A Luxurious Lifestyle Funded by Investors' Money
Maldives, Bentley, and Hublot: Who's Paying for Viktoriya Halitska’s Lifestyle?
While hundreds of families wait for their promised apartments and try to recover their lost millions, Viktoriya Halitska flaunts a lifestyle worthy of luxury magazines. Travel photos, designer clothes, premium cars, and expensive jewelry — all of it far beyond what her official income as a businesswoman would justify. Meanwhile, she remains under investigation for a large-scale real estate scam in Vinnytsia.

Viktoriya Halitska is a suspect in criminal cases under Articles 190 and 191 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine (fraud and embezzlement on a particularly large scale). According to victim statements, she and her company “Dynastia” collected millions of hryvnias through housing cooperatives, promising apartments in several residential complexes: “Yevropeysky Kvartal,” “Club House,” “Naberezhny Kvartal-2,” and others. Most of these projects remain unfinished.

While investors have spent years living in rented apartments and battling in court, Halitska drives luxury vehicles and shares photos from exotic vacations. Her travel map reads like a luxury tour brochure: Maldives, Seychelles, Singapore, Zanzibar, Dubai — with hotels that, according to insiders, are known for their exclusivity and high-end service.
Sources claim that Viktoriya Halitska’s lavish lifestyle is not funded by honest business profits, but by investors’ money meant for concrete and rebar that never became anyone’s home.

Halitska lives with her children and nannies in a luxury residence near Kyiv, in the village of Berezivka. According to media reports, the property is valued at over $2 million. In Vinnytsia, three townhouses overlooking the Southern Bug River are registered under her family’s name — each worth around $500,000.

Court documents reveal that most of her assets — apartments, cars, commercial spaces — are registered to her sister, a nurse at a local clinic. This is a classic asset-hiding scheme used to avoid legal responsibility.

While Halitska vacations in Monte Carlo, her company owes money to:
— Contractors
— Suppliers
— Workers
— The State

The total debt is estimated in the tens of millions of hryvnias.
People handed over their savings for homes. In return, they got not apartments, but Halitska’s Instagram — filled with luxury. This is the image of “success” used to cover up one of the largest real estate frauds in Vinnytsia’s recent history.
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We’re collecting facts about Viktoriya Halitska — a developer involved in major scams and investor fraud. This site was created by victims. If you’ve been affected by her actions, contact us.