Required Disclosures in Russia
Information landlords must disclose to tenants under Russian law, including property defects, ownership rights, and third-party claims.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Unlike highly regulated jurisdictions (like California) where landlords must distribute standardized pamphlets about lead paint, mold, or bed bugs, Russian residential rental law imposes fewer formalized "disclosure packet" requirements. However, the Civil Code (ГК РФ) does explicitly require landlords to disclose critical information regarding the legal status and physical condition of the property.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes. Failure to disclose critical information can invalidate the lease. Information verified: March 2026.
1. Disclosure of Third-Party Rights (Legal Encumbrances)
This is the most strictly enforced disclosure requirement in Russian rental law. According to Article 613 of the Civil Code, before signing the lease, the landlord must warn the tenant of all existing rights of third parties to the leased property.
This includes:
- Mortgages (Pledges): If the apartment was bought with a mortgage and is currently pledged to a bank (e.g., Sberbank or VTB).
- Easements or Arrests: If the property is under arrest by bailiffs due to the owner's debts.
- Other Co-owners: If the apartment is jointly owned (e.g., by two siblings or spouses), the landlord must disclose this, and the tenant should demand written consent from all other legal co-owners before signing.
Consequences of Non-Disclosure: If a landlord conceals that the apartment is under a bank's mortgage, and the bank suddenly initiates foreclosure proceedings, disrupting the tenant's life, the tenant has the right to demand a reduction in rent or the immediate cancellation of the contract with full compensation for relocation damages.
2. Disclosure of Physical Property Defects
According to Article 612 of the Civil Code, the landlord is liable for structural and functional defects in the leased property that wholly or partially hinder its use, even if the landlord themselves did not know about these defects at the time of signing.
Because of this strict liability, a smart landlord must proactively disclose and document all known defects prior to signing. If a defect is explicitly documented in the lease or the signed Inventory Act (e.g., "The washing machine occasionally leaks" or "The balcony door does not fully close"), the landlord is entirely absolved of responsibility for that specific flaw, and the tenant cannot later demand repairs or rent reductions for it.
However, if a major "hidden defect" emerges later (e.g., faulty internal wiring causes constant power outages, or hidden black mold blooms behind the wallpaper), the tenant has the right to:
- Demand the landlord fix it free of charge.
- Demand a proportionate reduction in rent.
- Fix it themselves and withhold the cost from the next rent payment (with receipts).
- Terminate the lease early without penalty.
3. The EGRN Extract (Выписка из ЕГРН)
While not a "disclosure form" filled out by the landlord, the fundamental document protecting a tenant in Russia is the EGRN Extract (an extract from the Unified State Register of Real Estate - Выписка из ЕГРН).
It is standard, due-diligence practice for any tenant or real estate agent in Russia to request the landlord present a fresh EGRN extract (issued within the last 30 days) and their internal passport before signing the 11-month lease.
The EGRN Extract proves:
- That the person standing in front of the tenant is the actual legal owner (preventing rampant sub-leasing scams where fraudsters rent an Airbnb for 3 days and try to "rent" it long-term to unsuspecting victims).
- The presence of any existing legal encumbrances (mortgages or arrests).
While the landlord is supposed to disclose these facts verbally or in writing, the EGRN document serves as the absolute state verification of these claims.
Return to the Russia Landlord-Tenant Law Overview.
Sources & Official References
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