ride on Kyiv’s public transit will cost 30 UAH

13 July , 2026  

New fares for single rides on public transit will take effect in Kyiv on July 15—a single ride on the metro, bus, tram, trolleybus, or funicular will cost 30 UAH.

Mayor Vitali Klitschko signed the corresponding order on July 7; the document was published on the Kyiv City State Administration’s website on Friday, July 10.
At the same time, discounts are available on “multi-ride passes” depending on the number of trips: 1–9 trips—30 UAH; 10–19 trips—28.90 UAH; 20–29 trips—27.80 UAH; 30–39 trips—26.60 UAH; 40–49 trips—25.50 UAH; 50 trips – 25 UAH.

Starting August 1, a 60-UAH ticket will also be available, allowing for an unlimited number of transfers within 90 minutes.
Tickets purchased before July 14 are valid until September 14. After that, any unused balance will be automatically credited as a cash equivalent to the transit card.

As previously reported, five petitions on the Kyiv City Council website calling for a halt to fare increases on the capital’s public transit system until the end of martial law had already garnered the number of votes required for consideration, but most of them were rejected by city authorities.

On May 18, the Kyiv City State Administration announced plans to update public transit fares. Specifically, the cost of a single trip will depend on the number of trips purchased on the transit card. Specifically, for 1–9 trips, the fare will be 30 UAH; for 10–19 trips, 28.90 UAH; for 20–29 trips, 27.80 UAH; for 30–39 trips, 26.60 UAH; for 40–49 trips, 25.50 UAH; and for 50 trips, 25 UAH. Monthly passes are also available, with the cost of a single trip amounting to approximately 23.3–23.6 UAH. Discounted rates remain in effect for students and schoolchildren: students will pay 50% of the monthly pass price; schoolchildren will ride for free during the school year and receive a 75% discount in the summer. Separately, there are plans to introduce a transfer ticket for 60 UAH, which will allow unlimited transfers between the metro and surface transit within 90 minutes.

Fares in the capital have not been adjusted since 2018. Starting January 1, 2022, there were plans to raise public transit fares to 20 UAH, and to 12 UAH for holders of the “Kyiv Card.”
At the end of 2021, Klitschko assured the public that public transit fares would not increase until the end of the heating season. In 2023, city officials stated that they had no intention of raising public transit fares until the end of the war. In September 2025, Klitschko stated that although public transit in Kyiv is subsidized, the city is looking for ways to avoid raising fares.

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