
Lucas Botzen
Founder & Managing Director
Last updated:
September 11, 2025
How to hire employees in Russia
View our Employer of Record servicesHiring employees in Russia requires a thorough understanding of the country's unique labor code and employment regulations. Businesses looking to expand into this market often face complexities related to legal entity establishment, payroll processing, tax withholding, and ensuring full compliance with local employment laws. Navigating these requirements can be time-consuming and resource-intensive for international companies.
To legally employ talent in Russia, companies typically consider a few primary approaches, each with its own set of administrative burdens and strategic advantages.
- Establishing a local legal entity: This involves setting up a subsidiary or branch office in Russia, a process that can be lengthy and requires significant investment in local registration, legal counsel, and administrative staff.
- Utilizing an Employer of Record (EOR): Partnering with an EOR like Rivermate allows companies to hire employees in Russia without establishing their own local entity. The EOR acts as the legal employer, handling all compliance, payroll, and HR responsibilities, while the client company manages the day-to-day work of the employees.
- Hiring independent contractors: While seemingly simpler, classifying workers as independent contractors in Russia carries significant risks. Russian labor law heavily favors employees, and misclassification can lead to severe penalties, back taxes, and fines if the relationship is deemed to be de facto employment.
How an EOR Works in Russia
An Employer of Record (EOR) service simplifies global expansion by taking on the legal and administrative burdens of employment. In Russia, an EOR provides a compliant framework for hiring, ensuring your operations remain legal and efficient.
- Legal Employer Status: The EOR becomes the legal employer of your Russian workforce, handling all legal obligations.
- Payroll and Tax Management: The EOR manages local payroll processing, including salary disbursements, social contributions, and income tax withholding in compliance with Russian regulations.
- Benefits Administration: They administer mandatory and supplementary employee benefits, such as health insurance, pension contributions, and paid leave.
- Labor Law Compliance: The EOR ensures full adherence to the complex Russian Labor Code, including employment contracts, working hours, termination processes, and employee rights.
- HR Support and Guidance: Provides ongoing HR support for both the client company and the employees, including handling queries and managing HR-related documentation.
Benefits of Using an EOR in Russia
For companies seeking to enter the Russian market without the commitment and complexity of establishing a local entity, an EOR offers compelling advantages.
- Speed to Market: Hire employees in Russia quickly, often within days or weeks, bypassing the lengthy process of entity registration.
- Reduced Risk and Compliance: Mitigate the risks associated with navigating complex and frequently changing Russian labor laws, tax regulations, and payroll compliance.
- Cost Efficiency: Avoid the significant upfront costs and ongoing overheads associated with setting up and maintaining a local subsidiary.
- Focus on Core Business: Free up internal resources from administrative and compliance tasks, allowing your team to concentrate on strategic objectives and growth.
- Talent Acquisition: Access a wider talent pool in Russia without geographical or legal constraints, enabling you to hire the best professionals regardless of your entity status.
Responsibilities of an Employer of Record
As an Employer of Record in Russia, Rivermate is responsible for:
- Creating and managing the employment contracts
- Running the monthly payroll
- Providing local and global benefits
- Ensuring 100% local compliance
- Providing local HR support
Responsibilities of the company that hires the employee
As the company that hires the employee through the Employer of Record, you are responsible for:
- Day-to-day management of the employee
- Work assignments
- Performance management
- Training and development
Costs of using an Employer of Record in Russia
Rivermate's transparent pricing model eliminates complexity with a single, competitive monthly fee per employee. Unlike traditional PEO providers, our pricing in Russia includes comprehensive HR support, benefits administration, compliance management, and access to our proprietary dashboard for real-time workforce analytics. No hidden costs, no setup fees—just straightforward pricing that scales with your business needs while ensuring full legal compliance in Russia.
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Taxes in Russia
Employers in Russia must fulfill several tax obligations, primarily related to social security contributions, payroll taxes, and income tax withholding. They are responsible for paying social security contributions on behalf of employees, covering pension insurance (22%), social insurance (2.9%), medical insurance (5.1%), and mandatory accident insurance (0.2%-8.5%), based on gross salaries and applicable thresholds. Additionally, employers must withhold personal income tax (PIT) at 13% for residents earning up to 5 million rubles annually, and 15% for higher incomes; non-residents typically face a 30% rate.
Tax compliance involves timely reporting: monthly income and tax withholding reports (Form 6-NDFL) are due by the end of the following month, annual reports (Form 2-NDFL) by March 1, and social security contributions by the 15th of the following month. Employers should also be aware of employee tax deductions, including standard, social, property, investment, and professional deductions, which can reduce taxable income. Foreign workers and companies must consider specific rules, including potential benefits from tax treaties to avoid double taxation.
Tax Obligation | Rate / Deadline |
---|---|
Pension Insurance | 22% of gross salary |
Social Insurance | 2.9% of gross salary |
Medical Insurance | 5.1% of gross salary |
Accident Insurance | 0.2% - 8.5% (depending on risk class) |
Income Tax (Residents) | 13% up to 5M rubles, 15% above; 30% for non-residents |
Monthly Reporting (Form 6-NDFL) | End of following month |
Annual Reporting (Form 2-NDFL) | March 1 of the following year |
Social Security Report | 15th of the following month |
How an Employer of Record, like Rivermate can help with payroll taxes and compliance in Russia
An Employer of Record (EOR) manages monthly payroll calculations, employer contributions, and tax filings in-country on your behalf. Rivermate handles registrations, payslips, statutory reporting, and remittances to authorities so you stay compliant with local rules and deadlines—without setting up a local entity. Our specialists monitor regulatory changes and ensure correct rates, thresholds, and caps are applied to every payroll cycle.
Salary in Russia
Russia's salary landscape varies significantly by industry, role, and region, with higher wages typically found in Moscow and St. Petersburg. For example, annual salaries range from 800,000 RUB for medical doctors to up to 4,000,000 RUB for IT software engineers. Minimum wages are set federally at around 19,242 RUB/month in 2025, but regional authorities may impose higher thresholds. Employers must comply with these minimums to avoid penalties.
Compensation packages often include base salary, bonuses, and allowances such as performance, holiday, transportation, meal, and housing allowances. Salaries are generally paid monthly via bank transfers, with a payroll cycle from the 1st to the 15th of the following month. Employers are responsible for withholding taxes (13% for residents, 30% for non-residents) and social contributions, and must provide detailed payslips.
Salary Range (RUB/year) | Industry | Role |
---|---|---|
1.5M - 4M | IT | Software Engineer |
1.2M - 3M | Finance | Financial Analyst |
1M - 2.5M | Manufacturing | Production Manager |
900K - 2M | Retail | Marketing Manager |
800K - 1.8M | Healthcare | Medical Doctor |
Salary trends are upward, especially for skilled roles in IT, finance, and healthcare, with forecasts indicating moderate increases in 2025. Companies should monitor these trends to maintain competitive compensation strategies.
Leave in Russia
Russian labor law guarantees employees a minimum of 28 calendar days of paid annual leave, which can be split into multiple parts, with at least one part lasting no less than 14 days. Employers must pay employees their average salary at least three days before leave begins. Unused leave can generally be carried over for up to two years, but prolonged accumulation is discouraged. Public holidays are designated non-working days with full pay, including major dates like New Year (January 1-6, 8), International Women's Day (March 8), Victory Day (May 9), and Russia Day (June 12).
Sick leave benefits depend on service length, with the first three days paid by the employer and subsequent days covered by the Social Insurance Fund, offering 60-100% of average earnings. Parental leave includes 70 days of maternity leave with full pay, and parental leave until the child turns three, with allowances provided until the child reaches 1.5 years. Paternity and adoption leaves are also available, with paternity leave typically unpaid unless specified by collective agreements. Other leave types include bereavement, study, unpaid, and potentially sabbatical leave, depending on employer policies.
Leave Type | Duration / Details | Payment / Conditions |
---|---|---|
Annual Leave | 28 days minimum, can be split, at least one part ≥14 days | Paid in advance, up to 2-year carryover |
Public Holidays | Multiple, e.g., Jan 1-6, Mar 8, May 9, June 12 | Non-working, full pay |
Sick Leave | First 3 days paid by employer; rest by Social Insurance Fund | 60-100% of average earnings, based on service length |
Maternity Leave | 70 days prenatal + 70 days postnatal (84 days for complications) | 100% pay, covered by Social Insurance Fund |
Parental Leave | Until child turns 3; allowances until 1.5 years | Paid, job protected |
Paternity Leave | Unpaid (unless collective agreement states otherwise) | Unpaid, or paid if specified |
Adoption Leave | Similar to maternity and parental leave | Paid, with job protection |
Benefits in Russia
Russia mandates several employee benefits, including social insurance (approx. 2.9%), pension contributions (around 22%), mandatory health insurance (about 5.1%), and work injury insurance (0.2%-8.5% depending on industry risk). Employees are entitled to at least 28 days of paid leave, public holidays, sick leave, and maternity leave, with benefits typically funded through employer contributions and social funds.
Beyond mandatory benefits, employers often offer optional perks such as supplementary health insurance (DMS), life insurance, voluntary pension plans, training, wellness programs, transportation allowances, and housing subsidies. Supplementary health insurance costs range from 30,000 to 150,000 rubles annually per employee and is increasingly expected, especially in urban and competitive sectors.
Benefit package composition varies by company size and industry. Large firms tend to provide comprehensive benefits including DMS, life insurance, and pension plans, while SMEs may focus on core mandatory benefits. Industry-specific and regional differences influence offerings, with sectors like IT and finance offering more attractive packages.
Benefit | Large Companies | SMEs | IT Industry |
---|---|---|---|
Mandatory Benefits | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Supplementary Health Insurance | Yes | Sometimes | Yes |
Life Insurance | Yes | Rarely | Yes |
Voluntary Pension Plan | Yes | Rarely | Sometimes |
Training & Development | Yes | Sometimes | Yes |
Wellness & Fitness Programs | Yes | Rarely | Sometimes |
How an Employer of Record, like Rivermate can help with local benefits in Russia
Rivermate provides compliant, locally competitive benefits—such as health insurance, pension, and statutory coverages—integrated into one EOR platform. We administer enrollments, manage renewals, and ensure contributions and withholdings meet country requirements so your team receives the right benefits without added overhead.
Agreements in Russia
Employment agreements in Russia are governed by the Labor Code, requiring clear contracts that specify job duties, compensation, working hours, and termination conditions. Employers must include mandatory clauses such as full legal names, job description, workplace, start date, salary details, working hours, vacation entitlement, social insurance, and termination conditions. Contracts can be either indefinite-term, which continues until terminated, or fixed-term, limited to five years and renewable under specific conditions.
Probation periods are regulated, with a maximum of three months generally, and up to six months for senior roles. Fixed-term contracts between two and six months can have a probation of up to two weeks. Confidentiality clauses are enforceable if reasonable, while non-compete clauses require careful tailoring and may involve compensation. Contract modifications require mutual consent, and termination must follow strict procedures, including proper notice and documentation, to avoid legal disputes.
Contract Type | Duration | Renewal Conditions |
---|---|---|
Indefinite-Term | No end date | Continues until terminated |
Fixed-Term | Up to 5 years | Renewed under specific circumstances |
Probation Periods | Maximum Duration |
---|---|
General employees | 3 months |
Executives, chief accountants | 6 months |
Fixed-term contracts (2-6 months duration) | 2 weeks |
Remote Work in Russia
Remote work in Russia is increasingly prevalent, driven by technological progress and shifting employee expectations. The legal framework, primarily based on amendments to the Labor Code, mandates formal employment contracts for remote arrangements, specifying roles, schedules, and equipment provisions. Employees have the right to work remotely if feasible, but employers must ensure safe working conditions, data security, and proper equipment or compensation. Termination conditions should be clearly outlined in contracts.
Employers are adopting various flexible work arrangements, including:
Arrangement | Description |
---|---|
Work-from-Home (WFH) | Employees work remotely from home, with formalized agreements specifying conditions. |
Hybrid Model | Combination of office and remote work, allowing flexibility in scheduling. |
Flexible Hours | Employees choose work hours within agreed limits to enhance productivity and work-life balance. |
Key data points:
Aspect | Details |
---|---|
Legal Compliance | Formal contracts required; employer must ensure safety and data protection. |
Employee Rights | Right to remote work if role permits; cannot be forced unilaterally unless law states otherwise. |
Employer Obligations | Provide or compensate for necessary equipment; ensure safe and compliant remote work environment. |
This evolving landscape emphasizes legal clarity and flexible arrangements to attract talent and optimize productivity in Russia's remote work environment.
Termination in Russia
In Russia, employment termination is governed by strict legal procedures outlined in the Labor Code. Employers must follow specific notice periods based on employee category: three days for general employees and probationers, and one month for managers and executives. Severance pay is mandated in various cases, such as redundancy (one month’s average salary), military service (two weeks’ salary), employer fault (one month), and fixed-term contract expiration (one month). The calculation of severance is based on the employee's average salary over the past 12 months.
Key grounds for termination include both with-cause reasons—such as gross misconduct, performance failure, or loss of trust—and without-cause reasons like company liquidation or restructuring. Procedural compliance involves proper documentation, timely written notices, potential trade union consultation, offering suitable alternative positions, issuing formal orders, and settling all dues, including wages and severance, on the last day. Employers must also update employment records, now maintained electronically since 2021.
Employees are protected against wrongful dismissal through potential reinstatement, compensation for lost earnings, and moral damages. Certain categories, including pregnant women and employees on sick leave or vacation, enjoy additional safeguards. Employees can appeal termination decisions through labor courts or authorities.
Aspect | Key Data Points |
---|---|
Notice Periods | General: 3 days; Managers: 1 month; Probation: 3 days |
Severance Pay | Redundancy: 1 month; Military: 2 weeks; Employer fault: 1 month; Fixed-term: 1 month |
Grounds for Termination | With cause: misconduct, performance issues; Without cause: liquidation, restructuring |
Procedural Requirements | Documentation, written notice, offer alternative, formal order, final settlement, record update |
Employee Protections | Reinstatement, compensation, moral damages, special protections for certain categories |
Hiring independent contractors in Russia
Russia's freelance market is expanding, offering businesses flexibility and access to specialized skills. Key legal distinctions include control, integration, payment, tools, and relationship duration, with contractors typically operating autonomously on project-based terms. Misclassification risks are significant, so clear contracts are essential, covering scope, deliverables, payment, IP rights, confidentiality, and legal jurisdiction.
Independent contractors in Russia must handle their taxes and social contributions, often registering as self-employed or individual entrepreneurs, with tax rates around 4-6%. They are responsible for pension and medical insurance, with some contributions voluntary. Freelancers are prevalent in IT, marketing, finance, construction, logistics, and education sectors.
Aspect | Self-Employed (NPF) | Individual Entrepreneur (IP) |
---|---|---|
Income Tax Rate | 4% or 6% | 6% (typically) |
Pension Fund Contribution | Voluntary | Mandatory |
Medical Insurance | Mandatory | Mandatory |
Social Insurance | Voluntary | Voluntary |
Work Permits & Visas in Russia
Russia's work permit system requires foreign nationals to obtain appropriate visas and permits for legal employment, with various options tailored to employment type and skill level. The most common is the Work Visa, which necessitates employer sponsorship, a work permit, and compliance with quotas set annually by the government. Highly Qualified Specialist (HQS) visas offer longer validity (up to three years) with simplified procedures for skilled professionals earning above a certain threshold. Short-term business and student visas serve specific purposes but generally do not permit employment.
The application process involves employer sponsorship, quota approval, and submission of documents such as passports, educational credentials, medical certificates, and employment contracts. Employers are responsible for ensuring compliance with registration, notification, and labor law requirements. Visa fees and processing times vary, with durations ranging from a few weeks to several months. Foreign workers and their dependents must adhere to registration and renewal obligations to maintain legal status.
Key Data Point | Details |
---|---|
Work Visa Validity | Typically aligned with employment contract duration |
HQS Visa Validity | Up to 3 years, extendable |
Quota Application | Annually determined by Russian government |
Typical Processing Time | Weeks to several months |
Required Documents | Passport, educational credentials, medical certificate, employment contract, application form |
Permanent Residency Requirement | 5+ years of legal residence, Russian language test, proof of income, clean criminal record |
Dependent Visa Requirements | Proof of relationship, financial support, medical insurance |
Employers and employees must ensure timely visa renewal, proper registration, and accurate documentation to maintain compliance and avoid legal issues.
How an Employer of Record, like Rivermate can help with work permits in Russia
Navigating work permits can be complex and time‑sensitive. Rivermate coordinates the entire process end‑to‑end: determining the right visa category, preparing employer and employee documentation, liaising with local authorities, and ensuring full compliance with country‑specific rules. Our in‑country experts accelerate timelines, minimize refusals, and keep you updated on each milestone so your hire can start on time—legally and confidently.
Frequently asked questions about EOR in Russia
About the author

Lucas Botzen
Lucas Botzen is the founder of Rivermate, a global HR platform specializing in international payroll, compliance, and benefits management for remote companies. He previously co-founded and successfully exited Boloo, scaling it to over €2 million in annual revenue. Lucas is passionate about technology, automation, and remote work, advocating for innovative digital solutions that streamline global employment.