Connectivity
Carrier-neutral datacenters in Russian Federation
Which datacenters in Russian Federation have the most carriers?
42 datacenter facilities in Russian Federation show active or dense network connectivity in the viabandwidth directory, 22 of them dense. Each band is a verified summary of how many networks, exchanges, and carriers are present — derived from network data, not a self-reported map. Unlock the operator dossier for the exact carrier and ASN counts behind each facility.
Connectivity bands derived from PeeringDB and RIR registrations and independently verified. Last reviewed 2026-06-10.
42 facilities
DataHouse Ekaterinburg
Filanco Ltd.
Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation
Erlang.Ekb.MS145
Erlang company Ltd.
Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation
DataHouse Moscow
Filanco Ltd.
Moscow, Russian Federation
KIAEHOUSE
Joint-stock company "Internet Exchange" MSK-IX
Moscow, Russian Federation
Linxdatacenter (Moscow)
Linxdatacenter
Moscow, Russian Federation
Moscow M10
ROSTELECOM
Moscow, Russian Federation
Moscow M9
MMTS-9 JSC
Moscow, Russian Federation
DataHouse Saint Petersburg
Filanco Ltd.
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Linxdatacenter (Saint-Petersburg)
Linxdatacenter
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Miran-2
Miran Ltd
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Prometey Ltd SPB MM11
JSC SEVEREN-TELECOM
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
RETNNet OV DC
RETN
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Tsvetochnaya Data Center
Selectel Ltd.
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Miran-1
Miran Ltd
Санкт-Петербург, Russian Federation
Milecom Barnaul
Milecom LLC
Barnaul, Russian Federation
EKB, Uralcod
Uralskiy center obrabotki dannikh
Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation
CSS MPS Moscow
Moscow, Russian Federation
DataLine Moscow DC NORD
LLC Dataline
Moscow, Russian Federation
DataLine Moscow DC OST
LLC Dataline
Moscow, Russian Federation
DataPro Moscow
"DATAPRO" Limited Liability Company
Moscow, Russian Federation
DataSpace Moscow
DataSpace Partners LLC
Moscow, Russian Federation
IXcellerate MOS1
IXcellerate LLC
Moscow, Russian Federation
M100 datacenter Moscow, Varshavskoe 125
M100 LLC
Moscow, Russian Federation
Moscow CSS MPS
OAO Russian Railways
Moscow, Russian Federation
Moscow TehnoGorod
TehnoGorod
Moscow, Russian Federation
Stack.M1
Stack Group
Moscow, Russian Federation
StoreData
StoreData LLC
Moscow, Russian Federation
NKZ - Stroitelei43
Truenetwork Infrastructure Russia
Novokuznetsk, Russian Federation
KeyPoint Novosibirsk
Key Point
Novosibirsk, Russian Federation
Sinar
NvsF FSUE "TsentrInform"
Novosibirsk, Russian Federation
NSK - Yadrintsevskaya18
Truenetwork Infrastructure Russia
Novosibisk, Russian Federation
РТКомм-Юг (RTKomm-Yug)
RTKomm-Yug
Rostov-on-Don, Russian Federation
BONCH-IT
Maloe Innovacionnoe Predpriyatie Bonch IT LLC
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Bolshaya Morskaya 18
SPBIX
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Data-Center IMAQLIQ
IMAQLIQ SERVICE Ltd
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
IVC ORW Saint-Petersburg
JSC "Russian Railways", "October Railway"
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Raduga-2
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Telehouse Saint Petersburg
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Xelent
Atomdata-Center Xelent
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
COD BM-18
Center data exchange
St.Petersburg, Russian Federation
KeyPoint Vladivostok
Key Point
Vladivostok, Russian Federation
YarTT
YarTranzitTelecom CJS
Yaroslavl, Russian Federation
Frequently asked questions
- How many connected datacenters are in Russian Federation?
- 42 facilities show an active or dense connectivity band, 22 of them dense.
- What is a connectivity band?
- A verified summary of network density. Dense means many networks, exchanges, and carriers; Active means multiple networks or an exchange on-net. The exact counts are part of the paid operator dossier.
- Why does carrier density matter?
- More carriers present means more route redundancy, more price competition, and lower latency to reach networks — the core reason network engineers shortlist one facility over another.