Russia cuts off Apple ID payments to choke VPN access

Russia cuts off Apple ID payments to choke VPN access📷 Published: Apr 12, 2026 at 12:36 UTC
- ★Mobile carriers block Apple’s payment system in Russia
- ★VPN crackdown forces users into costlier workarounds
- ★Apple’s silence leaves Russian iPhone owners in limbo
Russia’s Ministry of Digital Development didn’t just target VPNs—it went straight for the wallet. By ordering mobile carriers to disable Apple ID payments, the Kremlin cut off one of the last seamless ways for iPhone users to subscribe to services like ExpressVPN or NordVPN. The move forces users into clunkier payment methods: prepaid cards, cryptocurrency, or asking friends abroad to foot the bill.
This isn’t a technical glitch; it’s a calculated squeeze. Apple’s payment system was a rare frictionless path in a country where international sanctions have already gummed up digital transactions. Now, even users who’ve stockpiled App Store credit will hit a wall when renewing subscriptions. The message is clear: if you want unrestricted internet, Russia wants you to jump through hoops—or give up.
The timing lines up with broader VPN restrictions. Russia has blocked thousands of VPN services this year, but Apple’s ecosystem was a holdout. Unlike Android, where sideloading APKs is trivial, iOS users rely on the App Store. Without Apple Pay, they’re left with fewer options—and more reasons to consider switching platforms.

The payment freeze isn’t just about money—it’s about control📷 Published: Apr 12, 2026 at 12:36 UTC
The payment freeze isn’t just about money—it’s about control
For Apple, this is a test of how far it will go to protect its Russian user base. The company has remained silent on the payment freeze, even as users report errors when trying to renew subscriptions. That silence speaks volumes: Apple’s priority in Russia has long been compliance over confrontation, from storing user data locally to pulling LGBTQ+ apps. This time, the cost isn’t just political—it’s functional.
The workaround economy will boom. Telegram channels are already trading guides on using foreign Apple IDs or gift cards, but these solutions are brittle. A misconfigured payment method can lock users out of purchases entirely. Meanwhile, Android users face fewer hurdles: Google Play still accepts international cards, and sideloading remains an escape hatch. The gap in user experience just widened.
The real signal here isn’t just about VPNs—it’s about who controls the pipes. Russia is showing how to weaponize payment rails, a playbook other authoritarian regimes will study. For iPhone users, the immediate pain is clear: more steps, more costs, more uncertainty. For the industry, it’s a reminder that even closed ecosystems like Apple’s can’t fully shield users from geopolitical pressure.
Practical takeaway for Russian iPhone owners: expect subscription lapses, failed renewals, and a scramble for workarounds. The cost isn’t just money—it’s time spent troubleshooting what used to take two taps. For VPN providers, this is a stress test of their customer support and alternative payment flows.