Volcanoes in Russia
94 Holocene Volcanoes Across Kamchatka, the Kurils, and Beyond
Volcano Locations in Russia
Click any marker to view volcano details β’ 94 volcanoes total
Quick Stats
- How Many Volcanoes?
- Russia has 94 Holocene volcanoes catalogued by the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program, of which 41 have historically observed eruptions. Russia ranks fourth globally for total volcano count.
- How Many Active?
- At least 41 Russian volcanoes have erupted in recorded history. Kamchatka and the Kuril Islands experience eruptions almost continuously, with an average of 5β8 volcanoes erupting per year.
- Why So Many Volcanoes?
- Russia's volcanoes are concentrated where the Pacific Plate subducts beneath the North American and Okhotsk microplates along the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench β one of the most active subduction zones on the Ring of Fire.
- Tallest Volcano
- Elbrus at 5,642 m (18,510 ft) in the Caucasus β the tallest volcano in Russia and the highest peak in Europe
- Most Recent Eruption
- Klyuchevskoy, Sheveluch, Bezymianny, Karymsky, and Ebeko all erupting in 2024β2025
Overview
Russia has 94 Holocene volcanoes β the fourth-highest national count after [[country:united-states|the United States]] (165), [[country:japan|Japan]] (105), and [[country:indonesia|Indonesia]] (101) β with 41 historically active volcanoes concentrated almost entirely in the remote Far East of the country: the Kamchatka Peninsula and the Kuril Islands chain. Despite their remoteness from Russia's major population centers, these volcanoes rank among the most active and powerful on Earth, collectively producing 983 recorded eruptions in the Smithsonian database and including some of the largest explosive events of the Holocene. [[volcano:klyuchevskoy|Klyuchevskoy]], at 4,754 m (15,597 ft) the tallest active volcano in Eurasia, has erupted 113 times β one of the highest eruption counts of any volcano on the planet. [[volcano:sheveluch|Sheveluch]], with 103 recorded eruptions including multiple VEI 5 events spanning 9,000 years, is one of the most explosively active volcanoes anywhere. Russia's volcanic region forms the northern segment of the [[special:ring-of-fire|Ring of Fire]], where the Pacific Plate dives beneath the Okhotsk microplate at rates exceeding 80 mm per year along the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench β one of the deepest oceanic trenches and most seismically active subduction zones on Earth.
Separately, Russia also holds Mount Elbrus (5,642 m / 18,510 ft) in the Caucasus, a dormant [[special:types-of-volcanoes|stratovolcano]] that is the highest peak in all of Europe and last erupted around 50 CE. Kamchatka's extraordinary volcanic landscape earned it UNESCO World Heritage status in 1996 as the "Volcanoes of Kamchatka," recognizing one of the most outstanding concentrations of active volcanism on the planet.
Why Russia Has Volcanoes
Russia's volcanic activity is overwhelmingly driven by the subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the Okhotsk microplate (itself part of the broader North American Plate) along the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench. This trench stretches approximately 2,200 km (1,367 mi) from [[country:japan|Japan's]] Hokkaido island northward through the Kuril Islands to the southern tip of Kamchatka, then continues as the Kamchatka Trench along the peninsula's eastern coast. At depths exceeding 10,500 m (34,449 ft), the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench is among the deepest oceanic features on Earth.
The Pacific Plate descends at 75β83 mm per year β one of the fastest subduction rates globally β driving intense volcanism in two parallel arcs. The Kuril Volcanic Arc includes 44 of Russia's 94 Holocene volcanoes, spread across 56 islands stretching 1,300 km from Hokkaido to Kamchatka. The Kamchatka Volcanic Arcs β split into Eastern (29 volcanoes) and Central (17 volcanoes) branches β host the most intensely active volcanoes, including the towering Klyuchevskaya Group.
The Central Kamchatka Arc is unusual: it lies 200β250 km behind the main volcanic front and is thought to result from a corner flow in the mantle wedge created by the junction of the Pacific and Commander plate boundaries. This produces uniquely voluminous volcanism β Klyuchevskoy alone has a magma production rate exceeding 60 million cubic meters per year, the highest of any subduction volcano on Earth. Outside the Pacific subduction system, Russia has two other volcanic provinces: the Baikal Rift Volcanic Province in Siberia (with the Udokan Plateau and Jombolok volcanic fields, produced by continental rifting) and Mount [[volcano:elbrus|Elbrus]] in the Caucasus, generated by the collision of the Arabian and Eurasian plates.
However, neither province has experienced eruptions in historical times, and Russia's active volcanism is effectively synonymous with Kamchatka and the Kurils.
Major Volcanoes
**Klyuchevskoy** β [[volcano:klyuchevskoy|Klyuchevskoy]] (4,754 m / 15,597 ft) is the tallest active volcano in Eurasia and one of the most active volcanoes on Earth, with 113 recorded eruptions β only [[volcano:merapi|Merapi]] and [[volcano:etna|Etna]] have more. This magnificent symmetrical [[special:types-of-volcanoes|stratovolcano]] has been in near-continuous eruption since its formation approximately 6,000 years ago, making it one of the youngest and most productive volcanoes on the planet. Its eruptions typically produce Strombolian to sub-Plinian activity, generating lava flows, ash columns reaching 10β15 km altitude, and pyroclastic flows.
Klyuchevskoy is the centerpiece of the Klyuchevskaya Group, a cluster of 13 volcanoes that includes Bezymianny and Tolbachik.
**Sheveluch** β [[volcano:sheveluch|Sheveluch]] (3,283 m / 10,771 ft), located 80 km northeast of the Klyuchevskaya Group, is one of the most explosively active volcanoes in the world with 103 recorded eruptions spanning at least 10,000 years. Sheveluch has produced at least 16 VEI 5 eruptions over its documented history β an extraordinarily high frequency. Its most recent major eruption in 1964 (VEI 4) generated massive pyroclastic flows, and it has been in a state of continuous dome-building and explosive activity since 1999.
In 2023, Sheveluch produced one of the largest ash clouds in its recent history, sending volcanic ash to altitudes exceeding 20 km and dusting communities hundreds of kilometers away.
**Bezymianny** β [[volcano:bezymianny|Bezymianny]] (2,882 m / 9,455 ft) earned global scientific significance through its cataclysmic March 30, 1956 eruption β a VEI 5 directed blast that demolished the volcano's eastern flank in a manner remarkably similar to the 1980 eruption of [[volcano:st-helens|Mount St. Helens]]. In fact, the Bezymianny eruption provided the scientific template for understanding lateral blast eruptions.
Since 1956, Bezymianny has been in near-continuous eruption with 71 recorded events, primarily dome-building episodes punctuated by explosive collapses.
**Tolbachik** β [[volcano:tolbachik|Tolbachik]] (3,611 m / 11,847 ft) is a massive shield volcano in the Klyuchevskaya Group known for its spectacular fissure eruptions. The Great Tolbachik Fissure Eruption of 1975β1976 (VEI 4) was one of the largest basaltic eruptions of the 20th century, creating new cinder cones and lava flows that buried 40 kmΒ² of landscape. The 2012β2013 eruption produced some of the most photographed lava flows in modern volcanology, attracting scientists and adventurers from around the world.
**Karymsky** β [[volcano:karymsky|Karymsky]] (1,513 m / 4,964 ft) is Kamchatka's most active volcano by eruption frequency relative to its size, with 53 recorded eruptions and a maximum VEI of 6 (in prehistoric times). It has been in near-continuous eruption since 1996, producing Vulcanian to sub-Plinian explosions and ash plumes that frequently disrupt trans-Pacific aviation routes. Despite its modest size, Karymsky's persistent activity makes it one of the most studied volcanoes in Russia.
**Avachinsky** β [[volcano:avachinsky|Avachinsky]] (2,717 m / 8,914 ft) looms directly over Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, the regional capital with approximately 180,000 inhabitants, making it Russia's most dangerous volcano in terms of population exposure. It has produced 58 recorded eruptions with a maximum VEI of 5. The most recent eruption in 2001 was relatively modest, but Avachinsky's history includes major explosive events, and the city lies well within its hazard zone.
Its neighbor Koryaksky (3,430 m) adds to the volcanic threat to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.
**Elbrus** β [[volcano:elbrus|Mount Elbrus]] (5,642 m / 18,510 ft) in the Greater Caucasus is the highest peak in Europe and Russia's tallest volcano β yet it is not in Kamchatka or anywhere near the Pacific. This ice-capped stratovolcano last erupted around 50 CE and is classified as dormant rather than extinct; fumarolic activity, hot springs, and occasional seismic swarms indicate a still-active magmatic system beneath the surface. Elbrus sits in a completely different tectonic setting from Russia's Pacific volcanoes, generated by the collision of the Arabian and Eurasian plates.
**Sarychev Peak** β Sarychev Peak (1,496 m / 4,908 ft) on Matua Island in the central Kuril Islands produced one of the most spectacular eruptions of the 21st century when it exploded in a VEI 4 event on June 12, 2009. The eruption was captured in a stunning photograph from the International Space Station showing a perfectly symmetrical pyroclastic column punching through the cloud layer. The eruption completely reshaped the island's vegetation and coastline.
**Alaid** β [[volcano:alaid|Alaid]] (2,285 m / 7,497 ft), on Atlasov Island at the northern tip of the Kuril chain, is the tallest volcano in the Kuril Islands. Its symmetrical conical form rising from the sea has earned it comparisons to [[volcano:fujisan|Mount Fuji]]. Alaid has erupted 17 times since 1700, most recently in 2022, with eruptions typically producing lava flows and ash columns.
**Ebeko** β Ebeko (1,103 m / 3,619 ft) on Paramushir Island is one of the northernmost active Kuril volcanoes and has been persistently active since 2016, producing frequent phreatic explosions and ash plumes that periodically affect the town of Severo-Kurilsk (population ~2,500), which sits just 7 km from the summit β making it the most directly exposed community to volcanic hazard in the Kuril Islands.
Eruption History
Russia's volcanic eruption record includes 983 documented events in the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program database, making it the fourth most volcanically active country by eruption count after [[country:indonesia|Indonesia]], [[country:japan|Japan]], and [[country:iceland|Iceland]]. The record is dominated by Kamchatka's remarkably prolific volcanoes: Klyuchevskoy alone accounts for 113 eruptions (11.5% of the national total), while Sheveluch (103), Bezymianny (71), Tolbachik (60), and Avachinsky (58) round out the top five. Russia's VEI distribution is notably skewed toward larger eruptions compared to many other volcanic countries: 36 VEI 5 events, 4 VEI 6 events, and 1 VEI 7 event β reflecting Kamchatka's extraordinary explosive volcanic character.
The largest known eruption in Russia was the VEI 7 event at Kurile Lake caldera approximately 6,440 BCE, which produced widespread ignimbrite deposits across southern Kamchatka. Historical eruptions of global significance include the VEI 5 eruptions of Bezymianny in 1956 (the prototype for directed blast eruptions), Sheveluch in 1854 and 1652, Kharimkotan in 1933 (which killed the entire population of the island), and Ksudach in 1907 (one of the largest eruptions of the 20th century, ejecting approximately 1.5β2 kmΒ³ of tephra). The 1975β1976 Great Tolbachik Fissure Eruption ranks as one of the most voluminous basaltic eruptions of the 20th century.
In recent decades, Kamchatka's volcanoes have become major contributors to volcanic ash in trans-Pacific aviation corridors: Sheveluch, Klyuchevskoy, and Bezymianny regularly produce ash plumes exceeding 10 km altitude on flight paths between North America and Asia. The 20th century recorded 277 eruptions and the first quarter of the 21st century has already logged 92, reflecting both increased monitoring capacity and genuinely intense ongoing activity.
Volcanic Hazards
Russia's volcanic hazards differ markedly from countries like Indonesia or Japan because most volcanoes are located in extremely remote, sparsely populated regions β the Kamchatka Peninsula has only about 300,000 residents total, and many Kuril Islands are uninhabited. However, this remoteness creates its own set of challenges and does not eliminate risk. Aviation hazard is the most globally significant threat from Russian volcanoes.
Kamchatka and the Kuril Islands lie directly beneath the North Pacific and Russian Far East air corridors carrying roughly 50,000 flights per year between North America and Asia. Multiple Russian volcanoes produce ash plumes exceeding 10β15 km altitude annually; Sheveluch, Klyuchevskoy, and Bezymianny are among the world's most frequent ash-producing volcanoes. Russia's Kamchatka Volcanic Eruption Response Team (KVERT) operates in coordination with the Tokyo and Anchorage Volcanic Ash Advisory Centres to issue aviation color codes and ash advisories.
On the ground, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (population ~180,000) faces the most direct threat, sitting between [[volcano:avachinsky|Avachinsky]] and [[volcano:koryaksky|Koryaksky]] β two large, active stratovolcanoes whose eruption products could reach the city within minutes to hours. Pyroclastic flows, lahars fed by snowmelt, and heavy ashfall are the primary hazards. In the Kuril Islands, the 1933 eruption of [[volcano:kharimkotan|Kharimkotan]] (VEI 5) killed the entire small population of the island.
The town of Severo-Kurilsk on Paramushir Island lives under the threat of both eruptions from Ebeko and tsunamis β a devastating earthquake-generated tsunami killed over 2,000 residents in 1952. Kamchatka's volcanic rivers carry significant lahar risk when eruptions interact with heavy snowpack and glaciers that cloak many of the peninsula's higher volcanoes.
Volcanic Zones Map
Russia's 94 Holocene volcanoes are distributed across four distinct volcanic provinces, though the vast majority cluster in the Far East. The Kuril Volcanic Arc contains 44 volcanoes stretched across 1,300 km of island chain between Hokkaido and Kamchatka, formed by the subduction of the Pacific Plate at the Kuril Trench. The Eastern Kamchatka Volcanic Arc (29 volcanoes) parallels the peninsula's Pacific coastline and includes the most intensely active cluster: the Klyuchevskaya Group in central Kamchatka, where Klyuchevskoy, Bezymianny, Tolbachik, Ushkovsky, and their neighbors form a volcanic massif unmatched anywhere else on Earth for its concentration of large, frequently erupting volcanoes.
The Central Kamchatka Volcanic Arc (17 volcanoes) runs inland, 200β250 km behind the eastern arc, and includes Ichinsky β the highest volcano in central Kamchatka at 3,596 m. Far from the Pacific, the Baikal Rift Volcanic Province in Siberia contains two volcanic fields (Udokan Plateau and Jombolok) produced by continental rifting rather than subduction. Finally, [[volcano:elbrus|Mount Elbrus]] stands alone in the Caucasus Volcanic Province, 7,000 km from Kamchatka, representing collision-zone volcanism between Arabia and Eurasia.
Impact On Culture And Economy
Kamchatka's volcanoes are central to the region's identity and emerging economy. For the indigenous Itelmen and Koryak peoples, volcanic landscapes have been sacred and practical resources for millennia β hot springs serve as natural bathing and cooking sites, and volcanic soils support tundra berries and the fish-spawning rivers that have sustained communities since prehistory. The name 'Kamchatka' itself may derive from Itelmen words, and volcanic features permeate indigenous oral traditions and place names across the peninsula.
Modern Kamchatka's economy is increasingly linked to its volcanic heritage through geothermal energy and adventure tourism. The Mutnovsky geothermal power plant, drawing heat from the active Mutnovsky-Gorely volcanic system, generates approximately 50 MW β a significant share of the peninsula's electricity. Heli-skiing and volcano trekking tourism have grown substantially since the 1990s, when Kamchatka was opened to visitors after decades as a closed military zone during the Soviet era.
The UNESCO World Heritage designation of the "Volcanoes of Kamchatka" (1996, extended 2001) encompasses six distinct areas totaling approximately 3.8 million hectares, protecting the volcanic landscapes alongside extraordinary wildlife including brown bears, Steller's sea eagles, and Pacific salmon. Russia's volcanoes are also of immense scientific value: the Kamchatka Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (IVS) in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is one of the world's premier volcanological research centers, and Kamchatka has long served as a natural laboratory for understanding subduction volcanism.
Visiting Volcanoes
Visiting Russia's volcanoes is a frontier expedition experience unlike any other volcanic destination on Earth. Kamchatka's remoteness β accessible primarily by air from Moscow or Vladivostok β and limited infrastructure make it an adventure travel destination rather than a casual tourist stop. [[volcano:tolbachik|Tolbachik's]] 2012β2013 lava fields offer an otherworldly landscape accessible by off-road vehicle expeditions from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (approximately 350 km). [[volcano:avachinsky|Avachinsky]] is the most accessible major volcano, climbable in a long day hike from base camps reached by 4WD from the capital. [[volcano:mutnovsky|Mutnovsky]] offers spectacular fumarole fields and an acid crater lake reachable by tracked vehicle. [[volcano:gorely|Gorely]] can be combined with Mutnovsky for a multi-day trek. The Klyuchevskaya Group requires multi-day expeditions with experienced guides and is not recommended for casual visitors β these are among the most active volcanoes on Earth.
Helicopter tours over active volcanoes are Kamchatka's signature experience, offering aerial views of erupting vents, caldera lakes, and lava fields inaccessible by land. The Valley of Geysers in the Kronotsky Nature Reserve β the second-largest geyser field in the world β is accessible only by helicopter and requires permits. The best visiting season is JulyβSeptember, when snow recedes and weather is most cooperative.
All volcano expeditions should be organized through licensed Kamchatka tour operators with experienced volcanological guides; self-guided attempts on major volcanoes are extremely dangerous due to weather, crevasses, volcanic gases, and the extreme remoteness from rescue services.
Complete table of all 94 Holocene volcanoes in Russia, sourced from the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program. Ranked by elevation.
Volcano Table
| Rank β | Name | Elevation (m) | Type | Last Eruption | Evidence | Eruptions | VEI Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Elbrus | 5,642 | Stratovolcano | 50 | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 2 | Klyuchevskoy | 4,754 | Stratovolcano | 2025 | Eruption Observed | 113 | VEI 4 |
| 3 | Kamen | 4,585 | Stratovolcano | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 4 | Ushkovsky | 3,943 | Compound | 1890 | Eruption Observed | 3 | VEI 2 |
| 5 | Tolbachik | 3,611 | Shield | 2013 | Eruption Observed | 60 | VEI 4 |
| 6 | Ichinsky | 3,596 | Stratovolcano | 1740 | Eruption Observed | 14 | VEI 5 |
| 7 | Kronotsky | 3,482 | Stratovolcano | 3350 BCE | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 3 |
| 8 | Koryaksky | 3,430 | Stratovolcano | 2009 | Eruption Observed | 7 | VEI 3 |
| 9 | Sheveluch | 3,283 | Stratovolcano | 2025 | Eruption Observed | 103 | VEI 5 |
| 10 | Zimina | 3,057 | Stratovolcano(es) | Unknown | Evidence Uncertain | 0 | Unknown |
| 11 | Zhupanovsky | 2,899 | Compound | 2016 | Eruption Observed | 16 | VEI 3 |
| 12 | Udina | 2,886 | Stratovolcano(es) | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 13 | Bezymianny | 2,882 | Stratovolcano | 2025 | Eruption Observed | 71 | VEI 5 |
| 14 | Avachinsky | 2,717 | Stratovolcano | 2001 | Eruption Observed | 58 | VEI 5 |
| 15 | Alney-Chashakondzha | 2,570 | Stratovolcano | 1600 | Eruption Dated | 3 | VEI 3 |
| 16 | Ostry | 2,552 | Stratovolcano | 2050 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 17 | Gamchen | 2,539 | Complex | 188 BCE | Eruption Dated | 3 | Unknown |
| 18 | Opala | 2,439 | Caldera | 1776 | Eruption Observed | 6 | VEI 5 |
| 19 | Kizimen | 2,334 | Stratovolcano | 2013 | Eruption Observed | 11 | VEI 5 |
| 20 | Taunshits | 2,301 | Stratovolcano | 550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 2 | Unknown |
| 21 | Mutnovsky | 2,288 | Complex | 2000 | Eruption Observed | 45 | VEI 3 |
| 22 | Alaid | 2,285 | Stratovolcano | 2022 | Eruption Observed | 17 | VEI 4 |
| 23 | Dzenzursky | 2,285 | Compound | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 24 | Bakening | 2,278 | Stratovolcano | 550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 5 | VEI 3 |
| 25 | Udokan Plateau | 2,180 | Volcanic field | 220 BCE | Eruption Dated | 5 | Unknown |
| 26 | Vilyuchinsky | 2,173 | Stratovolcano | 8050 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 2 |
| 27 | Spokoiny | 2,171 | Stratovolcano | 3450 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 28 | Vysoky | 2,129 | Stratovolcano | 550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 0 |
| 29 | Gorny Institute | 2,125 | Stratovolcano | 1250 | Eruption Dated | 3 | VEI 0 |
| 30 | Kambalny | 2,116 | Stratovolcano | 2017 | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 3 |
| 31 | Komarov | 2,065 | Stratovolcano | 950 | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 0 |
| 32 | Jombolok | 2,047 | Volcanic field | 737 | Eruption Dated | 2 | Unknown |
| 33 | Khodutka | 2,039 | Stratovolcano(es) | 300 BCE | Eruption Dated | 3 | VEI 5 |
| 34 | Khangar | 1,967 | Stratovolcano | 1500 | Eruption Dated | 10 | VEI 6 |
| 35 | Severny | 1,936 | Shield | 1550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 36 | Zheltovsky | 1,926 | Stratovolcano | 1923 | Eruption Observed | 6 | VEI 5 |
| 37 | Asacha | 1,910 | Complex | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 38 | Cherpuk Group | 1,868 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | 4550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 39 | Koshelev | 1,822 | Stratovolcano | 1690 | Eruption Observed | 5 | VEI 3 |
| 40 | Krasheninnikov | 1,816 | Caldera | 2025 | Eruption Dated | 32 | VEI 4 |
| 41 | Gorely | 1,799 | Caldera | 2010 | Eruption Observed | 53 | VEI 3 |
| 42 | Chikurachki | 1,781 | Stratovolcano(es) | 2023 | Eruption Observed | 29 | VEI 4 |
| 43 | Nylgimelkin | 1,764 | Shield(s) | 3550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 44 | Fuss Peak | 1,742 | Stratovolcano | 1854 | Eruption Observed | 11 | VEI 3 |
| 45 | Bolshoi Semiachik | 1,720 | Stratovolcano(es) | 4450 BCE | Eruption Dated | 2 | Unknown |
| 46 | Uzon | 1,617 | Caldera(s) | 200 | Eruption Dated | 4 | Unknown |
| 47 | Zavaritsky | 1,567 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | 800 BCE | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 4 |
| 48 | Iliinsky | 1,555 | Stratovolcano | 1901 | Eruption Observed | 6 | VEI 5 |
| 49 | Maly Semyachik | 1,527 | Caldera | 1952 | Eruption Observed | 23 | VEI 4 |
| 50 | Titila | 1,523 | Shield(s) | 550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 51 | Kikhpinych | 1,515 | Stratovolcano(es) | 1550 | Eruption Dated | 8 | VEI 4 |
| 52 | Karymsky | 1,513 | Stratovolcano | 2025 | Eruption Observed | 53 | VEI 6 |
| 53 | Milna | 1,504 | Stratovolcano | 1914 | Eruption Observed | 6 | VEI 3 |
| 54 | Sarychev Peak | 1,496 | Stratovolcano | 2021 | Eruption Observed | 22 | VEI 4 |
| 55 | Ivao Group | 1,426 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 56 | Bolshoi-Kekuknaysky | 1,401 | Shield(s) | 5310 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 3 |
| 57 | Sedanka Lava Field | 1,399 | Volcanic field | 7050 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 58 | Elovsky | 1,381 | Shield(s) | 7550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 4 |
| 59 | Prevo Peak | 1,360 | Stratovolcano | 1825 | Eruption Observed | 2 | VEI 3 |
| 60 | Kolokol Group | 1,328 | Stratovolcano | 1973 | Eruption Observed | 11 | VEI 3 |
| 61 | Karpinsky Group | 1,326 | Complex | 1952 | Eruption Observed | 1 | VEI 1 |
| 62 | Tao-Rusyr Caldera | 1,272 | Stratovolcano | 1952 | Eruption Observed | 2 | VEI 6 |
| 63 | Visokiy | 1,227 | Stratovolcano | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 64 | Vernadskii Ridge | 1,183 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 65 | Akademia Nauk | 1,180 | Stratovolcano(es) | 1996 | Eruption Observed | 4 | VEI 3 |
| 66 | Ketoi | 1,172 | Stratovolcano | 1960 | Eruption Observed | 5 | VEI 2 |
| 67 | Ekarma | 1,170 | Stratovolcano | 2010 | Eruption Observed | 3 | VEI 2 |
| 68 | Kostakan | 1,150 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | 1350 | Eruption Dated | 6 | VEI 3 |
| 69 | Kharimkotan | 1,145 | Stratovolcano | 1933 | Eruption Observed | 6 | VEI 5 |
| 70 | Ebeko | 1,103 | Stratovolcano | 2024 | Eruption Observed | 21 | VEI 2 |
| 71 | Diky Greben | 1,040 | Lava dome(s) | 350 | Eruption Dated | 4 | Unknown |
| 72 | Tolmachev Dol | 1,021 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | 300 | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 4 |
| 73 | Nemo Peak | 1,018 | Caldera | 1938 | Eruption Observed | 12 | VEI 2 |
| 74 | Ksudach | 1,007 | Stratovolcano | 1907 | Eruption Observed | 15 | VEI 6 |
| 75 | Rasshua | 956 | Stratovolcano | 1957 | Eruption Observed | 2 | VEI 3 |
| 76 | Sinarka | 911 | Stratovolcano | 1878 | Eruption Observed | 5 | VEI 4 |
| 77 | Barkhatnaya Sopka | 874 | Volcanic field | 3550 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 78 | Terpuk | 765 | Shield | 800 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 79 | Shirinki | 761 | Stratovolcano | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 80 | Chirpoi | 742 | Caldera | 2016 | Eruption Observed | 9 | VEI 4 |
| 81 | Chirinkotan | 724 | Stratovolcano | 2022 | Eruption Observed | 12 | VEI 3 |
| 82 | Olkoviy Volcanic Group | 681 | Volcanic field | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 83 | Uratman | 678 | Stratovolcano | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 0 | Unknown |
| 84 | Yavinsky | 646 | Stratovolcano | 4050 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 85 | Zavaritzki Caldera | 612 | Caldera | 1957 | Eruption Observed | 2 | VEI 3 |
| 86 | Kinenin | 583 | Maar | 850 | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 4 |
| 87 | Raikoke | 551 | Stratovolcano | 2019 | Eruption Observed | 4 | VEI 4 |
| 88 | Veer | 520 | Pyroclastic cone(s) | 390 | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 2 |
| 89 | Ushishur | 357 | Caldera | 1884 | Eruption Observed | 4 | VEI 4 |
| 90 | Shisheika | 355 | Lava dome | 2240 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
| 91 | Bliznetsy | 265 | Lava cone | 1060 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | VEI 1 |
| 92 | Kurile Lake | 81 | Caldera | 6440 BCE | Eruption Dated | 2 | VEI 7 |
| 93 | Srednii | 36 | Stratovolcano | Unknown | Evidence Credible | 1 | VEI 0 |
| 94 | Piip | -300 | Stratovolcano | 5050 BCE | Eruption Dated | 1 | Unknown |
Interesting Facts
- 1Klyuchevskoy's 113 recorded eruptions make it the most active volcano in Eurasia and one of the three most frequently erupting subduction volcanoes on Earth, alongside Indonesia's Merapi and Italy's Etna.
- 2Russia's Kuril-Kamchatka Trench reaches depths exceeding 10,500 m (34,449 ft) β among the deepest points in any ocean β and drives one of the fastest subduction rates on the planet at 75β83 mm per year.
- 3The 1956 eruption of Bezymianny was the first scientifically documented directed lateral blast and provided the template for understanding the 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption 24 years later.
- 4Mount Elbrus in the Caucasus, at 5,642 m (18,510 ft), is both the highest point in Europe and a dormant volcano that last erupted around 50 CE β approximately 7,000 km from Russia's other volcanoes in Kamchatka.
- 5Russia's 983 recorded eruptions include 36 events at VEI 5 β more VEI 5 eruptions than any other country β reflecting Kamchatka's extraordinary explosive volcanic character.
- 6The Valley of Geysers in the Kronotsky Nature Reserve is the second-largest geyser field in the world after Yellowstone, containing more than 90 active geysers in a 6 km canyon.
- 7Kamchatka was a closed military zone during the Soviet era and was not opened to civilian visitors until the 1990s, leaving its volcanic wilderness among the most pristine on Earth.
- 8Klyuchevskoy's magma production rate exceeds 60 million cubic meters per year β the highest of any subduction volcano on Earth β building the cone at a geologically remarkable pace.
- 9The 1933 VEI 5 eruption of Kharimkotan in the Kuril Islands killed every person living on the island, representing one of the few cases of a volcanic eruption completely depopulating its host island.
- 10Kamchatka's brown bear population of approximately 20,000 β the densest concentration in the world β thrives partly because volcanic hot springs keep salmon-spawning rivers ice-free longer into autumn.
- 11The Sarychev Peak eruption of 2009 was captured in one of the most famous volcanic photographs ever taken: an astronaut aboard the International Space Station photographed the eruption column punching through the cloud deck from directly above.
- 12Russia's KVERT (Kamchatka Volcanic Eruption Response Team) issues volcanic ash advisories for trans-Pacific aviation, monitoring an airspace through which approximately 50,000 commercial flights pass annually.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many volcanoes are in Russia?
Russia has 94 Holocene volcanoes catalogued by the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program, placing it fourth globally behind the United States (165), Japan (105), and Indonesia (101). Of these, 41 have historically observed eruptions. The vast majority β 90 of 94 β are located in Russia's Far East, split between the Kamchatka Peninsula (46 volcanoes across the Eastern and Central Kamchatka arcs) and the Kuril Islands (44 volcanoes). The remaining four are distributed between the Baikal Rift zone in Siberia (2 volcanic fields), the Caucasus (Mount Elbrus), and the westernmost Aleutian arc (1 volcano).
What is the tallest volcano in Russia?
Mount Elbrus in the Greater Caucasus is Russia's tallest volcano at 5,642 m (18,510 ft) β and also the highest peak in all of Europe. However, Elbrus is a dormant volcano that last erupted around 50 CE, located 7,000 km from Russia's main volcanic region. The tallest active volcano in Russia β and in all of Eurasia β is Klyuchevskoy on the Kamchatka Peninsula at 4,754 m (15,597 ft). Klyuchevskoy is also one of the most active volcanoes on the planet with 113 recorded eruptions.
Where are Russia's volcanoes located?
Russia's 94 Holocene volcanoes are concentrated almost entirely in two areas of the Far East: the Kamchatka Peninsula (46 volcanoes) and the Kuril Islands (44 volcanoes), both situated along the northwestern edge of the Pacific Ring of Fire. The remaining volcanoes are Mount Elbrus in the Caucasus mountains (between the Black and Caspian Seas), two volcanic fields in the Baikal Rift zone of Siberia (Udokan Plateau and Jombolok), and one volcano in the westernmost Aleutian arc. Kamchatka's most active volcanoes are clustered in the Klyuchevskaya Group in the peninsula's center, approximately 500 km northeast of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.
What is the most active volcano in Russia?
Klyuchevskoy is Russia's most active volcano with 113 recorded eruptions β the highest count of any volcano in Eurasia. At 4,754 m (15,597 ft), it is also the tallest active volcano on the Eurasian continent. Klyuchevskoy has been in near-continuous eruption since its formation approximately 6,000 years ago, with Strombolian to sub-Plinian activity producing lava flows, ash plumes, and pyroclastic flows. Sheveluch ranks second with 103 eruptions but is notable for producing more large explosive events (16+ VEI 5 eruptions) than Klyuchevskoy, making it arguably the most explosively dangerous.
When was the last volcanic eruption in Russia?
Russia has multiple volcanoes erupting simultaneously at almost all times. As of 2025, Klyuchevskoy, Sheveluch, Bezymianny, Karymsky, Ebeko, and Krasheninnikov are all in states of eruption or elevated activity on the Kamchatka Peninsula. Chikurachki and Ebeko in the Kuril Islands also erupt frequently. Russia averages 5β8 volcanic eruptions per year, primarily concentrated in the Klyuchevskaya Group and the central Kuril Islands. The most significant recent eruption was Sheveluch's massive 2023 event, which sent ash to altitudes exceeding 20 km.
Is Mount Elbrus an active volcano?
Mount Elbrus is classified as dormant rather than extinct. Its last eruption occurred around 50 CE β approximately 2,000 years ago β which is well within the timeframe that volcanologists consider potentially active. Elbrus shows ongoing signs of residual magmatic activity: fumaroles emit volcanic gases near the summit, hot springs emerge on its flanks, and occasional seismic swarms suggest magma movement at depth. While an eruption is not considered imminent, Elbrus cannot be ruled out as a future volcanic threat. The volcano's two summit cones, extensive glacial cover, and elevation of 5,642 m mean that even a modest eruption could produce dangerous lahars.
Why does Russia have so many volcanoes?
Russia's 94 Holocene volcanoes exist because the Kamchatka Peninsula and Kuril Islands sit directly above the Kuril-Kamchatka subduction zone, where the Pacific Plate dives beneath the Okhotsk microplate at 75β83 mm per year β one of the fastest subduction rates on the planet. As the Pacific Plate descends into the mantle, water released from the slab lowers the melting point of the overlying mantle rock, generating magma that rises to the surface. The 2,200 km length of the trench and the speed of subduction produce two parallel volcanic arcs (Kuril and Kamchatka) with an extraordinarily high concentration of active volcanoes.
What is the most dangerous volcano in Russia?
Avachinsky is often considered Russia's most dangerous volcano because it sits just 25 km from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, the Kamchatka regional capital with approximately 180,000 inhabitants. Avachinsky has produced 58 eruptions including VEI 5 events, and its neighbor Koryaksky (3,430 m) adds compounding risk to the same population. However, in terms of global aviation hazard, Sheveluch, Klyuchevskoy, and Bezymianny may pose greater risks: their frequent high-altitude ash plumes threaten the North Pacific air corridor used by roughly 50,000 flights per year between North America and Asia.
Can you visit volcanoes in Kamchatka?
Yes, Kamchatka's volcanoes are accessible to adventure travelers, though the region requires more logistical planning than most volcanic destinations. Avachinsky is the most accessible major volcano, climbable as a day hike from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. Mutnovsky and Gorely offer spectacular fumarole fields and crater lakes reachable by tracked vehicle. Tolbachik's recent lava fields can be visited via multi-day overland expeditions. Helicopter tours β Kamchatka's signature experience β provide access to the Valley of Geysers, active eruptions, and otherwise inaccessible calderas. The best season is JulyβSeptember. All expeditions should be organized through licensed operators with volcanological expertise.
What was Russia's worst volcanic eruption?
The deadliest volcanic event in Russian territory was the 1933 VEI 5 eruption of Kharimkotan in the Kuril Islands, which killed the entire population of the island (though the exact death toll is debated due to the small and poorly documented community). The largest eruption in Russia's historical record is the 1907 VEI 5 eruption of Ksudach on Kamchatka, which ejected 1.5β2 kmΒ³ of tephra and deposited ash over more than 20,000 kmΒ². The 1956 VEI 5 directed blast at Bezymianny was the most scientifically significant, demolishing the summit and pioneering understanding of lateral volcanic explosions.