Hello!

I suspect that the answer lies in paragraph 4, article 7 of the information law.

You suspect correctly.

Article 7. Public information

1. Public information includes generally known information and other information to which access is not limited.
2. Public information can be used by any persons at their discretion, subject to the restrictions established by federal laws regarding the dissemination of such information.
3. The owner of information that has become publicly available by his decision has the right to demand that persons distributing such information indicate themselves as the source of such information.
4. Information posted by its owners on the Internet in a format that allows automated processing without prior human changes for the purpose of reuse is publicly available information posted in the form of open data.

The essence of open data comes down not so much to providing the opportunity to get acquainted with information created by government bodies (since it is assumed that this is already provided by previous generations of laws), but to ensuring the possibility of its subsequent use by interested parties, through its analysis, visualization, and creation of applications using it .

In accordance with Part 4 of Art. 7 of the Law, information posted by its owners on the Internet in a format that allows automated processing without prior changes by a person for the purpose of reuse is publicly available information posted in the form of open data. As can be seen from this norm, information acquires the status of open data if several conditions are met:

1) such information must be posted by its owner, which is the corresponding public legal entity, on behalf of which a decision is made to classify information as open data by the relevant state or municipal authority in the prescribed manner (Resolution of the Government of the Russian Federation of July 10, 2013 .N 583

2) information must be placed in a format that allows its subsequent processing without human intervention (for example: CSV, XML, JSON, ODS, etc.). This condition is due to the fact that the concept of “open data” is inextricably linked with ensuring the compatibility of such data with various information systems for the purpose of their subsequent use in various ways. In this regard, if the data is placed in the form of a scanned but not recognized document, its further use is significantly difficult, since human intervention in one form or another is necessary to transform it into a structured form, therefore, the placement of such a document will not constitute “open data”.

Lists of information that are subject to posting in the form of open data were approved by Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation dated July 10, 2013 N 1187-r “On Lists of information on the activities of state bodies and local governments posted on the Internet in the form of open data.” Such information includes, in particular: a plan for conducting inspections of legal entities and individual entrepreneurs for the next year; the results of scheduled and unscheduled inspections carried out by the federal executive body and its territorial bodies within the limits of their powers; statistical information generated by the federal executive body in accordance with the federal statistical work plan, as well as statistical information based on the results of scheduled and unscheduled inspections; registers of licenses for specific types of activities, licensing of which is carried out by federal executive authorities.
The specific composition of the information provided for in this list is determined in accordance with the Methodological Recommendations approved by the Government Commission for the Coordination of Open Government Activities

Part 4 Art. 7 of the Law says nothing about the absence of legal restrictions on the subsequent use of information in the form of open data, while most definitions of open data mention this feature of open data as a constitutive one. As an exception, it is possible to impose the obligation to indicate the source of information and (or) distribute such information under similar conditions

Result: On the other hand, a systematic interpretation of the provisions of Art. 7 of the Law allows us to fill this gap. Since open data acts as a type of publicly available information, the provisions of Part 2 of Art. 7 of the Law, according to which each person can use such information at his own discretion. The free and free nature of the use of open data is also indicated in the Guidelines for the publication of open data.
2. Public information can be used by any persons at their discretion, subject to the restrictions established by federal laws regarding the dissemination of such information.

“Commentary to the Federal Law of July 27, 2006 N 149-FZ “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”

(item by item)
(Savelyev A.I.)
(“Statute”, 2015)

The concept of “publicly available information” is defined in Article 7 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”. This category includes generally known information and other information to which access is not restricted. It is provided that publicly available information can be used by any persons at their discretion, subject to the restrictions established by federal laws regarding the dissemination of such information.

The right to access information is regulated by Article 8 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”, according to paragraph 1 of which citizens (individuals) and organizations (legal entities) have the right to search and receive any information in any forms and from any sources, subject to compliance with the requirements established by federal laws. At the same time, in accordance with paragraph 4 of this article, access to:

1) regulatory legal acts affecting the rights, freedoms and responsibilities of humans and citizens, as well as establishing the legal status of organizations and the powers of state bodies and local governments;

2) information about the state of the environment;

3) information on the activities of state bodies and local self-government bodies, as well as on the use of budget funds (except for information constituting state or official secrets);

4) information accumulated in open collections of libraries, museums and archives, as well as in state, municipal and other information systems created or intended to provide citizens (individuals) and organizations with such information;

5) other information, the inadmissibility of restricting access to which is established by federal laws.

State bodies and local self-government bodies are obliged to provide access to information about their activities in Russian and the state language of the corresponding republic within the Russian Federation in accordance with federal laws, laws of constituent entities of the Russian Federation and regulatory legal acts of local self-government bodies. A person wishing to gain access to such information is not required to justify the need to obtain it (clause 5 of Article 7 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”). Decisions and actions (inaction) of state bodies and local governments, public associations , officials who violate the right to access information can be appealed to a higher authority or a higher official or to court (clause 6 of Article 7 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”). Paragraph 8 of Article 7 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection” specifically provides that information should be provided free of charge:

1) on the activities of state bodies and local government bodies, posted by such bodies in information and telecommunication networks;

2) affecting the rights and obligations of the interested person established by the legislation of the Russian Federation;

3) other information established by law.

The fundamental legislative act in the field of legal regulation of relations related to the use of the media is the Law of the Russian Federation of December 27, 1991 No. 2124-I “On the Mass Media” (as amended on January 13, June 6, July 19, 27 December1995, March 2, 1998, June 20, August 5, 2000, August 4, 2001, March 21, July 25, 2002, July 4, December 8, 2003, June 29, August 22, 2 November 2004, July 21, 2005, July 27, October 16, 2006).

The freedom of thought and speech proclaimed by the Constitution of the Russian Federation is guaranteed by freedom of mass information and the prohibition of censorship. The Law “On the Mass Media” establishes that the search, receipt, production and dissemination of mass media, as well as the establishment of mass media, ownership, use and disposal of them, production, acquisition, storage and operation of technical devices and equipment, raw materials and materials intended for the production and distribution of media products are not subject to restrictions. An exception to this rule can only be provided for by federal law. Obstruction in any form of the legitimate activities of the media by citizens, officials, government bodies, public organizations through the establishment of censorship, interference in the activities and violation of the professional independence of the editorial board, illegal termination or The law defines suspension of the activities of the media as a violation of freedom of the media, which may entail liability, including criminal liability.

In some cases, legislation and international treaties specifically provide for types of information, access to which cannot be subject to restrictions.

Thus, according to Article 30 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in those States where ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities or indigenous people exist, a child belonging to such minorities or indigenous people shall not be denied the right, in common with other members of his or her groups to enjoy their culture, profess and perform their religion, and use their native language.

According to the Law of the Russian Federation of July 21, 1993 No. 5485-1 “On State Secrets” (as amended on October 6, 1997, June 30, November 11, 2003, June 29, August 22, 2004) cannot be The following information is classified as state secret:

On emergencies and disasters that threaten the safety and health of citizens, and their consequences, as well as natural disasters, their official forecasts and consequences;

About the state of ecology, health care, sanitation, demography, education, culture, agriculture, as well as the state of crime;

On privileges, compensation and benefits provided by the state to citizens, officials, enterprises, institutions and organizations;

On facts of violation of human and civil rights and freedoms;

On the size of gold reserves and state currency reserves of the Russian Federation;

On the state of health of senior officials of Russia;

On facts of violation of the law by public authorities and their officials.

The provisions under consideration also fully apply to cases of dissemination of information using digital networks, including the Internet, regardless of whether the relevant network resources are registered as mass media or the absence of such registration.

Thus, Article 10 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection” stipulates that the dissemination of information in the Russian Federation is carried out freely subject to the requirements established by the legislation of the Russian Federation. At the same time, information disseminated without the use of the media must include reliable information about its owner or about another person disseminating information, in a form and volume that is sufficient to identify such a person, and when using means to disseminate information, to determine recipients of information, including postal items and electronic messages, the person distributing the information is obliged to provide the recipient of the information with the opportunity to refuse such information. The provision of information is carried out in the manner established by agreement of the persons participating in the exchange of information.

The use of information and telecommunication networks is regulated by the provisions of Article 15 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”, according to paragraph 1 of which, on the territory of the Russian Federation, the use of information and telecommunication networks is carried out in compliance with the requirements of the legislation of the Russian Federation in the field of communications, the Federal Law “ On information, information technologies and information protection" and other regulatory legal acts of the Russian Federation.

Regulation of the use of information and telecommunication networks, access to which is not limited to a certain circle of persons, is carried out in the Russian Federation taking into account the generally accepted international practice of self-regulatory organizations in this area. The procedure for using other information and telecommunication networks is determined by the owners of such networks, taking into account the requirements established by the Federal Law (clause 2 of Article 15 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”).

The transfer of information through the use of information and telecommunication networks is carried out without restrictions, subject to compliance with the requirements established by federal laws for the dissemination of information and the protection of intellectual property. The transfer of information can be limited only in the manner and under the conditions established by federal laws (clause 5 of Article 15 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”). Features of connecting state information systems to information and telecommunication networks can be established by regulations a legal act of the President of the Russian Federation or a regulatory legal act of the Government of the Russian Federation (clause 6 of Article 15 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”).

Some provisions related to the principles of using information in electronic form are also contained in the Federal Law of August 8, 2001 No. 129-FZ “On State Registration of Legal Entities and Individual Entrepreneurs” (as amended and supplemented on June 23, 8, 23 December 2003, November 2, 2004, July 2, 2005), Article 4 of which establishes the principles of maintaining state registers containing information on the creation, reorganization and liquidation of legal entities, acquisition by individuals of the status of individual entrepreneur, termination by individuals of activities in as individual entrepreneurs, other information about legal entities, individual entrepreneurs and relevant documents. Such state registers are federal information resources. Information and documents contained in state registers are open and publicly available, with the exception of information, access to which is limited in accordance with paragraph two paragraph 1 of article 6 of the said Federal Law. Thus, information about the number, the date of issue and the body that issued the identity document of an individual, information about bank accounts of legal entities and individual entrepreneurs can be provided exclusively to government bodies, bodies of state extra-budgetary funds in cases and in the manner established Government of the Russian Federation. This restriction does not apply when providing copies of constituent documents of legal entities containing the specified information, as well as information about the place of residence of individual entrepreneurs.

A number of provisions on the implementation of citizens' rights to information are enshrined in the current Decrees of the President of the Russian Federation.

So, in particular, in the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of December 5, 1993 No. 2093 “On measures to protect freedom of mass information in the Russian Federation” and in the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of December 31, 1993 No. 2334 “On additional guarantees of the rights of citizens to information" (as amended and supplemented on January 17, 1997, September 1, 2000) it is noted that the right to information is one of the fundamental human rights; the state should strive to expand the real opportunities of citizens and their associations to actively participate in management of state and public affairs, promoting the development of local self-government; create conditions to ensure freedom for citizens to receive information about the activities of legislative, executive and judicial authorities.

Paragraph 3 of this Decree stipulates that the activities of government bodies, organizations and enterprises, public associations, and officials must be carried out on the principles of information openness, expressed by:

Availability to citizens of information of public interest or affecting the personal interests of citizens;

In systematically informing citizens about proposed or adopted decisions;

In the exercise by citizens of control over the activities of government bodies, organizations and enterprises, public associations, officials and the decisions they make related to the observance, protection and defense of the rights and legitimate interests of citizens;

In creating conditions for providing citizens of the Russian Federation with foreign information products and providing them with information services of foreign origin.

The President of the Russian Federation approved the Doctrine of Information Security of the Russian Federation (approved by the President of the Russian Federation dated September 9, 2000 No. Pr-1895), which is a set of official views on the goals, objectives, principles and main directions of ensuring information security of the Russian Federation and is intended to serve the basis for the formation of state policy in the field of ensuring information security of the Russian Federation, preparing proposals for improving the legal, methodological, scientific, technical and organizational support of information security of the Russian Federation, developing targeted programs for ensuring information security of the Russian Federation.

Information security of the Russian Federation is understood as the state of protection of its national interests in the information sphere, determined by the totality of balanced interests of the individual, society and the state. It is determined that the interests of the individual in the information sphere lie in the implementation of the constitutional rights of man and citizen to access information, to use information in the interests of carrying out activities not prohibited by law, physical, spiritual and intellectual development, as well as to protect information that ensures personal safety. The interests of society in the information sphere lie in ensuring the interests of the individual in this area, strengthening democracy, creating a legal social state, achieving and maintaining public harmony, and the spiritual renewal of Russia. The interests of the state in the information sphere are to create conditions for the harmonious development of the Russian information infrastructure, for the implementation of the constitutional rights and freedoms of man and citizen in the field of obtaining information and using it in order to ensure the inviolability of the constitutional system, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Russia, political, economic and social stability, unconditional provision of law and order, development of equal and mutually beneficial international cooperation.

A significant amount of regulatory material on issues of ensuring the right to access to information has been developed at the regional level.

As an example, one can cite, in particular, the Moscow City Law of March 31, 2004 No. 20 “On guarantees of accessibility of information on the activities of public authorities of the city of Moscow”, approved by Resolution of the Moscow City Duma of March 31, 2004 No. 74.

According to the definition of the purpose and scope of the Moscow Law “On guarantees of accessibility of information about the activities of government bodies of the city of Moscow” (Article 1), it is aimed at ensuring free access of citizens to information about the activities of government bodies of the city. Such information includes:

Information about the structure and functions of government bodies, the decisions they make and other activities carried out by government bodies in the exercise of their powers;

Information about the heads of government bodies;

Texts of legal acts adopted by authorities, including laws of the city of Moscow, resolutions of the Moscow City Duma, decrees and orders of the Moscow Mayor, resolutions and orders of the Moscow Government.

Such information must be open and accessible for review (Article 3); access to it can be limited only in cases established by law.

Article 2 of the Law in question contains a definition of the concept of the official website of the Moscow city government, which is understood as a set of information resources posted in accordance with the law or the decision of the relevant government authority on the Internet at a specific address published for public information. In addition, Article 3 of this Law specifically provides that access to information about the activities of authorities is ensured, in particular, by the authorities posting information about their activities on the Internet; according to Article 5 of the Law, Moscow city authorities “post information about their activities on their ».

The issues of posting information about the activities of government bodies of the city of Moscow on the Internet are specifically regulated in Article 6 of the Moscow Law “On guarantees of accessibility of information about the activities of government bodies of the city of Moscow”, according to paragraph 1 of which, in order to inform citizens about their activities, the Moscow City Duma and the Government Moscow create and maintain the Internet and post information on them in accordance with the requirements of the Law, and also ensure regular updating of information on official websites.

Moreover, according to paragraph 2 of this article, the information required to be posted by the Moscow City Duma and the Moscow Government includes:

Texts of laws and other regulatory legal acts of the city of Moscow (including information on amendments and additions to them, as well as on declaring them invalid or ineffective);

Information about the authority, including information about its structure and functions, postal and email addresses, as well as the telephone number at which reference information about this authority is provided;

Information about deputies of the Moscow City Duma and heads of executive authorities of the city of Moscow (surnames, first names and patronymics, brief biographical information, time and place of their reception of citizens);

Texts of official statements and speeches by heads of government bodies published in the media;

Information about the main events organized by authorities;

Information on legislative activities of government bodies, including the texts of draft laws of the city of Moscow submitted in the prescribed manner to the Moscow City Duma, plans for legislative activities;

Information on the main indicators characterizing the situation and dynamics of development of the industry (area of ​​management) within the competence of the authority, as well as forecasts for the development of this industry (area of ​​management), prepared by the authority;

Information about open competitions (tenders, auctions, trades) conducted by government authorities;

Qualification requirements for candidates for positions in the civil service of the city of Moscow and the procedure for admission to it;

Forms of documents established for submission by citizens and organizations to government bodies and organizations subordinate to them, as well as instructions for filling them out;

List of information resources of authorities.

Order of the Moscow Government of October 27, 2004 No. 2138-RP also approved a special List of information about the main events held in the city, subject to mandatory posting and weekly updating on the official websites of prefectures of administrative districts and district governments of Moscow.

A number of provisions related to the use of information resources are also contained in the Moscow Law of October 24, 2001 No. 52 “On information resources and informatization of the city of Moscow” (as amended and supplemented on December 28, 2005).

Law of Moscow dated June 20, 2001 No. 25 “On the development of education in the city of Moscow” (as amended and supplemented on October 10, 2001, October 29, 2003, December 22, 2004, June 15, 2005 .) contains a special article 16 “Providing information in the field of education”, which, in order to support the development of the education system by public authorities of the city of Moscow, provides that city and district education authorities provide students, pupils and their parents (legal representatives) with information, including number about non-state educational organizations of the city of Moscow, which allows for an informed choice of an educational institution or organization, and also contributes to providing employees of educational institutions and organizations with the information necessary for the effective implementation and improvement of their professional activities.

Order of the Moscow Government dated December 5, 2005 No. 2449-RP “On ensuring the activities of centers of public access to modern information and communication technologies created in 2004” approved the Standard Regulations on the center of public access to modern information and communication technologies created on the basis of institutions professional education in Moscow (Appendix 2).

In the Moscow region, the Law of the Moscow Region dated February 11, 2001 No. 21/2001-OZ “On the creation by public authorities of the Moscow Region of information resources and systems and their use” is in force, adopted by the decision of the Moscow Regional Duma dated January 24, 2001 No. 9/ 121 (as amended and supplemented on July 7, 2005), as well as Law of the Moscow Region dated March 12, 1998 No. 9/98-OZ “On information and informatization in the Moscow Region”, adopted by the decision of the Moscow Regional Duma dated 25 February 1998 No. 4/8) and the Governor of the Moscow Region dated June 30, 1999 No. 224-PG “On the Register of state and municipal information resources and systems of the Moscow Region.”

Important provisions are contained in the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, adopted in Rome on November 4, 1950 and in force as amended on September 21, 1970, December 20, 1971, January 1, November 6, 1990, May 11 1994 The Convention was ratified by the Russian Federation by Federal Law of March 30, 1998 No. 54-FZ.

Article 10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms guarantees freedom of expression, which includes the freedom to “receive and impart information and ideas without any interference from public authorities and regardless of frontiers.” At the same time, as emphasized in paragraph 2 of the same article, “the exercise of these freedoms, which imposes duties and responsibilities, may be subject to certain formalities, conditions, restrictions or sanctions that are provided for by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public order, to prevent disorder or crime, to protect health or morals, to protect the reputation or rights of others, to prevent the disclosure of information received in confidence, or to ensure the authority and impartiality of justice."

The need to eliminate unlawful or expand inappropriate restrictions on the right to information is emphasized in the Declaration on Freedom of Communication on the Internet adopted by the Council of Europe in 2003, the main principles of which include, inter alia, instructions that member states of the Council of Europe:

Network content should not be subject to restrictions that go beyond those already in place for other media;

Self-regulation or co-regulation of information dissemination on the Internet should be encouraged;

It is prohibited to proactively filter or block public access to information regardless of borders, which does not exclude the possibility of using “family filters.” Deleting or blocking access to data is possible if it is determined that the data is illegal.


See: Scientific and practical commentary on the Constitution of the Russian Federation / Rep. ed. V.V. Lazarev, M., 2003

See: Zalessky V.V. Commentary on the Federal Law “On State Registration of Legal Entities and Individual Entrepreneurs.” - 2003; Alekseev Yu.V. Commentary on the Federal Law “On State Registration of Legal Entities”. - “Urayt - M”, 2002

" This category includes generally known information and other information to which access is not restricted. It is provided that publicly available information can be used by any persons at their discretion, subject to the restrictions established by federal laws regarding the dissemination of such information.

In general, two types of information can be distinguished.

1st view: Open information - information (messages, data), regardless of the form of their presentation, access to which is free.

2nd view: Restricted information is a state secret and confidential information (in this case, the person holding the information is required not to transfer such information to third parties without the consent of its owner).

The right to access information is regulated by Article 8 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”, according to paragraph 1 of which citizens (individuals) and organizations (legal entities) have the right to search and receive any information in any forms and from any sources, subject to compliance with the requirements established by federal laws.

At the same time, in accordance with paragraph 4 of this article, access to:

4) information accumulated in open collections of libraries, museums and archives, as well as in state, municipal and other information systems created or intended to provide citizens (individuals) and organizations with such information;

5) other information, the inadmissibility of restricting access to which is established by federal laws.

A person wishing to gain access to such information is not required to justify the need to obtain it (clause 5 of Article 7 of the Federal Law “On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection”).

State secret is information, information, unauthorized access to which may harm the interests of the country or state. The Law “On State Secrets” gives the following definition: “state secret is information protected by the state in the field of its military, foreign policy, economic, intelligence and operational-search activities, the dissemination of which may harm the security of the Russian Federation.”


The legal basis for the secrecy regime is the Constitution, the laws of the Russian Federation “On Security”, “On State Secrets”, as well as acts of the President and Government adopted on the basis of the latter law*. It should be noted that the Law “On State Secrets” is the first act of this level in Russian history on this issue. Previously, these issues were resolved by by-laws, which were also secret and not published. The adoption of an open legal act on this issue, which also has the highest legal force, is another stroke in the development of Russian democracy, in increasing the role of law in administrative and legal regulation.

We can name the following signs of state secrets:

1) this is very important information;

2) their disclosure may cause damage to state interests;

3) the list of information that can be classified as a state secret is fixed by federal law;

4) it is protected by criminal liability measures (Articles 275, 276, 283 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation) and other coercive means;

5) for its protection, a special administrative and legal regime has been created - a regime of secrecy.

The President of the Russian Federation approved the Doctrine of Information Security of the Russian Federation (approved by the President of the Russian Federation dated September 9, 2000 No. Pr-1895), which is a set of official views on the goals, objectives, principles and main directions of ensuring information security of the Russian Federation and is intended to serve the basis for the formation of state policy in the field of ensuring information security of the Russian Federation, preparing proposals for improving the legal, methodological, scientific, technical and organizational support of information security of the Russian Federation, developing targeted programs for ensuring information security of the Russian Federation.

Information security of the Russian Federation is understood as the state of protection of its national interests in the information sphere, determined by the totality of balanced interests of the individual, society and the state.

Information located in the Unified State Register of Rights is publicly available (with the exception of certain information). It is provided upon request from individuals and legal entities, as well as government agencies. Receipt of information from the Unified State Register is issued in the form of an extract, which can be issued both in paper and electronic form.

Public information

To obtain information from the Unified State Register, you must submit a request in the manner established by Order of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation No. 180 dated May 14, 2010.

Any person who has submitted a request in the prescribed manner can obtain publicly available information from the Unified State Register. This group includes data on legally registered rights to real estate and their transfer. See what an extract from the Unified State Register looks like. The standard statement displays the following information:

  • description of the object (name, address, purpose, number of storeys of the building, floor);
  • registered right to real estate (full name of the owner, type of right, date of registration);
  • presence of encumbrances;
  • existence at the time of registration of the extract of legal claims of third parties;
  • Full name of the applicant.

In the video, see why you need to order an extract from the Unified State Register and obtain information about real estate before purchasing it

An extract with information about the land plot on which the construction of the facility is taking place and which is the subject of a shared participation agreement also contains information about the mortgage and participants in shared construction.

The government agency may provide an extended extract that contains additional information about all previous owners of the property, indicating the date of transfer of ownership.

Restricted information

Certain information may only be provided to a certain group of people. This information includes:

  • on the contents of documents that confirm ownership (except for information on the presence or absence of encumbrances);
  • general information about the ownership of real estate by individuals (including previous rights);
  • the fact that a person who has ownership of real estate is recognized as fully or partially incompetent.

Information of this nature may be provided:

Extended information

To make a payment, you need to top up your account, the status of which is displayed in the “My Accounts” tab of the user’s personal account. The account is replenished in the Rosreestr IR service. To do this, payment is made using a code that will be sent to the applicant’s email. The same notification will contain information about banks where you can make payments.

The table below provides information on the cost in rubles for obtaining information from the Unified State Register.

According to Article 8 of the Federal Law of the Russian Federation “On state registration of rights to real estate and transactions with it,” information is provided free of charge to:

  • judicial and law enforcement agencies when the data relates to a case in their proceedings;
  • state authorities and local self-government;
  • tax authorities;
  • statistical authorities;
  • bodies that control the use of land and other natural resources;
  • organizations specified in other laws of the Russian Federation.

Thus, any individual or legal entity can access publicly available information after registering the keys and paying for the services of Rosreestr.

You can ask questions about the requested information from the Unified State Register in the comments to the article