Personally vetted instructors

Intensive Russian tutors, lessons & classes

Здравствуйте zdravstvuyte The formal Russian "hello," and the register an intensive student should default to from day one.

Personally vetted Russian tutors who run accelerated, immersive programs. Lessons modeled on the discipline of FSI-style Category IV training, calibrated to adults with a fixed window (a posting, an academic semester, a TORFL deadline) and the willingness to live inside the language for months.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Russian tutor running an intensive immersion session with an adult student
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

Your instructors

Intensive Russian tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen is a curated boutique school and the Intensive Russian roster is the deepest end of the Russian program. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us, and the bar for the intensive track is higher: experience running compressed programs, comfort with daily contact, and the discipline to hold the schedule architecture together when students hit a wall.

Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial and tell us your deadline.

Below are the Strommen tutors who run intensive Russian programs. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

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Погружение — immersion essentials

5 things to know before starting Intensive Russian

These are the framing pieces a tutor lays out at the trial before any intensive plan gets built. Screenshot them, then book a tutor to discuss the deadline and the schedule.

  1. 01

    FSI Category IV

    The Foreign Service Institute classifies Russian as Category IV (1,100 classroom hours to professional working proficiency), grouping it with Polish, Czech, Serbian, and Vietnamese. By comparison, French is Category I at roughly 600 hours. The 1,100-hour figure is what an intensive program compresses, and it is the honest baseline for setting expectations and deadlines.

    e.g. 1,100 contact hours plus comparable self-study, compressed from years into months

  2. 02

    ТРКИ TORFL

    The Russian state proficiency exam (Тест по русскому языку как иностранному), administered by the Pushkin Institute and recognized internationally. Runs A1 through C2 plus a Fourth Certificate. Many intensive programs anchor their calendar to a specific TORFL test date, which gives the study schedule a hard deadline and the student a concrete credential at the end.

    e.g. A1 (elementary) → B1 (basic) → B2 (intermediate) → C1 (advanced) → C2 (mastery)

  3. 03

    Совершенный / несовершенный вид

    Perfective and imperfective verb aspect, the second defining feature of Russian grammar after the cases. Every Russian verb a learner encounters has to be acquired as a pair (читать / прочитать, писать / написать), and choosing the right aspect in a given sentence is closer to a grammatical decision than a vocabulary one. Intensive programs introduce aspect from week six onward and treat it as a maintenance topic for the rest of the program.

    e.g. Я читал книгу (imperfective, was reading) vs Я прочитал книгу (perfective, finished reading)

  4. 04

    Глаголы движения

    Verbs of motion. The system where every verb of going splits into unidirectional and multidirectional pairs (идти / ходить, ехать / ездить, лететь / летать), with prefixes layered on top to produce came-in, came-out, passed-through, went-around, and a dozen more. The reason intermediate Russian students plateau, and the reason intensive programs sequence motion verbs as the late-program centerpiece they are.

    e.g. Я иду в магазин (going to the store now) vs Я хожу в магазин (I go to the store regularly)

  5. 05

    Только по-русски tolko po-russki

    "Russian only." The classroom protocol most intensive programs adopt from week two or three onward: tutor and student conduct lessons exclusively in Russian, with English permitted only for the briefest grammar clarifications. Uncomfortable for the first month, natural by the second, and the single most important compounding-driver in an intensive curriculum.

    e.g. From week three: greetings, instructions, corrections, and casual exchanges all in Russian

About Intensive Russian

Russian on a compressed timeline

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Intensive Russian

Compressed grammar sequencing

Cases introduced on an aggressive but learnable curve: alphabet and pronunciation in week one, nominative and accusative plus present tense by week three, prepositional and basic past tense by week five, genitive by week seven, dative and instrumental by week nine, full case system in active use by week twelve. Verb aspect from week six onward, verbs of motion from week ten. The sequencing assumes daily study and compounds aggressively when the load is sustained.

Russian-only immersion protocol

From week two or three, lessons conducted exclusively in Russian. Layered with daily-life immersion (Russian-language phone interface, Russian journaling, an hour of native content daily) and optional cohort-immersion blocks. The immersive component is what distinguishes intensive Russian from merely-frequent Russian, and tutors help design the immersion plan around your real life rather than imposing a one-size protocol.

Literature and academic reading on the intensive curve

Chekhov short stories starting around month three, twentieth-century writers (Platonov, Babel, Shalamov) through month six, contemporary fiction (Tolstaya, Ulitskaya, Shishkin, Yakhina) and academic prose layered in as reading speed builds. Literature exercises the high-register vocabulary and older case constructions that survive in formal prose, and it builds reading speed faster than newspaper-only diets do.

Deadline-anchored planning: posting, semester, TORFL

The intensive plan reverse-engineers from your deadline. Diplomatic or NGO posting six months out, academic semester start in three months, TORFL test date with a fixed administration window, immersion-summer arrival at Middlebury or the Pushkin Institute. Tutors build the weekly architecture (8 to 15 contact hours, 15 to 30 self-study hours) around the deadline and adjust as life collisions hit.

FAQ

About Intensive Russian lessons & classes

How many hours per week does an intensive Russian program require?

The high-functioning shape is 8 to 15 hours of one-on-one tutor contact per week, plus 15 to 30 hours of structured self-study (textbook work, audio drilling, reading, writing, vocabulary maintenance), plus daily exposure to native content. Programs at the lower end of that range (8 contact, 15 self-study) still qualify as intensive and produce real gains; programs at the upper end (15 contact, 30 self-study) approximate a full-time language commitment and produce the fastest progress. Honest assessment of what you can actually sustain matters more than aiming high and burning out by month two.

Realistically, how far can I get in six months of intensive Russian from zero?

With the full intensive load (10 to 15 contact hours weekly plus matching self-study), most students reach the equivalent of TORFL A2 to B1 in six months: able to read unadapted journalism with effort, sustain conversations on familiar topics, write paragraph-length responses with mostly accurate case morphology, and follow much of native-speed spoken Russian when the topic is familiar. B2 (intermediate proficiency, the level many academic programs require) is usually a 9-to-12-month intensive target from zero. Going from B2 to C1 (advanced) is another 9-to-12-month investment, often best done partially in-country.

Is intensive Russian appropriate for an absolute beginner, or should I do weekly lessons first?

Both paths work, and the right one depends on your deadline and your bandwidth. Absolute beginners with a hard deadline 6 to 12 months out (a posting, a semester start, a planned move) usually benefit from an intensive entry, because the compressed sequencing compounds faster than a slow start would. Absolute beginners without an external deadline often do better with a 2 to 4 month weekly ramp-up before going intensive, to build the foundation comfortably and confirm that Russian is a good fit before committing to the heavy schedule. The trial conversation is where this decision gets made.

Are your intensive Russian tutors native speakers?

Most are native speakers, and the rest are longtime fluent teachers with formal training and substantial experience running compressed programs. The bios specify backgrounds. The intensive track has a higher bar than weekly tutoring: comfort with daily contact, experience holding immersion protocols, and the discipline to manage schedule architecture when students hit a wall. Tutors on the intensive roster have cleared that bar.

Can intensive lessons happen online, or do they need to be in person?

Both work. Online via Zoom or Jitsi is the norm for most intensive students because the daily-or-near-daily contact schedule is easier to sustain when lessons happen from home and travel time is eliminated. Audio quality is fine for the conversation work, screen-sharing handles vocabulary and grammar drills, and shared documents work for writing correction. In-person lessons in the Los Angeles area are possible for students who prefer face-to-face energy. Hybrid plans (in-person twice a week, online for the rest) are common.

What if life collides with the program halfway through?

Honest answer: this happens to a meaningful percentage of intensive students, and the right move is usually to negotiate down the intensity rather than abandon the language. A student who hits a job promotion, a family emergency, or just three-month accumulated tiredness is better served by dropping from 12 contact hours to 6 for a couple of months and keeping the daily exposure habit alive than by going to zero and trying to restart later. Tutors on the intensive roster are coaches as well as teachers and most have managed dozens of mid-program adjustments. Tell us when life shifts and we will replan.

I want to take the TORFL exam. Can the intensive program prepare me for a specific level?

Yes. TORFL prep is one of the most common intensive deadlines. The exam is administered by the Pushkin State Russian Language Institute and recognized internationally. Tutors with TORFL experience build the program around the test date, calibrate the four-skill balance (reading, listening, writing, speaking) to match the exam, and run practice tests in the final weeks. The specific level (A1 through C2) depends on your starting point and your timeline; the trial conversation establishes both.

What does the free trial cover?

30 minutes, no cost, with the tutor you select. For intensive prospects we use the trial to establish three things: your deadline (and how fixed it is), your real weekly availability (hours of contact and hours of self-study you can sustain), and your tolerance for the immersion protocols that drive the fastest progress. The tutor proposes a draft intensive plan calibrated to those three inputs, you discuss the trade-offs, and you decide whether to continue. Intensive plans live or die on the schedule math, and the trial exists largely to do that math honestly together.

Ready for Intensive Russian lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.