We recently reported the first documented cases of a new rickettsial disease caused by Rickettsia heilongjiangensis in the Russian Far East (Far Eastern tick-borne rickettsiosis). Here we report the amplification of DNA of R. heilongjiangensis from both the skin biopsy of an acutely ill patient and the tick removed from him prior to the disease development. The tick has been identified as Haemaphysalis spp. The clinical picture was that of a spotted fever group rickettsiosis and a seroconversion was noted with R. heilongjiangensis antigen. Screening testing of both species of Haemaphysalis ticks inhabiting Russian Far Eastern regions showed that up to 28.13% of H. concinnae and 4.48% of H. japonica douglasii ticks harbor R. heilongjiangensis. It has been concluded that H. concinnae may serve as the main vector for the transmission of R. heilongjiangensis. H. japonica douglasii ticks harbor several varieties of rickettsiae. DNA of "Candidatus Rickettsia tarasevichiae," previously found in Ixodes persulcatus ticks, was amplified from one male tick. Two sequenced complete gltA genes belong to the novel spotted fever group rickettsial species provisionally called here "Candidatus Rickettsia principis" variants Hjd54 and Hjd61. The rate of infection has been found to be not higher than 1.5%.