Real estate development companies in Russia can be searched by city, project type, service area, and profile status. Review developers, brokers, builders, property managers, construction firms, and development-related providers before contact. Use REDH profiles to compare available company details before document requests, registry checks, or serious project discussions begin.
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Честр-Инвест, ООО
Честр-Инвест, ООО (First Trust Group) operates in Ufa, Bashkortostan, and focuses on residential and commercial development. On its official site, the company says it is ...
Суварстроит
#Суварстроит operates in Kazan, Russia and focuses on large-scale residential development with some commercial space and buyer services around parking, storage, and financing. Its official ...
Девелопмент-Юг
Девелопмент-Юг, operating as Development-Yug, is a Russian residential developer rather than a single-project brand. Its official site presents the company as active since 1995, with ...
Zhk Svetlaya Dolina
Svetlaya Dolina is a residential complex in Kazan on Natana Rakhlin Street, developed by Ak Bars Dom rather than a standalone company. The official project ...
PMD
PMD operates in Perm, Russia and focuses on residential development with related commercial premises. Its official site says the company has been shaping the city ...
Nonamegroup
Nonamegroup operates in Russia and focuses on residential development in Izhevsk, while also expanding into Crimea. On its official site, the company presents apartment buildings ...
GK ACI
GK ACI appears to refer publicly to Group of Companies AlfaStroyInvest, a Russian housing developer building business-light and comfort-plus residential complexes. On its official site, ...
How to review real estate developers in Russia
Real estate developers in Russia can differ by city, company role, project stage, and property type. A Moscow apartment developer, Saint Petersburg broker, Sochi property manager, or construction-linked provider may each require different checks.
Start with the company profile. Review its location, website, service area, project focus, public links, and profile status. Then compare key details with official sources where needed.
For new-build projects, users should ask about the legal developer, project declaration, escrow account, DDU contract, construction permit, commissioning status, handover timeline, and delay terms.
For resale or land-related deals, users should check property records, ownership details, limitations, encumbrances, and contract parties.
REDH supports early research before direct contact begins. Final decisions should depend on current documents, registry extracts, legal advice, and direct confirmation from the company or authorised representative.
Explore Russia companies by real estate focus
Real estate companies in Russia can work across development, brokerage, construction, management, investment, and project delivery. Users should compare each provider by actual role, not only by name or city.
Apartment developers may focus on new-build residential complexes, mixed-use projects, or large urban districts. Commercial property firms may work with offices, retail space, logistics sites, industrial buildings, or income-producing assets.
Some providers support projects without owning them directly. These may include brokers, property managers, construction contractors, design firms, engineering companies, land advisers, and investment-linked businesses.
REDH categories help users narrow the search before contact and compare companies by project focus, service area, and profile status.
Official checks for Russia real estate company research
Before contacting real estate companies in Russia, users should compare profile details with official or public sources where possible. These checks can help confirm the legal company, property record, project status, construction role, and contract party.
- Use EGRUL through the Federal Tax Service when checking the legal company behind a provider. It can help users review business register information and compare the company name with the contract party.
- Use Rosreestr and EGRN extracts when checking property rights, cadastral data, ownership records, encumbrances, restrictions, or registered claims linked to a property.
- Use наш.дом.рф when reviewing new-build residential projects, project declarations, construction progress, developer information, and project documents.
- Use NOSTROY’s unified SRO register when a provider offers construction, reconstruction, capital repair, or demolition work. The register includes fields such as SRO registration number, member name, INN, OGRN, registration date, and manager.
These checks support early research before payment, contract signing, or deeper legal review.
EGRN and property record checks
When reviewing real estate companies in Russia, users should check the property record, not only the company profile. A provider may present a project, apartment, land plot, or resale offer, but the official record should still support the main details.
An EGRN extract can help users review registered property information, rights, limitations, and encumbrances. Rosreestr notes that EGRN extracts may contain information about the property, registered rights, restrictions, and encumbrances. It also advises users to ask sellers for an EGRN extract with main characteristics and registered rights before a transaction.
Users should compare the extract with the offer, contract, payment request, and seller details. The cadastral number, address, property type, area, registered owner, mortgage records, arrest records, claims, or other limits should make sense together.
If details do not match, users should slow down and ask for legal review. REDH profiles help users review the company behind the offer, while EGRN records help users check whether the property itself has clear registered information before payment, contract signing, or handover discussions begin.
New-build, escrow, and handover checks
New-build projects in Russia can involve project declarations, DDU contracts, escrow accounts, staged timelines, commissioning dates, and handover documents. Users should ask whether the project is listed on наш.дом.рф, whether the developer details match the contract party, and whether construction progress is visible through official project information.
Escrow does not remove every risk. Users should understand when funds may be released, what happens if timelines change, and how delays are handled under the agreement.
Before signing, users should review the DDU, payment terms, completion date, delay clauses, commissioning status, inspection process, and key transfer procedure with qualified legal support.
Construction SRO and contractor checks
Construction-linked real estate companies in Russia may need extra review when they offer building, reconstruction, design, engineering, or major repair work. Users should check whether the legal entity matches the contract and whether the provider appears in the right professional register.
Use NOSTROY for construction, reconstruction, capital repair, or demolition-related SRO checks. Use NOPRIZ for design and engineering survey-related checks. REDH profiles help users review the company first, while SRO records help confirm role and scope before signing.
Agent, contract, and payment warning signs
When reviewing real estate companies in Russia, users should be careful if a provider avoids naming the legal company, pushes for fast payment, or asks for money through unclear routes.
Warning signs may include personal payment accounts, missing EGRN extracts, unclear powers of attorney, pressure to sign addenda, weak receipts, or contract details that do not match the company profile. A serious provider should explain its role, confirm the legal entity, provide written terms, and allow time for document review before payment or signing.
Foreign-party and cross-border checks
Foreign-party real estate checks in Russia can be sensitive because rules may depend on buyer status, seller status, citizenship, residency, payment route, property type, and location. Users should not rely only on general online advice when a transaction involves a foreign person, foreign company, or cross-border payment.
| Check area | What users should review | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer or seller status | Citizenship, residency, company control, sanctions exposure | Some transactions may need extra legal review or approval |
| Property location | Border zones, strategic areas, agricultural land, restricted territories | Foreign ownership may be limited in certain areas |
| Payment route | Bank transfer path, currency, account ownership, documentation | Cross-border payments may face banking or compliance limits |
| Contract party | Legal company, representative authority, power of attorney | Helps confirm who can legally sign and receive payment |
| Tax position | Sale tax, withholding, reporting duties | Tax treatment may differ for residents and non-residents |
These checks are especially important when a provider asks for payment from outside Russia, uses a foreign-linked company, or suggests a structure that sounds like a shortcut. REDH profiles help users review the company first, but cross-border transactions should be checked with qualified legal, tax, and banking advisers before signing or paying.
How REDH supports a clearer Russia shortlist
REDH helps users move from broad search results to a more useful shortlist of real estate companies in Russia. Instead of comparing providers only by name, users can review city, company role, project focus, service area, website details, public links, and profile status.
A practical shortlist should help users compare:
- which city or region the company serves
- what type of real estate work it handles
- whether the profile is listed or verified
- which public links are available
- what official records may still need checking
After building a shortlist, users can contact stronger matches and ask for current documents, EGRN extracts, EGRUL details, project declarations, escrow information, contract terms, payment instructions, and legal confirmation. REDH supports early research, while final decisions should depend on direct checks and qualified advice.
Get your Russia company profile listed
Real estate and development-related companies in Russia can create or claim a REDH profile to make their business easier to review.
A profile can show your company name, website, city, service areas, property types, project focus, categories, features, public links, and contact details. This helps users understand your company before direct contact begins.
Companies that want a deeper profile can choose a premium option with added business information, legal details, team size, portfolio URLs, and project links. This can help buyers, partners, investors, landowners, and project teams review your company with more context.
Russia companies can also apply for verified status. Verification is a separate review process based on submitted information, public details, company evidence, and available proof at the time of review.
Approved companies may receive a verified badge on REDH and a website widget.
Browse real estate companies and developers in Russia
Use this page to explore real estate developers, brokers, builders, property managers, construction firms, and development-related providers across Russia.
Each profile can help users compare city, company role, project focus, service area, public links, and profile status. Users can open profiles that match their search, then continue with EGRUL checks, EGRN extracts, project documents, SRO records, payment terms, and direct company questions before making decisions.
Frequently asked questions about real estate development companies in Russia
Real estate companies and developers in Russia can be reviewed by city, project focus, profile status, official records, and company information.
What types of real estate companies in Russia can I find?
You can review developers, brokers, builders, property managers, construction firms, commercial property companies, land companies, design firms, engineering providers, and development-related service providers. Each profile may show city, service area, project focus, website details, public links, and profile status.
What does listed mean for real estate companies in Russia?
Listed means the company appears on REDH with basic public or submitted profile information. This may include company name, website, city, category, service area, project focus, and contact details. Listed status does not mean the company has completed REDH verification.
What does verified mean for real estate companies in Russia?
Verified means the company completed REDH’s added review process based on submitted details, available proof, public information, and company-related evidence reviewed at the time. Verified status can support early research, but users should still check registry records, contracts, payment details, and legal documents.
Should I check EGRN records before working with real estate companies in Russia?
Yes. EGRN records can help users review property rights, cadastral data, limitations, encumbrances, and other registered details. REDH profiles support early company research, while property records should be checked separately before signing, payment, or handover discussions.
Can real estate companies in Russia claim their REDH profiles?
Yes. A Russia real estate or development-related company can request to claim its REDH profile. REDH may ask for proof that the person is authorised to manage the company information before profile changes are approved.
Build a clearer company profile on REDH
Choose a listed profile for basic visibility, or apply for verification if your company wants stronger proof signals.
