St.Petersburg Travel Guide

St. Petersburg’s Subway System: How It Works

Petersburg’s underground

St. Petersburg’s subway is not very hard to use, though you have to keep in mind some moments. That’s the fastest way to get from A to B throughout the city, and many stations are true pieces of art. Fare is 46-60 rubles depending on the means of payment.

This page has been UPDATED in February, 2021.

Lines And Travel Time

The St. Petersburg’s subway (metro) system runs five lines with interchanges between them (see the map). Each of them has its official name, but the locals refer to them by the names of the colors: red instead of Kirovsko-Vyborgskaya, blue instead of Moskovsko-Petrogradskaya, etc.

Most of the stations are located underground and four – Devaytkino, Kupchino, Rybatskoe, Parnas – on the ground.
Recent developments: in May 2018, two new stations — Begovaya and Novokrestovskaya — have been added to the network, in autumn 2019 — three new stations have been launched: Dynayskaya, Shushary, and Prospekt Slavy.

See the scheme close up here.

Finding an entrance to a station on the street is easy by the mark M (on the photo below).

Stations open every day at 5.30-5.45 and close at 00.00 – 00.45 depending on station. A full listing of stations with their timetables you can find at http://www.metro.spb.ru/rejimrabotystancii.html (in Russian).

If a station has two entries/exits, one of them can be closed earlier, at 20.00 or 22.00 for example. For instance, Dostoevskaya closes at 20.00. In this case, you can enter Vladimirskaya station that’s combined with Dostoevskaya and then pass to the trains departing from Dostoevskaya.

Travel time in St. Petersburg’s subway varies depending on the period. On weekends, early in the morning (till 08.00 am) and late at night (after 20.00), trains go a bit faster, albeit a bit more rarely.

Travel time (approximately)

— Prospect Veteranov — Devyatkino (the red line) — 50-60 minutes;
— Kupchino — Parnas (the blue line) — 50 minutes;
— Rybatskoe – Primorskaya (the green line) — 35 minutes;
— Shushary – Komendantsky prospect (the violet line) — 48 minutes;
— Dybenko – Spasskaya (the orange line) — 20 minutes.

Fare And How To Pay

St. Petersburg’s subway is a single travel zone. A ticket is valid since the moment you have entered and until you have gone out through a turnstile no matter how long you had been inside and how long you had traveled.

Fare for a single trip by token or by bank card is 60 rubles (as of January 1, 2021). You can buy a travel card which gets you a trip for just 41 rubles or less (depending on the number of trips).

There are a few types of travel cards with different numbers of trips and days the ticket is valid for. We recommend two options:

1) Travel card Podorozhnik (on the photo left). Purchase it at a ticket-office at a subway station for 60 rubles, put some money (up to 15.000 rubles) on it and use it as an “electronic wallet” when paying for transportation. Podorozhnik is valid both for underground and overground public transport, including commercial minibuses («marshrutkas»).
You can recharge this both at a ticket-office and online here:
http://ispp.spbmetropoliten.ru/ (only in Russian).

Important. You can get back your 60 rubles paid for the card (though it’s still troublesome, only at one spot in the city, and hardly worth it), but you’ll not have refunded your money left on it. Of course, as the card is valid for 3 years since the purchase you have a chance to spend them, but only in case you come back to the city within this period.

2) Time-limited travel passes for 1, 3, and 7 days are available in 2021.

A travel pass costs:
1 day — 240 rubles
3 days — 460 rubles
7 days — 815 rubles

A travel pass, valid on all public transport (tram, city (public) buses (not marshrutkas!), trolleybus, subway) in St. Petersburg, provides you with unlimited travel within a period you paid for.

You can purchase tokens and cards/recharge cards at a ticket office and with the help of automated machines (on the photo below).

Automated machines can recharge your cards

Some Tips, The Busiest Stations And Lines

Important. One of the stations, Tekhnologichesky institut (Technology institute), is designed not like the others, and this can confuse you or even send you in the wrong direction.

What’s the difference and why it’s important to know? When you’re coming from station A to a traditional station B, then cross the platform to take a train, you’ll come back to station A. In the case of Technologichesky institut it works in another way. See the map of the subway above. If you come to Technologichesky institut from the direction of Kupchino (for example, from Moskovskaya), then cross the platform and catch a train, you’ll go up along the red line in the direction of Devaytkino. And on the contrary, if you come from the direction of Devyatkino and cross the platform, you’ll go further down the blue line. It’s been done to reduce transition time and the number of movements a passenger has to make.

When choosing a hotel, keep in mind a few busiest stations and routes. First of all, it’s right for the red line between Prospect Veteranov and Tekhnologichesky institut. Prospect Veteranov is in the center of a huge urban area serving more than a million inhabitants. Crowds are flooding the station every morning on weekdays, and sometimes people at the next station Leninsky prospect cannot get into an overcrowded wagon. We would recommend you to avoid this stretch of St. Petersburg’s subway system if you plan your trip between 07.30 and 09.00.

Other difficult stations are Prospect Prosvestchenya and Vasileostrovskaya, both in the morning and in the evening. Less occupied lines are the violet (except Staraya Derevnya and Kommendantsky prospect stations) and the orange ones.

Metro Stations Near Museums, Monuments, Railway Stations, Squares

Theatres

The Mariinsky theater Sennaya ploschad / Spasskaya / Sadovaya
The Mikhailovsky theater Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor
Capella Nevsky prospect Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor

Museums

The Hermitage Admiralteyskaya
The Russian museum Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor
The Dostoevsky’s museum Dostoevskaya / Vladimirskaya
The Pushkin’s museum Admiralteyskaya / Nevsky prospect
The Peter and Paul fortress Gorkovskaya
St. Isaac’s Cathedral Admiralteyskaya
Kazan Cathedral Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor
Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor

Squares

Dvortsovaya (Palace) square Admiralteyskaya
Vosstanya (Rebellion) square Ploschad Vosstanya
Alexander Nevsky’s square Ploschad Alexandra Nevskogo
Ploschad Iskusstv (Arts square) Nevsky prospect / Gostiny dvor

Railway stations

Moskovsky Ploschad Vosstanya
Finlayndsky Ploschad Lenina
Ladozhsky Ladozhskaya
Baltiysky Baltiyskaya
Vitebsky Pushkinskaya / Zvenigorodskaya

Airport

Airport Pulkovo Moskovskaya (+25 or 30 minutes by bus)

Venues

Yubileyny Dvorets (Sport Palace Yubileyny) Sportivnaya
Petrovsky Stadium (Zenit football club stadium) Sportivnaya
Sport Concert Complex (SKK) Park Pobedy
Ledovy Dvorets (Ice-hockey and concert Palace) Prospect Bolshevikov
Sibur Arena (basketball and concerts) Krestovsky Ostrov
Krestovsky stadium (Gazprom Arena) Krestovsky Ostrov

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to ask them here, in the comments.

You can easily book excursions online through an international aggregator which secures your payment in your currency and a seat and ensures a safe deal:

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