Briefly
DOU published its annual ranking of the best IT employers in Ukraine for 2025. More than 13,000 specialists took part in the vote; they evaluated 683 companies according to 19 criteria, grouped into six blocks — from salaries to corporate culture. New for 2025: a separate block of questions about companies' social responsibility.
Who are the leaders
The winners were distributed by company size:
Over 1,500 employees: Genesis (first place for the second year in a row). Second — Ciklum, third — N‑iX.
800–1,500: Upstars — first place; Skelar — second, mono — third.
200–800: Leobit topped the category; Binotel — second, Universe Group — third.
81–200: Empat — first position; inVerita and Lionwood.software — second and third, respectively.
"The results of the vote underscore that for IT specialists not only salaries are important, but also a stable culture, development opportunities, and employers' social responsibility."
— DOU, press release of the 2025 ranking
Why this matters
This is not just a "title." The DOU ranking is one of the key markers for the labor market: it influences specialists' decisions to change jobs, shapes companies' images among investors, and helps the state assess sources of taxation and innovation. At a time when the country's economic resilience critically depends on the technology sector, such signals are important for the business climate and labor mobility.
What changed in the approach
In 2025 DOU updated the questionnaire and methodology: a block on social responsibility was added, reflecting society's and the market's demand for transparency and businesses' contribution to communities. The more than 19 criteria provide a more comprehensive picture — from compensation to opportunities for professional growth.
Context and outlook
When two companies from the top ranking (mono and N‑iX) also appear in December's list of companies IT specialists dream of working for, it confirms that employer brand and real working conditions are two sides of the same process. For Ukraine, successful IT employers mean not only salaries but also service exports, tax revenue, and technological independence.
Whether these rankings will translate into long-term investments, jobs, and infrastructure projects depends on a combination of decisions by businesses, investors, and state policy. The ranking sends a signal; the next step is to turn it into actual contracts and support programs.
Conclusion
The DOU‑2025 ranking showed that Ukrainian IT continues to adapt and strengthen: the winners demonstrate resilience not only in salaries but also in culture and social responsibility. This is an important indicator for employees, investors, and policymakers who shape the conditions for the sector's further development.