RelocationRVPDecree 702

Williams family from London: a year of life in Moscow after relocating under Decree 702

M. Braiden·May 12, 2026·8 min read
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The Williams family from a London suburb — Peter, Anna, and two kids — relocated to Moscow in summer 2025, becoming one of the first families to obtain RVP under Decree 702. Six months later, they share their experience.

Why they chose Russia

"We had been watching UK policies over the last five years with growing concern," says Peter, a former management consultant. "In Moscow, we saw a country that preserves traditions while actively developing."

Family photo

The Williams family in their first month after moving to Moscow

Document acquisition process

The Williams family chose Braiden Consulting after a few calls and recommendations from other expats. In their words, the key factor was the ability to get consultations in their native English language.

"Our children's documents were issued in different countries — the UK and Austria, where Anna worked previously. We were explained what needed apostilling and how, and they assisted with the translation," says Peter.

"The hardest part was collecting background checks in the UK and Austria for the kids. Once we handed the documents to Braiden, everything went like clockwork — all four of us received RVP in 4 months."

— Peter Williams, former management consultant

Life after relocation

Kids' school

The school where the Williams children study

Now the family rents an apartment in Khamovniki. The kids attend an international school with advanced Russian language studies. Peter works remotely as a consultant for several international companies, while Anna runs online interior design courses.

"A year after obtaining RVP, we will apply for residency (VNZH). And we are already planning to buy an apartment — looking into the Zamoskvorechye district," adds Anna.

Tips for those planning a move

  • Start collecting documents back home early — apostilling can take up to 6 weeks
  • Do not skimp on legal help — especially when moving with kids or setting up a business
  • Learn the Russian language — it greatly eases integration, even if professionals handle your paperwork
  • Get a Russian SIM card and a Russian bank account in your first few days — many things are impossible without them
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