World Heritage Sites
Site Image Location UNESCO data Includes Description
Cultural Landscape of Chernihiv Chernihiv Oblast i, ii, iv Buildings of 9th17th centuries, including: Savior-Transfiguration Cathedral, Boris and Gleb Cathedral, the Collegium, Yelets-Dormition Monastery, Black Grave kurgan, Trinity Monastery, Boldyni Hory complex (with kurgans and St. Anthony's Caves).
The Historical Surroundings of Crimean Khans' Capital in Bakhchysarai AR Crimea ii, iii, v, vi Ensemble of the Palace of the Crimean Khans, historic monuments of Salachik district (Dürbe of Dilâra Bikeç [uk], Eski Dürbe, Tahtalı Cami, Zincirli Madrasa, Dürbe of Hacı Geray [uk], Assumption Monastery of the Caves), and the cave town of Chufut-Kale.
Cultural Landscape of the Canyon in Kamianets-Podilskyi Khmelnytskyi Oblast i, ii, iv Old City of Kamianets Podilskyi [uk], the Castle, and the Smotrych Canyon [uk].
Derzhprom (the State Industry Building) Kharkiv Oblast iv
Trading Posts and Fortifications on Genoese Trade Routes. From the Mediterranean to the Black Sea* AR Crimea ii, iv Genoese fortress in Sudak, as well as other structures of the Genoese period nearby (incl. Church of the Twelve Apostles, Padişah Cami Mosque, etc.) as the Ukrainian part of the nominaion.

Transnational nomination with Turkey,[1] Italy, Greece[2] and possibly other countries.

Dendrological Park "Sofiyivka" Cherkasy Oblast iv, viii, x
Stone Tomb Archaeological Site Zaporizhzhia Oblast iii, vi
Tyras - Bilhorod (Akkerman), on the way from the Black Sea to the Baltic Sea Odesa Oblast ii, iv, vi Ruins of ancient Greek colony of Tyras and the nearby Akkerman Fortress.
Post-Industrial Landscape of Chornobyl Kyiv Oblast vi, ix Chornobyl Biosphere Reserve, as well as the abandoned city of Prypiat and parts of Chornobyl.
Cultural Landscape of "Cave Towns" of the Crimean Gothia AR Crimea iii, v, vi, vii Eski-Kermen and Mangup-Kale cave towns.
Danube Delta Odesa Oblast vii, x Extension of existing WHS that includes Romanian part of the delta.
Malyi Galagov Zakarpattia Oblast iv
Khotyn Fortress Chernivtsi Oblast ii, iv, v
National Steppe Biosphere Reserve "Askania-Nova" Kherson Oblast x
Mykolaiv Astronomical Observatory Mykolaiv Oblast ii, iv
Kaniv Hills Cherkasy Oblast iii, v, viii, x
Vydubychi Monastery Kyiv i, iv
Remains of Princely Halych and St. Pantaleon's Church Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast iii, iv
The First Agricultural Civilization of Europe: Cultural Landscape of Cucuteni–Trypillia Cherkasy, Khmelnytskyi, Kirovohrad, Kyiv, Ternopil oblasts iii
Khreshchatyk Kyiv ii, iv
Caves of Ternopil Oblast Ternopil Oblast viii The caves in southern Ternopil Oblast form a unique karst complex. The caves are some of the longest in Europe and the world.
Oleshky Sands Kherson Oblast viii, x Oleshky Sands are the second-largest desert in Europe.
Bug Gard National Nature Park Mykolaiv Oblast vii, viii
Russian Imperial Palaces in Ukraine AR Crimea, Chernihiv Oblast, Zaporizhzhia Oblast iv Dulber Palace, Kachanivka Palace, Livadiia Palace (pictured), Masandra Palace, Popov's Manor, Vorontsov Palace There are many Russian Imperial palaces in Ukraine, especially the southern coast of Crimea. The palaces are a testimony to Russian colonization of regions that it conquered, with the nobility's estates contrasting with the local impoverished population.
Karadag Nature Reserve AR Crimea viii
Sotsmisto of Zaporizhzhia Zaporizhzhia Oblast iv, vi
Khortytsia Island Zaporizhzhia Oblast
Scythian Neapolis AR Crimea iii
Lutsk Castle Volyn Oblast
Surp Khach Monastery AR Crimea ii, iii
  1. ^ Permanent Delegation of Turkey to UNESCO. "Trading Posts and Fortifications on Genoese Trade Routes from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea". UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
  2. ^ "Судацька фортеця: мовчазний вартовий історії". UNIAN. 2011-12-29. Archived from the original on 2021-07-09.