Ethnic Russians in post-Soviet states

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union (USSR) in December 1991, about 25 million ethnic Russians in post-Soviet states found themselves living outside of Russia. However, this number declined to less than 6 million today, excluding Ukraine in which ethnic Russian population is hard to estimate due to lack of a recent census.

All former Soviet citizens had a time window within which they could transfer their former Soviet citizenship to Russian citizenship. Where they did not exercise that choice, their resulting citizenship status outside Russia varied by state: from no perceivable change in status – as in Belarus – to becoming permanently resident "non-citizens" – as in Estonia and Latvia, which restricted citizenship to their pre-World War II citizens and their offspring (regardless of ethnic group) upon restoration of their independence in continuity with their sovereign identities prior to June 1940.

In June 2006 Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a plan to introduce national policy aiming at encouraging ethnic Russian immigration to Russia.

Country Number of
ethnic Russians
Percent of
national population
As of
(census data)
 Russia1105,579,17980.82021
 Ukraine8,334,14117.32001
 Kazakhstan2,963,93814.62025
 Uzbekistan720,3242.12021
 Belarus706,9927.52019
 Latvia1434,24324.12025
 Estonia1285,81921.02025
 Kyrgyzstan274,9403.82024
 Lithuania144,5005.02025
 Turkmenistan114,4471.62022
 Moldova275,3003.22024
 Azerbaijan71,0460.72019
 Tajikistan29,0000.32020
 Georgia326,5860.72014
 Armenia14,0740.52022

1: Excluding the population for which data is unknown

2: Does not include Transnistria (2015 census: 138,072 Russians or 29.1% of the population)

3: Does not include Abkhazia (2021 census: 22,303 Russians or 9.1% of the population) or South Ossetia (2015 census: 610 Russians or 1.1% of the population)