Moscow delivers some of Europe's fastest and cheapest internet β home fiber at 202 Mbps for under $11 monthly β but the geopolitical complexity surrounding a stay here demands serious preparation. Cafe WiFi averages 44 Mbps across the five main work spots, with chains like Coffee Mania providing free connections alongside a growing specialty scene. Coffee costs about $4.00 at third-wave cafes, though budget chains offer flat-price options around $2.60. The work-friendly venues spread across the central ring from Kitay-gorod through Patriarshiye Prudy to the Moscow City business district.
The nomad community is small and predominantly Russian-speaking, reflecting the reality that most Western remote workers have found other bases since 2022. English proficiency is medium β functional among younger professionals and in tech circles but thin across daily life, where Russian is essential. At $1,800 per month, Moscow offers world-class museums, the Bolshoi Theatre, a dense metro network, and Soviet-to-modern architectural grandeur at costs below Western European capitals. The GMT+3 timezone overlaps with European business hours, and the city's tech ecosystem remains active with strong internal demand.
The practical barriers are substantial. Visa and Mastercard cards issued outside Russia do not work at all β you must bring cash and exchange it locally or set up domestic payment alternatives. Facebook, Instagram, X, Discord, LinkedIn, and many Western services are blocked, requiring VPN tools configured before arrival. There is no digital nomad visa, mandatory registration within 7 days creates bureaucratic overhead, and harsh winters regularly hit -15 to -25 degrees with minimal daylight. International flight connections have been severely reduced, and the overall environment of political uncertainty affects foreigners in ways that are difficult to predict.