Oleksandr Gorenyuk, a member of parliament from the Servant of the People party, declared his residence in a house with an area of 451.5 square meters, located in the village of Pidhirtsi near Kyiv. This was reported by journalist Vasyl Krutchak, who drew attention to the data from the parliamentarian's declaration.
Formally, the house does not belong to Gorenyuk himself. According to the documents, the owner is listed as 83-year-old Odessa resident Kateryna Solonenko, the grandmother of the people's deputy. The declaration states that it was she who “granted it for use” to her grandson. “It’s great when your grandmother has the opportunity to buy a house near Kyiv with an area of 451.5 square meters,” Krutchak commented on this, hinting at the dubious realism of such a purchase for a pensioner.
This is not the only property used by the deputy, but it is registered in the name of senior family members. Gorenyuk's declaration also indicates that he drives a Hyundai Ioniq 5 electric crossover. The MP himself explains that the car belongs to his father. At the same time, according to the journalist, the car was purchased on June 11, 2025 and registered not in the name of his father, but in the name of the deputy's mother, Olga Gorenyuk.
The electric Hyundai Ioniq 5 is a modern, expensive model that is sold on the Ukrainian market as a technological crossover with premium options; the cost of new cars in this line in 2024–2025 started at the equivalent of approximately UAH 2.3–2.9 million, depending on the configuration, all-wheel drive, and battery. This raises additional questions about the real level of income of the deputy's family and the origin of the funds for such transport.
The situation with the house in Pidhirtsi is similar to the classic e-declarations of Ukrainian politicians: expensive real estate is registered in the name of elderly relatives, and the official himself officially only "uses" the property. Such a mechanism formally allows not to show the asset as the official's property, but in fact provides him with access to elite housing near Kyiv.
The combination of a large cottage near the capital and a new electric car, registered to his parents and grandmother, looks like an attempt to minimize reputational and anti-corruption risks for the incumbent MP from the single-party majority. Especially considering that the issue of the origin of relatives' wealth regularly becomes a subject of attention of the NACP and anti-corruption bodies.
So far, Gorenyuk himself has not publicly explained how much money the 83-year-old Odessa woman was able to afford a property with an area of over 450 square meters in Pidhirtsi, a village considered one of the "cottage sleeping areas" for wealthy residents of Kyiv. There has also been no public response to doubts about the design of the Hyundai Ioniq 5.

