8 common Russian e-Visa mistakes (and how to avoid them)

Short answer
Most Russian unified e-Visa rejections and delays come from avoidable errors: applying too late, uploading a low-quality or non-compliant photo, entering names or passport numbers that do not exactly match the passport, choosing an entry point the e-Visa is not valid for, or assuming you can extend or change it. Apply at least a few days before travel, match every detail to your passport exactly, and enter only through an authorised checkpoint.
The eight mistakes
- 1Applying too late. The e-Visa is processed in up to four calendar days. Apply well before you travel — not the night before a flight.
- 2A non-compliant photo. Use a clear, recent, passport-style photo on a plain background. Blurry, cropped or filtered images are a top rejection cause.
- 3Name or passport-number mismatch. Every character must match your passport exactly, including the document number and expiry.
- 4Passport validity too short. Make sure your passport is valid well beyond your intended stay.
- 5Choosing the wrong entry point. The e-Visa is only valid through authorised checkpoints — confirm yours is on the list before booking flights.
- 6Overstaying the 30-day limit. The unified e-Visa allows a stay of up to 30 days; it is single-entry and cannot be extended.
- 7Assuming multiple entries. Once you leave Russia, the e-Visa is used up. You cannot re-enter on the same e-Visa.
- 8Not printing the confirmation. Carry a printed copy of your e-Visa notification as well as the digital version.
The simple rule
Match every field to your passport exactly, use a clean photo, apply a few days early, and enter through an approved checkpoint. Do that and the e-Visa is one of the easiest ways into Russia.
First, check you are eligible
The unified e-Visa is open to citizens of a specific list of countries (around 64). If your nationality is not on the list, you need a standard visa instead — applying for an e-Visa you are not eligible for is itself a common, wasted mistake.
Frequently asked questions
Why was my Russian e-Visa rejected?
The most common reasons are a non-compliant photo, a name or passport-number mismatch, insufficient passport validity, or applying for an e-Visa when your nationality is not eligible. Re-check each field against your passport and re-apply.
How early should I apply for the Russian e-Visa?
It is processed in up to four calendar days, so apply at least several days before travel — never the night before your flight.
Can I extend or re-use the Russian e-Visa?
No. The unified e-Visa is single-entry, valid for a stay of up to 30 days, and cannot be extended. Once you leave Russia it is used up.
RussianVisa.co is an independent guide and not a government body. Russian entry rules change frequently — always confirm the current requirements with the official Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the consulate that serves your country before you book or travel.
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