256-bit AES - the same standard that protects banking transactions

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How to Use Russian Banks and Gosuslugi from Abroad in 2026

The banking app won’t open, Gosuslugi throws an error, the SMS code never arrives. If you live abroad but still need Russian services — this article is for you.

Why Russian services won’t let you in from abroad

Many Russian banks, Gosuslugi, and government services restrict access from foreign IP addresses. The logic is simple: the service sees that you’re logging in from, say, Germany or Turkey, and either blocks the login entirely or triggers extra checks that often fail.

For someone in emigration, this turns a simple operation like checking a balance or paying a state fee into a genuine quest. And it’s not that you’re doing something wrong — it’s the address the request comes from.

Restrictions work both ways
The paradox of 2026: from inside Russia it's hard to reach foreign services, and from outside — Russian ones. In both cases a stable entry point solves the task, such as Russian VPN by Tainet (more below).

What usually breaks

The problem almost always looks the same — “unavailable in your region” or an endless check — but it shows up in different services.

Logging into a bank app or personal account from a foreign IP
Access to Gosuslugi and departmental services
Russian streaming services and subscriptions tied to a region
Marketplaces and delivery services that show "unavailable in your region"

The solution: log in as if you’re in Russia

Since the problem is that the service sees a foreign IP, the solution is on the surface — log in through an entry point located in Russia. Then, to the bank or Gosuslugi, your connection looks like an ordinary visit from inside the country, and the extra checks don’t trigger.

There’s an important nuance here. For banking apps, stability is what’s critical: they’re sensitive to a change of address mid-session. If the IP “jumps,” the app may consider it suspicious and log you out. So you need not a random chain of servers but precisely a stable Russian entry point.

Why stability matters more than "number of countries"
For access to Russian services you don't need dozens of locations around the world. You need one — a reliable Russian entry point that doesn't change its address in the middle of a banking session.

Where to get a stable connection

Russian VPN by Tainet is built, among others, for those who live abroad but don’t want to lose access to Russian services. Connecting through a stable Russian entry point makes the bank, Gosuslugi, and your usual services see an ordinary visit from inside the country.

The connection is encrypted, no logs are kept, and setup takes a couple of minutes on phone and laptop. Before a trip or a move, such access is convenient to set up in advance — you can try the service for free.

Frequently asked questions

This is about access to your own accounts in Russian banks and on Gosuslugi — that is, to your own data and services. Stable, secure access to them by itself stays within ordinary use.

Why doesn’t the SMS code arrive abroad?

That’s a separate roaming and message-delivery problem, unrelated to IP. But if the bank also blocks the foreign address, you may simply never reach the SMS step — so a stable Russian entry point solves the first half of the task.

Will a free VPN from the app store work?

For banks — almost certainly not. They need stability and a constant address, while free services usually “jump” between countries and servers, which gets you logged out.

Bottom line

Russian banks and government services often cut off foreign IPs, which is why they don’t work from abroad. A stable entry point in Russia solves the task: with it, the service treats you as a user inside the country. This is especially important for banking apps sensitive to a change of address — you can set up and test such access for free at eu.tainet.pro.