The district's population is 75,358. Of this, 19,621 are urban inhabitants.
Geography
The territory of Borshchiv raion is 1,006 square kilometers.
Villages
There are 70 villages within the raion, 2 urban-type settlements and one city - Borshchiv. The major villages in Borshchiv district include: Names are given in Ukrainian followed by Polish and Russian names in brackets. Some of the villages listed below, belong administratively to the bordering Zalishchytskyi Raion.
Babyntsi — 18 km south of Borshchiv. The name derives from the Ukrainian word "baba". It was an old Rus fortified settlement with ramparts around it, which are preserved.
Bedrykivtsi — Is 34 km southwest of Borshchiv, in the Zalishchyky district, only 10 km north from Zalishchyky, on a minor river which is a tributary of the Seret / Dniester. The name derives from the Ukrainian word "bedro". The village is very old; it had a prehistoric settlement. It also has an old graveyard.
Burdyakivtsi — Is 15 km northeast of Borshchiv. It is not far from the Zbruch river.
Dzvenyhorod — Has an Assumption Church with belfry. It is located on the slope of a mountain next to the Dniester river. The church dates from 1801 but the western part was reconstructed in 1861. The village is located in the southern part of the Borshchiv district, on the bank of the Dniester river.
Ivana-Puste has the wooden church of St John with a belfry. The church dates from 1775 and is a monument to the old Podolian school of people's architecture.
Hermakivka is a small village, located 20 km southeast of Borshchiv, 5 km west of the river Zbruch. The Zbruch was the border between the Austrian and Russian empires during 1772–1918.. What is remarkable about Hermakivka is that there is a Trayan wall, south of the village. It stretches from Hermakivka south via Zalissya and Kdryntis to the river Dniester. The Trayan wall was built by the Romans, as the northeastern border of the Roman Empire.
Holihrady, Goligrady is located on the left bank of the Seret river, 23 km southwest of Borshchiv. The village has an old stone church and a fabulous cave.
Horodok is a village on the isthmus of the Seret and Dniester rivers, 33 km southeast of Borshchiv, not far from the town of Zalishchyky. Note that there is major town with the same name in the Lviv region of Western Ukraine. The name literally means "little town". It had an old pre-historical settlement and a burial ground was also discovered here.
Kapustyntsi — Is a village 22 km northwest of Borshchiv, on the left bank of the river Seret. The name comes from the Slavic root "Kapusta". There used to be a Rus settlement here and there was also a medieval town.
Kasparivtsi — is 30 km southwest of Borshchiv, on the river Seret. Many old coins have been found in this village. It has an eighteenth-century stone church.
Korolivka — Is 10 km south of Borshchiv. Korolivka boasts a palace and cave.
Kryvche. Kryvche is known mainly because of its cave system, one of the longest in the world. It is also known for Kryvche castle which dates from first half of the 17th century and is built of sandstone, representing a typical castle from that period.
Kudryntsi. The original wojts of this region were of the noble house Kudrycki z Kudrynce h. Labedz i.e. Herb Labedz; from the period predating the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, probably of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The castle was fortified about 1386 following the Kreva agreement. Legend has it the castle is linked with Kryvche via underground sandstone caves. This castle fortress is also built of sandstone, but it is non-regular in plan and has three corner towers. It was reconstructed in the 18th century. The Trayan Wall passes through Kudryntsi. This wall was built by the Roman emperorTrajan, and served as the north-eastern border of the Roman Empire.
Kulakivtsi — Is 32 km southwest of Borshchiv, on the isthmus of the rivers Dniester and Seret. The name comes from the Slavic word "kulak". The village has a 19th-century wooden church.
Lanivtsi — Is a village 5 km northwest of Borshchiv. It has the remains of an old fortified settlement.