Ukrainians will spend more on groceries this summer than they did last summer, even though summer is normally the season when prices drop. Bread is leading the climb—up 10% in just the first four months of 2026, by official count—while the household electricity tariff has not moved at all.
The new harvest will soften some of the rest. War costs are keeping the usual summer relief from fully arriving. Six months ago, the story ran the other way.
The broader pressure comes from the war’s running costs—generators replacing a strike-damaged grid, logistics, and higher wages—landing inside everyday prices.
A record vegetable harvest had pushed food prices down by December, butter was finally easing, and Ukraine was beating its inflation forecast. This time, the broader pressure comes from the war’s running costs—generators replacing a strike-damaged grid, logistics, and higher wages—landing inside everyday prices, with frost-hit fruit adding to the squeeze even as seasonal produce starts to pull the other way.
Three scenarios for the bill
The Ukrainian Agribusiness Club maps three paths for the average grocery bill compared with last summer, Maksym Hopka, an analyst at the club, told RBK-Ukraine:
- Optimistic: up 5 to 8%
- Base case: up 8 to 15%, as seasonal vegetables soften the blow, while pricier fuel, business electricity, logistics, and lost fruit keep the basket from falling
- Pessimistic: up 15 to 25%, if weather and energy risks worsen
The market is tracking the base case, and the basket is already about 9.5% pricier than a year ago, according to Oleh Pendzin, executive director of the Economic Discussion Club.
Why even bread keeps climbing
The bread numbers are already in. Bread and bread products rose 5.2% in April and 10% over the first four months of the year—bread itself by 6.1%—the State Statistics Service reported, while the household electricity tariff stayed flat across the same span.
Part of the rise is simply built in. Bread adds 1 to 1.5% almost every month regardless of season, a deliberate pricing stance by producers, Pendzin told RBK-Ukraine. The war piles on from there. Bakeries are among the businesses most exposed to power cuts, and when the grid drops, they switch to diesel generators—pricier this year than last.
All-Ukrainian Bakers Association expects bread and pastry to rise by as much as 5% over three to four months.
There will be no shortage and no narrowing of what’s on the shelves, Oleksandr Taranenko assured RBK-Ukraine; the first vice-president of the All-Ukrainian Bakers Association expects bread and pastry to rise by as much as 5% over three to four months, about 1 to 1.5 hryvnia ($0.02 to $0.03) a loaf.
By autumn, energy bills, wages, and imported equipment could push the price up by as much as 25%, said Denys Marchuk, deputy head of the All-Ukrainian Agrarian Council.
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Where the relief still is
The cheap season is real, just smaller. The borscht set—the beets, cabbage, carrots, and onions—runs 15 to 17% cheaper than last year right now and potatoes have fallen by up to a fifth, Pendzin told RBK-Ukraine; young potatoes opened at 45 hryvnia ($1.02) a kilogram but will drop as supply swells. Eggs, chicken, and sugar all cost less than they did a year ago.
If global oil prices stay below $100 a barrel, diesel could slip from 85 hryvnia ($1.92) to under 80 hryvnia ($1.81) a liter within a week.
Drivers may get a small break, though it is fragile. Fuel and lubricants are already up nearly 28% since the start of the year, the State Statistics Service reported. If global oil prices stay below $100 a barrel, diesel could slip from 85 hryvnia ($1.92) to under 80 hryvnia ($1.81) a liter within a week, Serhii Kuyun, who heads the A-95 consulting group, told RBK-Ukraine.
That “if” is doing a lot of work: Brent is still about 52% above last year, and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed amid US-Iran hostilities, so relief at the pump depends on a second war easing thousands of kilometers away.
The fruit shelf took the frost
Apricots and peaches face a possible shortage after the spring frosts, with prices riding on imports from Türkiye and Central Asia. Imported bananas now cost nearly half as much as Ukrainian apples, and they have become the most common fruit on Ukrainian tables.


