Skip to main content
A Russian Internal Passport
is compulsory at 14 (but there is no penalty for not having one until
the age of 16) and it is reissued at age 20 and 45. Citizens can use any
other document for identification, although in certain cases an
internal passport is required (e.g. notarial transactions, sale of land
and other high-value assets).
In 1992, passports – or other photo identification documents – became
necessary to board a train. Train tickets started to bear passenger
names, allegedly, as an effort to combat speculative reselling of the
tickets.
On 9 December 1992, special pages were introduced which were affixed
in Soviet passports, certifying that the bearer of the passport was a
citizen of Russia. These pages were optional unless travelling to the
other former Soviet republics which continued to accept Soviet
passports; for other occasions, other proofs of citizenship were
accepted as well. Issuance of the pages continued until the end of 2002.
On 8 July 1997, the currently-used design of the Russian internal passport was introduced.[1]
Unlike the Soviet passports, which had three photo pages, the new
passports only have one. A passport is first issued at the age of 14,
and then replaced upon reaching the ages of 20 and 45. The text in the
passports is in Russian,
but passports issued in autonomous entities may, on the bearer's
request, contain an additional page duplicating all data in one of the
official local languages.
A deadline for exchanging old passports for the new ones was
initially set at year-end of 2001, but then extended several times and
finally set at 30 June 2004. The government had first regulated that
having failed to exchange one's passport would constitute a punishable
violation. However, the Supreme Court ruled to the effect that citizens
cannot be obliged to exchange their passports. The Soviet passports
ceased to be valid as means of personal identification since mid-2004,
but it is still legal (though barely practical) to have one.
The propiska was formally abandoned soon after adoption of the current Constitution in 1993, and replaced with "residency registration" which, in principle, was simply notification of one's place of residence.
Nevertheless, under the new regulations, permanent registration
records are stamped in citizens' internal passports just as were propiskas. This has led to the widespread misconception that registration was just a new name for the propiska; many continue to call it "propiska".
This misconception is partly reinforced by the fact that the existing
rules for registration make it an onerous process, dependent on the
consent of landlords, which effectively prevents tenants of flats from
registering.
Internal Russian passports are issued only inside the country.
Russian citizens who live abroad can get internal passport only if they
visit Russia, i.e., it is not possible to get internal passport in the
Russian consulate abroad. In practice, Russian citizens who live abroad
often do get new internal passports at all, as the law allows them to
prove their identity with an international Russian passport (travel document)
Comments