24.04.2025.

Russia seizing thousands of homes in occupied Mariupol

Russian authorities are systematically seizing thousands of homes from Ukrainian residents of Mariupol, a BBC Verify investigation has found as the city marks three years of occupation.

At least 5,700 homes have been identified for seizure, many belonging to people who had to flee the city, our analysis of documents published by the Russian-installed city authorities since July 2024 shows.

To save their homes, Ukrainians would have to face a dangerous return to Mariupol via Russia, gruelling security checks, a complex bureaucratic process and overwhelming pressure to accept a Russian passport.

Most of the impacted properties were once occupied by Ukrainians who either fled or died during Russia's 86-day siege of the strategically important city in 2022. Human Rights Watch said the bombardment killed more than 8,000 people, but noted that figure is "likely a significant underestimation".

The confiscations appear to be part of a larger scheme to “Russify” the occupied coastal city, which includes the construction of new military facilities and renaming streets to Moscow-approved titles.

Russia’s siege left 93% of Mariupol’s high-rise buildings - 443 towers - destroyed or damaged, a study by Human Rights Watch found. Since then, Russia claims to have built more than 70 new blocks of flats, but locals say a huge housing shortage persists.

There have been reports for some time that Russia has been seizing property in occupied Ukraine. But a new law has accelerated the process - and made it harder for Ukrainian owners to assert their rights.

As well as the 2,200 homes set for imminent seizure by city officials, another 3,550 have been identified for potential confiscation, city documents analysed by BBC Verify show.

Mariupol officials failed to reply when approached for comment.

Halyna is among the 350,000 Ukrainians estimated to have fled Mariupol to escape Russian occupation. We have agreed not to identify her surname because of safety concerns for her family who remain in the city.

She said her block of flats in the seaside city - which had a pre-war population of 425,000 - was heavily damaged by Russian tank fire during the siege. She has been told the "windows and doors" of the flat have been repaired, and that people are living there without her permission. She fears her flat will be seized.

“This is legalised stealing of property,” she said.

Russian officials use the term “ownerless” to describe homes they say are not in use or have no legal owner - effectively property not registered in Russia.

But these flats do have legal owners - including Ukrainian residents who fled Russian occupation, or the heirs of those who died in Russian attacks.

Official documents posted on the pro-Russian administration’s website show the complex process - outlined below - that leads to properties being seized after they are reported by local inspectors or residents.

We could not find records of how many flats have passed the final court stage. But at a recent conference Oleg Morgun - the Russian-installed mayor of Mariupol - said a final court decision had been made to seize some 600 flats.

In practice if your home gets into any of those lists your property is pretty much “impossible” to retrieve, Petro Andrushenko, a former adviser to the Ukrainian mayor of Mariupol, said. Earlier this month, Morgun insisted that homes will be taken off the register "if an owner appeals".

Once the homes have been seized, a law adopted late last year allows the authorities to transfer ownership to individuals. Only residents of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic who have lost property and hold Russian passports are eligible to obtain homes under the scheme.