Flights to Russia: no direct routes — here's how you actually get there
Open Google Flights, type "New York to Moscow," and you'll see either nothing or a $2,500 itinerary that makes no sense. That's not because you can't get to Russia — it's because direct US–Russia flights have been suspended since 2022, and most Western booking sites won't sell the Russian leg. The people who actually go use one of two methods.
Method 1: two separate tickets (the standard)
Book leg one on a Western airline to a hub — Istanbul is the workhorse; Dubai, Belgrade, Yerevan and Doha also work. Book leg two separately from the hub into Russia: Turkish Airlines, Pegasus, Southwind, AJet, Ural or Aeroflot all fly Istanbul–Moscow, with round trips from about $294–420 and one-ways from $143.
East Coast US $950–1,350 · West Coast $1,100–1,500 · Hawaii $1,400–1,900 · Europe $380–650.
The catch, and it matters: your bags do not transfer between two separate bookings. You collect them in Istanbul, re-check, and clear security again. Leave a minimum of 4 hours between flights — 5–6 if you value your cortisol. A missed second flight on separate tickets is your problem, not the airline's.
Method 2: one through-ticket (the comfort option)
Turkish Airlines sells single through-itineraries like JFK→IST→Moscow on one booking. It typically costs $300–700 more than two tickets, but bags check through to Moscow and a delayed first leg becomes the airline's responsibility. For families, older travelers, or anyone allergic to airport logistics, it's honest money well spent.
When to fly (the price swing is real)
| Season | Effect on fares |
|---|---|
| June–July | peak, +20–30% |
| August | high, +10% |
| Sep–Nov | cheapest, −15% |
| Dec 20 – Jan 8 | diaspora peak, +20% |
| Feb–Mar | low, −20% |
Live example from this summer: the same Los Angeles–Moscow through-fare listed at $2,572 for June and $1,812 for August — a 30% swing for shifting one month.
Three rules before you buy
- Visa first, flights second (US/UK/CA/AU passports). Your passport spends up to 20 calendar days at the consulate — non-refundable tickets bought early are the classic loss.
- Book the Russia leg on the airline's own site or a major OTA that completes checkout — if payment fails on a Western card, Trip.com usually processes it.
- Screenshot both bookings offline. Your first 24 hours in Russia may be dataless (the 24-hour SIM block explained).