startnewlife Mendee CIC · London

UK asylum for Russian nationals

Updated: 30 April 2026
In short

This page describes the legal landscape for Russian nationals considering an asylum claim in the UK after 2022. Plain-English overview with primary-source links. This is general information, not individual legal advice. Whether asylum is the right route for any specific person can only be assessed by a regulated adviser.

2022→
Mobilization
changed the picture for Russians
2023
LGBT classification
«extremist movement»
14 days
To appeal
after a refusal letter
0808 8010 503
Migrant Help
24/7 free
This is general information about the legal landscape, not legal advice
Immigration advice on individual cases can only be given by advisers regulated by the Immigration Advice Authority (IAA — replaced OISC in 2025) and qualified solicitors. Two people of the same nationality can have very different prospects. Whether asylum applies in your situation can only be assessed by a regulated adviser. Find a Legal-Aid lawyer →

What changed since 2022

Following the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine and the September 2022 partial mobilization, asylum claims from Russian nationals in the UK have risen significantly. Several developments in Russian law and Home Office country guidance shape the current landscape.

📜 Mobilization and conscientious objection
Electronic draft summonses were legalised in Russia in April 2023; evading such a summons is a criminal offence. Conscientious objection is not effectively recognised in Russian practice. Home Office country guidance is set out in the regularly-updated CPIN Russian Federation: Military service on gov.uk.
🏳️‍🌈 2023 Russian Supreme Court ruling on LGBT
In November 2023 the Russian Supreme Court designated the "international LGBT movement" as an extremist organization. This classification fundamentally raised the baseline persecution risk for individuals identifying as LGBT+ and connected to public activity or community structures. Documented in Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, UNHCR Refworld and updated CPINs.
📰 Journalists, activists, opposition
Laws on "fakes" about the Russian Armed Forces (articles 207.3, 280.3 RF Criminal Code), on "undesirable organizations", and the expanded application of "discrediting the army" — these create concrete legal risks for journalists, activists, and members of organizations declared "undesirable". Risk profiles are determined individually through objective evidence: publications, digital footprint, recognised-organisation membership, statements from collaborators.

Common evidence categories

A description of the kinds of evidence typically used in asylum cases from Russia. This is not a checklist or advice on what to submit in any specific case. The relevance and weight of each category in any individual case can only be assessed by a regulated adviser on the facts.

🛐 Sur place — activity in the UK
Anti-regime activity after arrival: anti-war protests at the Russian embassy, articles in recognised independent media, public positions on social media, membership of recognised opposition structures in exile. Home Office often characterises this as "self-serving". In MR (Pakistan) v SSHD [2026] EWCA Civ 473 the Court of Appeal held that tribunals cannot rely solely on prior credibility findings — new witnesses and material must be tested through cross-examination.
🌐 Digital footprint
Posts on Telegram, X/Twitter, YouTube; profile visibility; audience size; consistency of messaging. For Russian applicants, expert evidence on Russian state surveillance capabilities (FSB, Roskomnadzor) is typically prepared via a regulated solicitor. Digital evidence must be forensically preserved (URLs, timestamps, account handles).
📑 Documents from Russia
Summonses, criminal-case opening orders, administrative offence reports, court rulings, "foreign agent" / "undesirable organisation" register extracts. All non-English documents require certified translations from NRPSI-registered translators.
🏥 Medico-Legal Reports (MLR)
For people with detention experience, pressure from authorities, or medical consequences — Istanbul Protocol 2022-compliant clinical reports. UK specialist providers: Helen Bamber Foundation, Freedom from Torture. Typical preparation 2–6 months, usually arranged via a solicitor.
🌍 Country of Origin Information
Objective sources: UNHCR Refworld, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Memorial archive, OVD-Info reports, Upper Tribunal Country Guidance cases. Home Office CPINs — the official country assessments — often need to be supplemented or rebutted with external sources.

Common challenges in Russian asylum cases

Awareness of common pitfalls helps users assess the process realistically and prepare to work with a lawyer — but does not replace individual legal assessment.

Where to find regulated help

⚖️ Solicitors with Legal Aid + Russian-speaking teams
Our directory has 5,479 immigration firms — the "Russian-speaking" filter narrows results. London firms with publicly-advertised Russian-language asylum desks: Edmans & Co, SA Law, Mergul Law, Terence Ray Solicitors, Wilsons Solicitors. Always verify regulation status on the SRA or IAA register before engaging. Open directory →
📞 Migrant Help (24/7, multilingual)
Free helpline: 0808 8010 503. Helps with Section 95 / 95A applications and refers to a regulated adviser.
🏛️ Asylum Aid and Right to Remain
Asylum Aid — pro bono casework with complex-case specialism. Right to Remain Toolkit — public legal education in plain English.
🇷🇺 Russian-speaking community organisations in the UK
Anti-war and human-rights structures in the UK can provide corroboration of sur place activity (statements, attendance records). Before relying on a particular organisation, confirm it is operating sustainably and provides letters for immigration purposes. A regulated solicitor can advise on the current list.
⚠️ Caution: unregulated "consultants" on Telegram / VKontakte. Providing immigration advice without SRA or IAA regulation is a criminal offence under section 84 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999. Template cover letters, fake outcome "guarantees", and prepayments without written contracts are common scam patterns. Always verify regulation on the SRA register or IAA register.
This is general information, not legal advice. A description of the legal landscape does not account for individual circumstances. Whether asylum applies in your situation, what specific evidence to gather, how to frame arguments, and how to deal with prior credibility findings can only be assessed by a regulated adviser on the facts of your case.

Free regulated options: Legal Aid solicitors via our directory, Asylum Aid, Migrant Help 0808 8010 503.

Last reviewed: 30 April 2026.
⚠️ StartNewLife is an information project — not regulated by the IAA (Immigration Advice Authority). We do not provide immigration advice within the meaning of Section 84 of the Immigration & Asylum Act 1999. All content is general information only and does not replace advice from a regulated lawyer (IAA / SRA / BSB) about your specific case.