Mobile Internet in Russia: Shutdowns, the 24-Hour SIM Block, and How to Stay Online
Regional mobile internet shutdowns, the 24-hour data block on foreign SIM cards, whitelisted services — what travelers to Russia face in 2026 and how to prepare.
Blocked websites are only half of the story of the Russian internet in 2026. The other half is that mobile internet itself periodically disappears — for everyone in a region, or specifically for you as a holder of a foreign SIM card. If you are planning a trip, these two mechanisms are worth understanding in advance, because no app can fix them after the fact.
The 24-hour block on foreign SIM cards
Since October 2025, when a foreign SIM or eSIM first registers on any Russian network — MTS, MegaFon, Beeline or Tele2 — mobile data and SMS are blocked for roughly 24 hours. The official rationale is to prevent drones from being controlled through foreign mobile networks. In practice it means you land, your phone shows full signal, and nothing loads.
Key facts:
- Voice calls usually work during the block; data and SMS do not.
- The timer can reset when you cross a regional border or your phone switches networks — travelers moving between cities may hit the block more than once.
- Carriers send an SMS with an identity-verification link (sometimes just a captcha); completing it can lift the block early. Whether the SMS arrives on a foreign number reliably is hit-or-miss.
- The block applies to travel eSIMs too, since they attach to the same Russian networks.
What actually helps: plan your first day around Wi-Fi. Airports, hotels and cafés have it, and with a VPN installed you get your messengers and calls back immediately — see our guide on restoring WhatsApp and Telegram calls. Download offline maps and your tickets before the flight.
Regional mobile internet shutdowns
Separately from SIM rules, Russian regions periodically switch off mobile internet entirely, citing drone threats. Shutdowns can last hours or days, cover a city or a whole region, and are rarely announced in advance. In some regions they have become routine.
During a shutdown, carriers keep a government-approved whitelist of domestic services reachable: the state services portal, major Russian banks, taxi and map apps, food delivery. Everything foreign — Google, WhatsApp, Telegram, your airline's app — is off the list.
Two consequences for travelers:
- A VPN cannot help during a full shutdown. There is no data channel to tunnel through. This is a hard limit for any VPN, ours included — anyone promising otherwise is lying.
- Wi-Fi keeps working. Shutdowns target the mobile network; fixed broadband does not go down. A café with Wi-Fi turns back into a normal internet connection — and with a VPN, into an uncensored one.
Getting a local SIM: worth it?
A Russian SIM avoids the foreign-SIM block and gives you cheap data, but since 2025 buying one as a foreigner requires a passport and biometric registration, and the number of SIMs per person is capped. For a stay of months, it is worth the bureaucracy. For a two-week trip, most travelers do better with a travel eSIM (accepting the 24-hour block once) plus Wi-Fi and a VPN.
A realistic connectivity kit for 2026
- Before the flight: install a VPN that works on Russian networks (see our expat VPN guide — protocols matter more than brand names), download offline maps, save tickets and bookings offline.
- First 24 hours: expect no mobile data on a foreign SIM. Live on Wi-Fi, complete the carrier's verification link if it arrives.
- Day-to-day: mobile data works, but messenger calls and many apps need the VPN on. Keep it enabled — MeerGuard's plans have no traffic limits, so there is no reason to toggle.
- During a shutdown: find Wi-Fi; mobile data is gone for everyone, whitelisted apps aside.
The pattern behind all of this: connectivity in Russia is not gone, but it is conditional — on your SIM, your region, and your software. Travelers who prepare the software layer before departure barely notice; those who do not spend their first days offline. Preparation costs about ten minutes — the setup guide is here.
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