Leaving Russia in 2026
If you're reading this, you've probably already made a hard decision and now you're looking for where and how. This page is an honest map: which routes actually exist in 2026, where you can live and work legally, and where "easy entry" ends at the border. No "golden passport" sales pitch.
Four routes — and how to tell which is yours
"Leaving Russia" isn't one path but four. Each has its own rules, timelines and cost of getting it wrong. First, honestly work out which one is yours — everything else gets easier after that.
Protection (asylum)
If you face persecution at home — for an anti-war stance, journalism, activism, being LGBTQ+, refusing to fight. This is a distinct legal status, not a fallback.
This is me →Work
You have a profession in demand abroad (IT, engineering, medicine). Slower, but a route with a real path to permanent residence.
More →Study
Admission to a university abroad is often one of the few legal ways to turn entry into a long, lawful stay.
More →"Sit it out" nearby
Leave quickly for a visa-free neighbour and take stock. Good as a first step — but almost nowhere does this alone let you work and stay long-term.
Where you can go →Why timing can decide everything
For draft-age men in 2026, leaving is a question of timing, not just a ticket. A few facts worth knowing in advance:
- Conscription became year-round on 1 January 2026.Enlistment offices work all year; the 2026 target is 261,000. "Wait until the call-up ends" no longer works.
- An electronic summons blocks your exit automatically.The travel ban switches on the moment the summons is posted to the register — it's deemed served after 7 days, even if you never opened it. It can only be lifted in person at the enlistment office.
- The border is monitored.Border guards see the ban in the system. From April 2026 Belarus also enforces the exit ban — the former "exit via Minsk" route has closed.
- Keep your foreign passport with you, abroad.Getting or renewing it is safer done abroad — returning to Russia just for the passport is risky. Consulates abroad can have multi-month queues.
Visa-free neighbours — where you can go right now
The quickest exit is the neighbours that let you in without a visa. But watch the "can you work" column — that's the real line between a breather and a new life.
| Country | Visa-free | Work without permit | What to know |
|---|---|---|---|
| Armenia | 180 days | Yes (EAEU) | Entry on internal passport, citizenship in 3 years. The best option to work right away. |
| Kazakhstan | 90 / 180 days | Yes (EAEU) | You need an IIN tax number. "Visa runs" no longer reset the clock — long stays need work/study. |
| Kyrgyzstan | 90 / 180 days | Yes (EAEU) | Cheapest, entry on internal passport. Weak onward flight links. |
| Georgia | ~1 year | No since 1 Mar 2026 | Now needs a work permit (EAEU doesn't help). Mandatory travel insurance from Jan 2026. |
| Serbia | 30 days | No | Large Russian community. Work needs residence; PR after 3 years. Register a "white card" on arrival. |
| Turkey | 60 / 90 days | Hard | Tourist residence permits tightened sharply; many districts closed to registration. |
| Montenegro | 30 days | No | ⚠️ Reportedly introducing a visa regime in autumn 2026 — verify before travel. |
| UAE | 90 / 180 days | No | 0% income tax but expensive. Residence via a job, a freelance permit or a Golden Visa. |
Durations and rules as of June 2026; everything changes fast — check the country's official site (foreign ministry / migration service) before you travel.
Legal long-term routes: work, study, residence
If you have a profession, a degree or remote income, this is the route with a real chance to stay. It's not our specialty, so here's an honest pointer with links to official sources.
- Work: the EU Blue Card (e.g. Germany)One of the most realistic routes. 2026 salary thresholds: €50,700/year (€45,934 for shortage occupations — IT, engineering, medicine). IT can qualify without a degree if you have experience. Apply from a third country (consulates inside Russia are overloaded). Source: make-it-in-germany.com.
- Remote work: digital-nomad visasSpain (~€2,850/mo), Portugal (~4× minimum wage), Hungary, Greece and others. Important: income must come from abroad — these don't allow local employment, and usually don't lead to permanent residence.
- StudyEU universities admit Russians; no country has banned student visas. The barriers are practical — consulate appointments, blocked accounts, transfers. Often easier to apply from a third country.
- Family reunification & businessFamily routes are among the most stable in the EU. For business there are startup / self-employment visas (Germany, Portugal, France, Serbia).
The protection route: when you need asylum
our areaIf this isn't about "changing countries" but about being unsafe at home — this is the protection route. Here our help is deep and verified, and we can walk with you from here on.
Who asylum is for
- An anti-war stance, protests, persecution for it
- Journalists, activists, "foreign agents"
- LGBTQ+ — a growing ground for protection
- Refusing to fight, conscientious objection to mobilisation
- Persecution on political, religious or ethnic grounds
Where to start
First understand which country actually grants protection to Russians and on what terms — we've made an honest comparison.
⚖️ Compare: USA · Germany · Spain · UK →- The UK — our focusHow asylum works in the UK, who helps, what to expect: everything about UK asylum.
- For Russians and BelarusiansWhat counts as grounds and what evidence to gather: asylum for Russians · for Belarusians.
- LGBTQ+A distinct, increasingly recognised route: asylum on SOGI grounds.
- If you've been refusedA refusal isn't the end: how to appeal (~50% win; a Legal Aid lawyer is free).
- Once you have statusThe first 42 days matter most: what to do after you get status.
Not sure if it's protection or an ordinary visa? If you're afraid to go home because of who you are or what you believe, your route is probably here.
Say you've made it to the UK — what next
The hardest part isn't getting here — it's starting life again. Here's a short map of the first steps in the UK; we have a detailed guide for each.
Where to start today
- Check your exit statusDraft-age men — check Gosuslugi for a summons in the register before buying a ticket.
- Decide which of the 4 routes is yoursProtection, work, study, or "sit it out" nearby. Everything else follows from that.
- If it's protection — don't waitRead the country comparison and how asylum works. Need a free lawyer? We have a Legal Aid lawyer directory.
- Protect your documents and moneyForeign passport, copies of everything, a buffer for the first weeks, and an account in an EAEU country or the UAE as a cushion. Beware anyone promising a "guaranteed" visa or citizenship.
Frequently asked
Frequently asked questions
Where is it easiest to leave Russia for right now?
Fastest are the visa-free neighbours: Georgia, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Turkey. But "easy to enter" is not "you can live and work there". A Russian can actually work without a permit only in the EAEU countries — Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Belarus. Everywhere else you need a visa or residence permit to work.
Where can a Russian work legally without a permit?
Only in the EAEU: Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus (Article 97 of the EAEU Treaty). That is a genuine right to work that visa-free entry elsewhere does not give. Armenia is the most convenient: 180 days, entry on an internal passport, citizenship possible after 3 years.
Is Georgia still an easy option?
Not anymore. From 1 March 2026 Georgia requires a work permit for all foreigners — Russians are NOT exempt (Georgia is not in the EAEU). The one-year visa-free stay remains, but you cannot work without the permit. Mandatory travel medical insurance also applies from January 2026.
Is it risky for a draft-age man to delay leaving?
Yes. From 1 January 2026 conscription is year-round, and an electronic summons automatically blocks your exit the moment it is posted to the register (it is deemed served after 7 days, even if you never opened it). The ban can only be lifted in person at the enlistment office. From April 2026 Belarus also enforces the ban. The takeaway is simple: leave BEFORE any summons.
Do I need asylum — or is an ordinary visa enough?
It depends on whether you face persecution at home (for an anti-war stance, journalism, LGBTQ+, refusing to fight, etc.). If you do, that is the protection route, and that is where we offer deep help. If you simply want to change countries and can move on a work or study basis, that is a different, ordinary immigration route. This page helps you work out which is yours.
What about money and bank cards abroad?
Russian Visa/Mastercard do not work abroad, and Mir is accepted in only a few countries. The EU caps Russian deposits (€100,000) and limits payment services — but an EU/EEA residence permit lifts most of that. You can open an account in Armenia, Kazakhstan, Georgia or the UAE, but banks everywhere screen Russians heavily — nothing is guaranteed.
Can I be turned back at the border?
A draft-age man can be, if there is a summons in the register (border guards see it in the system). Women and those with no restrictions are usually allowed out. Always check your own status on Gosuslugi before you travel.
Is this legal advice?
No. This is an orientation overview, not individual immigration advice. Rules change fast — verify every fact on the destination country’s official site before deciding. On UK protection we can help and point you to a free lawyer.