
Earthquakes in Russia have occasionally been damaging and deadly.
Some of the largest Russian earthquakes since the latter half of the 20th century are the1958/1963 and2006/2007 earthquakes in theKuril Islands near Japan, as well as the1952/1959 earthquakes in theKamchatka Peninsula, all of which were ≥ 8.0 M. See also theKuril–Kamchatka Trench.
| Date | Region | Mag. | MMI | Deaths | Injuries | Total damage / notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-09-18 | Kamchatka | 7.8 Mw | VIII | Aftershock of the2025 Kamchatka earthquake | [1] | ||
| 2025-09-13 | Kamchatka | 7.4 Mw | VI | Aftershock of the July 29 event | [2] | ||
| 2025-07-30 | Kamchatka | 8.8 Mw | IX | 1 | 25 | Second-largest ever recorded in Russia behindthe 1952 event | [3] |
| 2025-07-20 | Kamchatka | 7.4 Mw | VIII | Foreshock to the July 29 event / Minor damage | [4][5] | ||
| 2024-08-17 | Kamchatka | 7.0 Mw | VI | Possible foreshock to the July 29, 2025 event | [6] | ||
| 2022-07-05 | Kemerovo | 4.4 Mw | 2 | 2 | Deaths due torockfalls in a mine | [7][8][9] | |
| 2020-03-25 | Kuril Islands | 7.5 Mw | V | 1 | Tsunami | [10][11] | |
| 2017-07-18 | Komandorski Islands | 7.8 Mw | VII | ||||
| 2013-05-24 | Okhotsk Sea | 8.3 Mw | V | Significant in seismology | |||
| 2011-12-27 | Tuva | 6.6 Mw | VI | Buildings damaged | [12] | ||
| 2011-10-14 | Amur | 6.0 Mw | VII | Minor damage/Power outages | [13][14] | ||
| 2008-10-11 | North Caucasus | 5.8 Mw | VIII | 13 | 116 | ||
| 2008-08-27 | Lake Baikal | 6.3 Mw | VIII | Minor damage | [15] | ||
| 2007-08-02 | Tatar Strait | 6.2 Mw | VIII | 4 | 12 | Tsunami | [16] |
| 2007-01-13 | Kuril Islands | 8.1 Mw | VI | Tsunami | |||
| 2006-11-15 | Kuril Islands | 8.3 Mw | IV | 1 | Tsunami | ||
| 2006-04-21 | Kamchatka | 7.6 Mw | X | 40 | $55 million | ||
| 2004-09-21 | Kaliningrad | 4.8 Mw | VI | 3 | 17 buildings damaged / Rare event | ||
| 2004-06-11 | kamchatka | 6.9 | V | [17] | |||
| 2003-09-27 | Altai Republic | 7.3 Mw | X | 3 | 5 | $10.6–33 million | |
| 2000-08-04 | Sakhalin | 6.8 Mw | VI | 8 | 19,100 displaced | [18] | |
| 1997-12-05 | Kamchatka | 7.7 Mw | VII | ||||
| 1995-05-27 | Sakhalin | 7.0 Ms | IX | 1,989 | 750 | $64.1–300 million | |
| 1994-10-04 | Kuril Islands | 8.3 Mw | 12 | 1000+ | Tsunami | ||
| 1970-05-14 | North Caucasus | 6.7 Mw | VII | 31 | 1,000+ | [19] | |
| 1963-10-20 | Kuril Islands | 7.8 Mw | Tsunami | ||||
| 1963-10-13 | Kuril Islands | 8.5 Mw | IX | Tsunami | |||
| 1959-05-04 | Kamchatka | 8.0 Ms | VIII | 1 | 13 | Tsunami | |
| 1958-11-06 | Kuril Islands | 8.3 Mw | X | Tsunami | [20] | ||
| 1952-11-05 | Kamchatka | 9.0 Mw | XI | 2,336 | Earthquake+Tsunami | ||
| 1946-11-02 | Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan | 7.6 Mw | X | Unknown | Severe damage | ||
| 1923-04-13 | Kamchatka | 6.8 Mw | X | 18 | Tsunami | [21][22] | |
| 1923-02-03 | Kamchatka | 8.4 Ms | XI | 3 | |||
| 1918-09-07 | Kuril Islands | 8.1 Mw | 23 | 17 | Tsunami | [23] | |
| 1911-01-03 | Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan | 7.7 Mw | X | 452 | Severe damage | ||
| 1907-10-21 | Uzbekistan, Tajikistan | 7.4 Ms | IX | 12,000–15,000 | |||
| 1902-08-22 | Kyrgyzstan, China | 7.7 Mw | XI | 2,500–20,000 | Severe damage | ||
| 1841-05-17 | Kamchatka | 9.0 Mw | IX | Severe damage and major tsunami | [24] | ||
| 1737-10-17 | Kamchatka | 9.0–9.3 Mw | Many deaths | Devastating tsunami | [25] | ||
| Note: The inclusion criteria for adding events are based onWikiProject Earthquakes'notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described also apply to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded. | |||||||