Reaviz started as a single institution in Samara back in 1993, and it quickly earned a reputation that pushed it well beyond one city. The Moscow branch grew out of that same foundation, giving students in Russia's capital access to the same quality of private medical education the parent university had already built over decades. Today, Medical University Reaviz Moscow stands as one of the few genuinely established private medical institutions operating in Moscow, part of a network that also covers St. Petersburg, Saratov, and other cities.
The Moscow campus puts you right inside one of the world's great medical cities. You are surrounded by top-tier hospitals, research institutions, and clinical networks that feed directly into your training. The university has formal cooperation agreements with major Moscow centres including Khimki Central City Hospital and City Clinical Hospital No. 59, meaning real clinical exposure is baked into the programme from the early years.
Reaviz runs a broad range of programmes. General Medicine (the equivalent of MBBS) is the flagship, but the university also offers Dentistry, Pharmacy, and Nursing tracks. For Indian and South Asian students in particular, the General Medicine programme is the main draw; it follows a six-year format and is entirely taught in English, with no Uzbek, Russian language requirement to hold you back in the classroom.
The financial side of things is genuinely manageable here. Annual tuition sits in a range that is a fraction of what private colleges charge in India, and when you factor in Moscow's relatively student-friendly living costs, the total yearly outlay stays within reach for most families. There is no donation, no hidden fee structure to decode.
Moscow is well connected to Delhi and other Indian cities with fairly regular flight options, typically around 5 to 6 hours. For South Asian students, the city is big, diverse, and very accustomed to international student communities.