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Why Is Russia Included In Europe?

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Last updated on 2 min read
Russia is included in Europe primarily because its western portion lies on the continent of Europe, separated from Asian Russia by the Ural Mountains.

Geographic Context

Look at a map, and you’ll see European Russia hugging the western edge of the Russian Federation. It sits on the East European Plain—Europe’s biggest unbroken flatland—stretching from the Baltic Sea clear across to the Ural Mountains. That flatland? Super fertile chernozem soil plus a mild climate made it the perfect spot for Russia’s biggest cities and factories. Moscow, St. Petersburg, and most of the country’s industry all huddle here. Most geographers draw the Europe-Asia line right along the Urals, which makes European Russia the continent’s eastern outpost.

Key Details

Metric Value (as of 2026) Source
Area 3.96 million km² CIA World Factbook
Population 110.6 million World Bank
Population share ~76% of Russia’s total CIA World Factbook
Major cities Moscow (12.6M), St. Petersburg (5.4M), Kazan (1.3M) Statista 2025
Climate zones Humid continental (west), subarctic (north), semi-arid (south) NOAA Climate Data

Interesting Background

Back in the 1700s, historian Gerhard Friedrich Müller drew the first clear line between Europe and Asia right along the Urals. That map stuck. Then came Peter the Great, who basically dragged Russia into the European club—he moved the capital to St. Petersburg, imported European architecture, and built a military modeled on Western standards. The Eastern Orthodox faith, which took root after Prince Vladimir’s conversion in the 900s, gave the region its own cultural flavor. Later, Soviet planners kept the factories and railroads west of the Urals, cementing European Russia’s dominance.

Practical Information

Ready to cross from Europe into Asia? You’ve got options—multiple road and rail checkpoints let you slip past the Urals. The Trans-Siberian Railway, for example, pulls out of Moscow’s Yaroslavsky Station and rolls into the Urals in about two days, giving passengers a front-row seat to both continents. Near Yekaterinburg (56° N 60° E), certain nationalities can even hop across visa-free under Russia’s 2024–26 transit deals. Still, always double-check the latest rules with the Russian Federal Security Service—border policies can flip faster than a pancake.

Edited and fact-checked by the MeridianFacts editorial team.
James Cartwright
Written by

James Cartwright is a geography writer and former high school geography teacher who has spent 20 years making maps and distances interesting. He can name every capital city from memory and insists that geography is the most underrated subject in school.

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