Krasnodar, 21 November – Yug Times. Sochi has once more been designated the status of a federal resort, following a new government decree signed by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. From 1 January 2026, the resort’s official area will expand to 351,000 hectares. The announcement, however, has sparked more questions than celebration.

Public reaction is mixed. Some hope the status will finally bring order to chaotic development of the city; others fear new restrictions, higher prices and shrinking access to beaches. Experts say the real implications lie elsewhere.

This is far from the city’s first “promotion.” Sochi held the title in Soviet times, regained it in 1993, and received another confirmation in 2024, when its area was listed as 348,800 hectares. The latest decree pushes the boundary almost 3,000 hectares further.

City officials stress that federal status mainly formalises borders and gives the Health Ministry authority over sanitary-protection zones of natural healing resources. In practice, Sochi already participates in major federal programmes, including a long-term socio-economic plan worth nearly 139 billion roubles for modernising water supply, sewage systems and utilities.

“Legally, the government must define the exact perimeter of the resort territory. Beyond that, the decree changes nothing,” says Dmitri Bogdanov, Chair of the AMOS Hoteliers’ Expert Council. “The PR effect is strong, but material consequences are limited.” 

Tourism experts doubt the new status will boost visitor numbers. “Sochi sharply raised prices this year expecting a surge, but instead saw under 8% growth instead of the predicted 15%,” notes Aleksan Mkrtchyan, Vice-President of the Alliance of Travel Agencies. “Travellers chose Crimea, Abkhazia and Gelendzhik instead.”



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