Cheap Flights to Moscow
Russia
CHEAPEST ROUTE
BostonMoscow
BOS to SVO • ~10h flight
Est. $375
estimated round trip
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FromAirportEst. PriceFlight Time
BESTBoston
BOS$375~10hView →
New York
LGA$390~10hView →
New York
JFK$391~10hView →
Newark
EWR$392~10hView →
Philadelphia
PHL$398~10hView →
Detroit
DTW$405~11hView →
Baltimore
BWI$405~11hView →
Washington D.C.
DCA$407~11hView →
Minneapolis
MSP$412~11hView →
Chicago
ORD$416~11hView →
Charlotte
CLT$435~11hView →
Seattle
SEA$437~11hView →
St. Louis
STL$438~11hView →
Nashville
BNA$444~12hView →
Portland
PDX$447~12hView →
Atlanta
ATL$451~12hView →
Denver
DEN$458~12hView →
Salt Lake City
SLC$464~12hView →
Orlando
MCO$470~12hView →
Tampa
TPA$475~12hView →
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SJU$476~12hView →
Fort Lauderdale
FLL$479~12hView →
Miami
MIA$480~12hView →
Dallas
DFW$482~12hView →
San Francisco
SFO$493~13hView →
Las Vegas
LAS$494~13hView →
Houston
IAH$494~13hView →
Austin
AUS$498~13hView →
Phoenix
PHX$504~13hView →
Los Angeles
LAX$510~13hView →
San Diego
SAN$515~13hView →

About Moscow

Moscow in 2026 is a destination that demands serious logistical homework before you book — US-Russia relations remain extremely tense, and the practical realities of visiting have changed dramatically since 2022. That said, travelers who do make it find one of the world's most architecturally staggering cities: Red Square at night, the Byzantine excess of St. Basil's Cathedral, the underground palace of Komsomolskaya Metro station — these are not overhyped. Moscow rewards people who've done their research and go in with clear eyes.

The single biggest practical issue for most Americans is payment. Visa and Mastercard suspended operations in Russia in 2022, meaning your US-issued cards are simply unusable. You must bring physical US dollars or euros and exchange them at local banks or authorized exchange points (avoid street changers). The ruble trades at roughly 88-95 per dollar as of early 2026, but rates shift. Russia's banking system is cut off from SWIFT, so wire transfers from the US don't work either. Budget conservatively and carry more cash than you think you'll need.

Visa access is the other major barrier. Americans must apply for a Russian tourist visa through the Russian consulate, a process that is slow, bureaucratically intensive, and carries real uncertainty given diplomatic conditions. The e-visa system that briefly existed for Americans was suspended. You'll need an invitation letter (typically arranged through a Russian hotel or tour operator), a completed application, and significant lead time — minimum 4-6 weeks, longer is safer. Some Americans are using group tour operators specifically because they handle the invitation letter paperwork. Do not arrive expecting visa-on-arrival; that doesn't exist for US citizens.

If you navigate all of this, the reward is extraordinary value (once you have rubles in hand), world-class museums like the Tretyakov Gallery and the Armory Chamber, a metro system that's genuinely one of the great engineering achievements of the 20th century, and a food scene that has evolved well beyond Soviet stereotypes. Georgian restaurants, Uzbek plov houses, and modern Russian tasting menus all coexist here. The city of 13 million operates at a relentless pace, safety for tourists is generally good in normal tourist zones, and locals who speak English — especially younger Muscovites — are often genuinely curious about foreign visitors.

Best Months
may, june, july
Currency
RUB ()
Russian Ruble
Visa (US Citizens)
As of 2026, Americans require a full tourist visa to enter Russia — there is no visa-on-arrival and no e-visa option for US citizens (the e-visa program that briefly included Americans was suspended in 2022 and has not been reinstated). You must apply through the Russian Consulate in Washington DC, New York, Houston, or San Francisco. The process requires: a completed visa application form, a valid US passport with at least 6 months validity and two blank pages, one passport photo, a tourist invitation (voucher) from a Russian hotel or licensed tour operator, and a fee of approximately $160-200 depending on processing speed. Processing takes 20 business days standard or 3 business days for rush processing at higher cost. The tourist visa is typically issued for 30 days single-entry. Given current US-Russia diplomatic tensions, the process can be unpredictable — consulates have occasionally had staffing disruptions. Apply at least 6-8 weeks before travel. Note also that Russia and the US have suspended most consular services reciprocally; verify current consulate operating status before applying. Some Americans are using Russian tour operators who specialize in Western tourists (like the licensed operators who previously worked with tourism boards) specifically because they provide the required invitation letters and have experience navigating the current bureaucratic environment.

Best Time to Fly to Moscow

Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.

BestShoulderPeak / Expensive
Best:May (65°F)Great weather — book early
Avoid:JanuaryPeak prices and crowds

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Airport to City: How to Get There

Sheremetyevo (SVO) is 29km northwest of central Moscow. The Aeroexpress train is the best option: it runs every 30 minutes from Terminal B's dedicated station directly to Belorussky Rail Terminal in the city center, costs 600 rubles (~$6.50), and takes exactly 35 minutes — pay cash at the station ticket machines, your US card won't work. Taxis via the official airport taxi desk or the Yandex Go app (Russia's Uber equivalent, downloadable before arrival) cost roughly 1,500-2,500 rubles ($17-28) to central Moscow depending on traffic, taking 45-90 minutes. The metro is technically possible but involves a shuttle bus connection to Khimki station and multiple transfers — not worth the hassle with luggage when the Aeroexpress is this good. Avoid unlicensed taxi touts in arrivals.

Neighborhoods & Where to Stay

Kitai-Gorod & Red Square Area
luxury

The historic core within the Garden Ring, walking distance to the Kremlin, GUM department store, and St. Basil's. Hotels here like the Four Seasons Moscow and the Ritz-Carlton command premium prices (from $400/night) but the location is unbeatable for first-timers. This is tourist central, so manage expectations around crowds at peak sights.

Patriarch's Ponds (Patriarshiye Prudy)
mid-range

The most fashionable residential neighborhood in Moscow, made famous by Bulgakov's 'The Master and Margarita' — you can visit the actual pond where the novel opens. Lined with excellent restaurants and independent cafes, this is where Moscow's creative class lives. Staying here feels like actually living in the city rather than inside a tourist bubble; good mid-range boutique hotel options run $120-200/night.

Zamoskvorechye
mid-range

South of the Kremlin across the Moscow River, this neighborhood houses the Tretyakov Gallery and has a dense concentration of Georgian and Armenian restaurants that are among the best value meals in the city. The area around Pyatnitskaya Street has a mix of renovated pre-revolutionary buildings and excellent coffee shops. Budget-to-mid-range hotels and hostels run $30-130/night.

Arbat & New Arbat
mid-range

Old Arbat is the pedestrian street beloved by tourists for souvenir shopping (matryoshkas, Soviet-era pins, amber jewelry) — the prices are negotiable and quality varies wildly. New Arbat one block over is a Soviet-era boulevard of ministry buildings and chain restaurants best avoided for eating. Decent mid-range hotel concentration here, convenient to metro.

Basmanny & Chistye Prudy
budget

East of center along the Boulevard Ring, this neighborhood has Moscow's best concentration of budget hostels (700-1,500 rubles/night), interesting street art, small independent theaters, and the kind of Soviet-to-modern-Russian architectural collision that feels authentically Muscovite. Chistye Prudy boulevard itself is lovely for evening walks.

Daily Budget: What to Expect

Budget
$55/day

$12 hostel dorm at Godzillas Hostel or similar, $18 food (pirozhki from street stalls, stolovaya canteen lunch, supermarket dinner), $5 metro day pass, $20 one paid museum entry (Tretyakov is worth it)

Mid-Range
$150/day

$80 mid-range hotel near Patriarch's Ponds, $40 food (Georgian restaurant dinner, café lunch, coffee), $10 metro plus occasional taxi, $20 museum entries and one evening event

Luxury
$450/day

$280 Four Seasons or Ritz-Carlton near Red Square, $100 dinner at White Rabbit or Selfie restaurant, $30 taxis everywhere, $40 Bolshoi Theatre ticket or private museum tour

What to Eat in Moscow

1

Pelmeni at Pelmenya chain (locations across Moscow) — hand-folded Siberian dumplings served with sour cream and vinegar, a 300-ruble bowl is one of the great cheap meals in Europe. Don't confuse with the inferior frozen supermarket versions.

2

Khachapuri at any Georgian restaurant, particularly Kolkhida near Chistye Prudy or Khinkali Sapori — the Adjarian boat-shaped version filled with molten cheese and a raw egg yolk cracked in at tableside is worth visiting Moscow for on its own.

3

Borscht with black bread and smetana at Café Pushkin on Tverskoy Boulevard — yes, it's touristy and yes it's expensive by Moscow standards (800-1,200 rubles for the soup), but the 19th-century pharmacy interior and the definitive version of Russia's most famous soup make it worth one visit.

4

Plov at Uzbekistan Restaurant on Neglinnaya Street — the canonical Uzbek rice-and-lamb pilaf cooked in a massive kazan, served with pickled vegetables and green tea. Central Asian food is Moscow's most underrated cuisine and this is the city's institution for it, open since Soviet times.

5

Medovik honey cake from any konditorskaya (pastry shop) — this layered honey-and-sour-cream cake is the dessert Moscow does better than anywhere else. The Wolkonsky bakery chain sells excellent individual portions for 250-350 rubles and is reliable across all locations.

Flying from the US to Moscow

Airlines & Routes

  • No US carriers currently operate flights to Russia — all American, Delta, and United flights to Moscow were suspended in 2022 following airspace restrictions
  • Turkish Airlines via Istanbul (IST) — most popular current routing for Americans, connects from JFK, LAX, ORD, IAH, and other hubs with 1-2 hour layover at IST
  • Aeroflot (Russian carrier) — suspended European and US operations in 2022 due to aircraft leasing disputes; check current status before booking
  • Air Serbia via Belgrade — connecting option from JFK and other East Coast cities through Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport
  • Flydubai or Emirates via Dubai — viable from East and West Coast US hubs, longer total journey (~20+ hours) but reliable connection
  • Qatar Airways via Doha — another Middle Eastern connection option working from most major US airports

Flight Duration

East Coast
9-10 hours nonstop (when available) / 12-18 hours via Istanbul, Belgrade, or Dubai with connection
Midwest
No nonstop available / 14-19 hours via Istanbul or Dubai with connection from ORD or similar hubs
West Coast
No nonstop available / 18-22 hours via Istanbul, Dubai, or Doha from LAX or SFO — polar routing is theoretically faster but current airspace restrictions prevent it

Safety Tips

Moscow is physically safe for tourists in the conventional sense — violent crime targeting foreigners is rare in tourist zones, and the metro at 2am is perfectly functional and reasonably safe. The real risks are political and administrative: photographing military installations, government buildings, or police operations can result in detention. Do not photograph anything at or near the Kremlin walls that could be interpreted as security-sensitive, and absolutely do not photograph police or military personnel without explicit permission. Keep your passport on you at all times — Russian law requires it and spot checks do happen, particularly on the metro. Register your accommodation with local authorities within 7 days of arrival; hotels do this automatically but if you're staying with locals via any informal arrangement, you need to handle this yourself at a post office (ignoring it is technically illegal and can cause problems at departure). Your US phone may work on roaming but get a local SIM (available at Beeline or MTS stores in any metro station for about 500 rubles including data) for reliable access to Yandex Maps and Go. Travel insurance that covers medical evacuation is essential — US health insurance has no coverage in Russia and the gap between tourist-accessible private clinics and state hospitals is enormous.

Insider Tip

Download Yandex Maps (not Google Maps) before you arrive and save offline maps of Moscow — Google Maps data in Russia is deliberately degraded by Russian authorities and routing is often wrong. Yandex Maps has accurate metro routing, real-time traffic for taxis, walking directions that actually match the street layout, and is what every Muscovite uses. While you're at it, download the Yandex Go app for taxis — it works like Uber, prices are fixed upfront in rubles, drivers can't rip you off, and the in-app translation feature handles communication with non-English-speaking drivers. These two apps alone will save you from the most common tourist mistakes in Moscow.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest way to fly to Moscow?

The cheapest route to Moscow from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $375. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.

What is the best time to visit Moscow?

The best time to visit Moscow is May, June, July, August. Summer is the only time Moscow feels livable — warm (70-80°F), long daylight, and outdoor cafes. May and September are shoulder months. Avoid October-April unless you love freezing temperatures.

Do US citizens need a visa to visit Moscow?

US passport holders NEED a visa to visit Russia (tourism visa requires invitation letter, hotel booking, and consulate visit). Not easy or quick. Visa-free transit (up to 72 hours) is possible in some cases.

How long is the flight from the US to Moscow?

Flight time from the US to Moscow (SVO) is approximately 10 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.

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