Russia declares nearly 8,000 Luhansk apartments “ownerless” for “nationalization”

Apr 29, 2026 - 09:07
Russia declares nearly 8,000 Luhansk apartments “ownerless” for “nationalization”

russia declares nearly 8000 luhansk apartments ownerless nationalization · post view 16th line street occupied donbasssosorg 93942 ukraine news ukrainian reports

Russian occupation authorities in temporarily occupied Luhansk have declared nearly 8,000 apartments "ownerless" and lined them up for "nationalization," the Luhansk Regional State Administration in exile posted on Facebook.

Russia has occupied the southern third of Luhansk Oblast since 2014 — capturing the regional capital and surrounding areas spanning to Donetsk Oblast in the south — and expanded control over the northern part of the oblast after the 2022 full-scale invasion, with Russia's leadership declaring the oblast "fully seized" at least four times by now despite Ukrainian forces still holding some ground there in the northwest.

How Russia takes a Luhansk apartment

Under new rules in effect since March 2026, housing missing from Russia's "state registry" is deemed "ownerless." Owners are given 30 days to resolve the registration issue. Apartments can also be illegally seized for unpaid utilities that have run for over a year, or for the owner being absent for 3 consecutive months.

Russia's "ownerless property" tool, expanded

Russia's Luhansk push fits a Russian seizure mechanism rolled out across all four occupied Ukrainian regions Russia claims to have annexed. Russia confiscated or began confiscating at least 25,000 residential properties in occupied Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts as of fall 2025. Putin then signed federal-level legislation in December 2025, letting occupation administrations confiscate homes and apartments where ownership "cannot be established," with the provisions running until 2030.

Cultural heritage rotting alongside the seizure drive

The same regional administration noted that 700 World War II monuments in the so-called "LNR" — the Russian-run "Luhansk people's republic" terrorist organization — are in critical condition, with neither local nor the "young republic's" budgets allocating restoration funds for 2026 or for the previous decade. 

"Russians don't care about their own history when it requires significant investment," the Luhansk Regional Administration said.