Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 19, 2026

Lake Leksozero

Lake Leksozero is a large freshwater lake in the Republic of Karelia, Russia. It has an area of 166 km² and an average depth of 8.6 m. It freezes up in November and stays icebound until May. There are many islands on the lake. Leksozero is used for fishery. The lake drains through the river Lieksanjoki that flows into the lake Pielinen in Northern Karelia, Finland. These lakes are part of the Vuoksi River basin in Finland and Russia, which in turn is part of the Neva River basin in Russia.

Last revised
Jul 19, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
166 w
Citations
Source
Lake Leksozero
View from the Repola village
Lake Leksozero
Location within Russia
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Lake Leksozero
Location within Karelia
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LocationRepublic of Karelia
Coordinates63°46′00″N 30°58′00″E / 63.766667°N 30.966667°E / 63.766667; 30.966667
Basin countriesRussia
Surface area
166 km2 (64 sq mi)
Average depth
8.5 m (28 ft)
Max. depth34 m (112 ft)
Water volume
1.408 km3 (1,141,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface elevation
174 m (571 ft)
FrozenNovember–May

Lake Leksozero (Russian: Лексозеро, Finnish and Karelian: Lieksajärvi) is a large freshwater lake in the Republic of Karelia, Russia. It has an area of 166 km² and an average depth of 8.6 m. It freezes up in November and stays icebound until May. There are many islands on the lake. Leksozero is used for fishery. The lake drains through the river Lieksanjoki that flows into the lake Pielinen in Northern Karelia, Finland. These lakes are part of the Vuoksi River basin in Finland and Russia, which in turn is part of the Neva River basin in Russia.

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