The village of Dnistrovka is located on the right bank of the Dniester River, 12 km from the Ivanivtsi station of the Lviv Railway, less than 20 km from the district center of Kelmentsi, and 120 km from the regional center of Chernivtsi. The population is over 1.5 thousand people.
The first mention of the settlement dates back to 1756, when a settlement called Rostiane (Resteo, Resteo-Atacca, Resteo-Ataki) was founded by Princess Maria Gica (daughter of Moldovan ruler Grigori Gica). Since 1948, it has been called Dnistrovka, due to the location of the third longest river in Ukraine, the Dniester.
Visit the Intercession wooden church (1884). In the village, you can go yachting or water scootering, diving, and fishing. There are private gazebos on the river bank that can be rented. On the outskirts of the village, the remains of a settlement of the Trypillian culture (III millennium BC), the Early Iron Age (I millennium BC), the Chernyakhiv culture (II-VI centuries AD) and the Slavs (IX-XI centuries) were discovered.
The village council building with a small tetrahedral tower may also be of some interest. The building was constructed in 1931 for the Plutonium administrative building. The first floor housed the barracks of the border garrison, and the second floor was occupied by the village administration.

The building with six columns decorated with capitals, which housed the village cultural center, and the one-story building of the paramedic and obstetric station, which probably dates back to Romanian times, are also interesting.
