Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán met Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin on Friday, marking his fourth visit to Moscow since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began. The talks focused on bilateral relations, energy cooperation, and, notably, the possibility of Budapest hosting a future Russia–US summit.

Putin: Relations built on “pragmatism”

At the start of the meeting, Putin emphasised that cooperation between Moscow and Budapest remains intact “despite all today’s difficulties”. According to the Russian president, the relationship is now based on pragmatism and “all the best that was” in the countries’ shared past, Russian news agency TASS reported.

Although trade volumes have fallen due to international sanctions, Putin noted that this year’s figures show “certain growth” of more than 7%. Energy cooperation also remains “extensive”, though he acknowledged there are outstanding issues the two governments need to resolve.

Putin again thanked Orbán for showing readiness to host Russia–US peace talks in Budapest. He even revealed that the idea originally came from former US President Donald Trump, who suggested the Hungarian capital as a venue because both he and Putin maintain a good relationship with Orbán.

“If our talks lead to Budapest serving as the platform, I would be very pleased,” Putin said.



Orbán’s “balanced” position on Ukraine

According to 444.hu, the Russian president also praised Hungary’s approach to the war in Ukraine, telling Orbán: “We are aware of your balanced position on the Ukraine issue.”

This latest Moscow trip comes after a series of unsuccessful “peace missions” by Orbán. He travelled to the Kremlin shortly before Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022: a move he later described as an attempt at mediation. In July 2024, he returned to Moscow as the rotating president of the EU Council, without consulting European partners, prompting widespread criticism across the bloc.

This week’s visit was similarly unannounced. Orbán only confirmed the trip publicly just before boarding an early-morning flight to Russia, with his delegation arriving in Moscow shortly after 11 AM local time:


Hungary was represented in the talks by Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó, Construction and Transport Minister János Lázár, and economic adviser Marcell Biró.

Brussels distances itself: “This has nothing to do with the EU”

Following news of the meeting, the European Commission moved quickly to clarify that Orbán’s Moscow visit was not an EU mission, according to Portfolio’s report.

Commission spokesperson Paula Pinho stressed that EU member state leaders cannot individually represent the bloc on matters involving common foreign policy, especially concerning Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Putin praises Orbán’s "balanced" Ukraine stance as leaders discuss potential Russia–US summit in Budapest
Orbán and Putin in Moscow on 28 November 2025. Photo: MTI/Miniszterelnöki Kommunikációs Főosztály/Fischer Zoltán

She underlined that the Hungarian prime minister travelled on his own initiative, adding that Brussels evaluates every diplomatic move based on how it affects European unity and the joint position on Russian aggression.

The Commission’s stance remains unchanged: no member state leader is authorised to negotiate in the EU’s name on such issues.