Do Russian border guards usually stamp on the visa, or on a separate page?

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Accepted answer

UPDATE: On the Allegro train, by default, they placed the entry stamp on a separate page - I saw it happen to a Spanish citizen who was checked before me.

However, I politely asked the officer, in broken Russian, to stamp the visa instead ("pozhaluista shtamp na visa, niet drugoj stranitsa"), and she was perfectly OK doing so.

Same thing when exiting for Kazakhstan.

Below is a picture of my visa with stamps

enter image description here

Upvote:3

I have three single entry visas (newest is from 2016), traveling with train from Helsinki and with plane. In each case, entry stamp was placed on the next page, and exit stamp was placed on the visa.

Upvote:3

I think it matters if you have a single or multiple entry visa I have travelled 4 times:

2010- Single visa, Both stamped on the visa
2015- Double Entry, First entry and Last Exit only stamped on visa
2016- Single Entry- Both on visa
2016- Double- Not on visa

Upvote:3

I have travelled to/from Russia more than a dozen times in the last few years - on USA passport and on British passport. Every single time the stamp went onto the visa itself.

Upvote:5

I've travel a lot from Russia, and I saw many foreigners going through the border, and I can say that border guards usually are trying to save the place, stamping the nearest to the visa page in passport.

Stamps on Russian borders usually are small enough to get two on one line of the page, so I think that you wouldn't lose much space there, but still, probably, one page will be stamped.

Upvote:6

For me, he stamped the page preceding the visa double-page, and he took some effort to open specifically that page, so it seems intentional (that was in April/May 2016).

You shouldn't be too worried about saving space, most border agents stamp across whatever is there without caring once the passport gets kind of full, and you can always get a new one. I have not heard of any case where there were immigration issues because the passport was 'full'.

Upvote:6

I’ll admit that ‘two’ is a small number of data points but it is still larger than zero, so here goes:

I entered (and exited) Russia twice. Once by train from Helsinki (inbound on the Saint Petersburg train, return on the Moscow train) and once from Belarus with detours to Helsinki (inbound coming from Prague, returning on a Saint Petersburg–Helsinki train). In all four occasions (one of which being Belarusian immigration) the entry and exit stamps were stamped onto the visa.

It makes sense because the visa allocate space for the stamps if you look at it properly.

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