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Russian Ferry
Ticket Prices & Reservations
Book Russia ferry tickets to and from the Russian ferry ports of St Petersburg and Vladivostok to Donghae, Sakaiminato, Helsinki and Tallinn with St Petersburg Ferries and DBS Cruise Ferry online in advance to enjoy the cheapest available ferry ticket price.
The price you see is the price you pay. There are no hidden extras or surprises such as added fuel surcharges or booking fees and we do not charge you anything extra for paying with a Visa Electron card. The price we quote you for your selected Russia ferries route, onboard accommodation and vehicle type is all you will pay, and that's a promise.
To obtain a Russia ferry ticket price and book your ferry ticket securely online please use the real time ferry booking form on the left. |
More About Russia
To get the most from Russia, head way off the beaten track. After taking in old favourites such as dynamic Moscow, historic St Petersburg and beautiful Lake Baikal, dive further and deeper into the largest country in the world.
Visit the soft, golden sands of the old Prussian resort of Kranz, now known as Zelenogradsk in the far western Kaliningrad Region; the charming Volga river village of Gorodets, home to folk artists and honey-cake bakers; fascinating Elista, Europe’s sole Buddhist enclave and location of the wacky Chess City; the 400-year-old mausoleums of Dargavs, a North Ossetian ‘city of the dead’; or the hot springs of Kamchatka’s Nalychevo Valley in the Russian Far East.
If cultural and architectural highlights are what you’re after, stick to European Russia, which is all of the country west of the Urals. If you don’t mind occasionally roughing it and are in search of Russia’s great outdoors, train your eye on the vast spaces of Siberia and the Far East.
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The Ferry Port of Vladivostok
It has the rep, everyone around the Far East seems to look up to it, and Vladivostok is indeed pretty good to look at for a couple days. Some streets are a bit drab, but the setting is remarkable: a series of peaks and peninsulas curl around Golden Horn Bay (bukhta Zolotoy Rog; named after Istanbul's similar-looking harbour), which is home to huge icebreakers and the Russian Pacific Fleet.
Quite the port-town bustler before communism (back when the Swiss family Brynner brought a bald Yul into the world here in 1920), Vladivostok's cosmopolitan urges have slowly returned after the long Soviet snooze. Vladivostok was firmly off limits to all foreigners (and most Russians) during the life of the USSR. Today you can fairly freely hop on ferries to far-off beaches on former navy-only islands, tour century-old forts or a Soviet sub, and weave past battalions of Chinese, Japanese and Korean summer tourists.
On the downside, summer is wet and foggy, and power outages plague winter. One transplant from Moscow exaggerated, 'I've been here four years and still haven't seen the sun.' September and October, locals swear, are best.
The Ferry Port of St Petersburg
It seemed like a lark when Peter the Great built this city on a swamp, and his subjects humoured the Emperor. When he declared it the new capital, they were less amused.
But history has shown that the forward-thinking, Westward-looking tsar was inspired. Gradually, St Petersburg evolved from a swampy backwater into a modern European city, Russia’s ‘window to the West’. Unlike Moscow’s red bricks and onion domes, St Petersburg’s network of canals and baroque and neoclassical architecture give the city a European flavour, no doubt because it was built by Italian architects. Even the residents of St Petersburg fancy themselves ‘European’ and somehow slightly more sophisticated than their more easterly compatriots.
St Petersburg has always been a city of ideas. Petersburgers incited the Russian Revolution, ushering in 70 years of communist rule. And it was St Petersburg that encouraged democracy when the tide began to change.
Nowadays, this city’s citizens are breaking down the barriers of generations past and exploring new ideas, investigating the possibilities of consumerism, creativity and career. It’s not only Rastrelli’s architecture and Tchaikovsky’s operas that entice visitors, but also beatnik bands, edgy art galleries, underground clubs and delectable dining. St Pete’s bohemian side gives a glimpse into the 21st century; and (to borrow a communist slogan) the future is bright!
St Petersburg is legendary for its White Nights: those long summer days when the sun barely dips below the horizon. Revels start in May, when the city finally succumbs to spring and the parks are filled with flowering trees. But even when the skies are grey and the ground is covered in snow, the rich culture of St Petersburg dazzles and delights.
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Russia
Russia covers more than 17 million square kilometres. It takes about a week to cross the country's ten time zones by train, and ten hours by air. Russia's population is about 150 million. The national language is Russian. Sixty percent of Russian are atheist, while the majority of believers are Orthodox.
Russia has the largest river in Europe, the Volga, the world's largest lake, the Caspian Sea, the world's deepest freshwater lake, the Baikal, and the Europe's highest peak, Elbrus.
St. Petersburg is the second largest city in Russia and one of the world's major cities, which has more to offer than just the Hermitage Museum and the Kirov Ballet. It is one of the biggest cultural centres in the world, a city with an exceptionally rich history, centuries old traditions and a promising future.
Scheduled passenger, car and freight ferry services operated by St Peter Ferry Line and DBS Cruise Ferries sail to and from Vladivostok and St Petersburg.
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Click Here to book a ferry ticket to Russia
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Best Russia Ferries Ticket Price Guarantee
Best Price Guarantee - We always offer you our lowest available Russia ferry ticket price and there are no hidden extras or surprises such as added fuel surcharges or booking fees and we also we do not charge you anything extra for paying with a Visa Electron card. The price we quote for your selected Russia ferry to or from the Russian ferry ports of St Petersburg and Vladivostok to Donghae, Sakaiminato, Helsinki and Tallinn with St Petersburg Ferries and DBS Cruise Ferry, onboard accommodation and vehicle type is all you will pay, and that's a promise!
In the unlikely event you find the same all inclusive Russia ferries ticket cheaper in the brochure of any other tour operator we promise that we will do our best to beat that price or offer you the choice of requesting a refund. To book Russia ferry tickets please click here. |
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Customer Care, Telesales & Contact Us
At ferryto.net you are able to obtain live Russia ferry ticket prices, check availability and book Russia ferry car and passenger ferries tickets to and from the Russian ferry ports of St Petersburg and Vladivostok to Donghae, Sakaiminato, Helsinki and Tallinn with St Petersburg Ferries and DBS Cruise Ferry at our lowest available ticket price.
Ferryto.net is part of the world's largest online ferry ticket distribution network providing the ability to book over 80 major European ferry operators including with Russia Ferry to over 1,200 ferry routes throughout the UK, France, Spain, Ireland, Holland, Eastern Europe, the Mediterranean, the Baltic and North Africa.
For more information, answers to frequently asked questions or to contact us directly please click here. |
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