In northern regions, cardiovascular pathology tends to be more aggressive, is likely to occur at a young age already and often results in disability and even mortality among people who have not yet reached the retirement age. The aim of this study was to assess the structure and age-specific dynamics of basic factors able to cause cardiovascular diseases in men living in northern regions and the total cardiovascular risk. We conducted a one-center experimental cross-sectional comparative one-sample study of 116 men living in the north of the Magadan region. The complex study program included questioning, anthropometric examination, laboratory biochemical tests and molecular-genetic screening of candidate genes of essential hypertension (AGT (rs 4762), AGTR1 (rs5186), ADD1 (rs4961), NOS3 (rs2070744), and АСЕ (rs4340)). Genotyping was performed using real-time polymerase chain reaction. The total cardiovascular risk was calculated using the SCORE scale. The structure of basic risk factors that can cause cardiovascular diseases in men in the Magadan region includes both modifiable (smoking, obesity, essential hypertension, and dyslipidemia) and non-modifiable ones (climatic-geographic and genetic risk factors) in various age groups. With age, risk factors exert stronger influence on each other thus aggravating the clinical course of cardiovascular diseases and increasing risks of fatal cardiac events. This is especially important for northern regions where people are exposed to such non-modifiable risk factors as extreme climate. Moderate risk of cardiovascular diseases (according to the SCORE scale) was established for all men living in the North already at a young age. Therefore, a key task is to develop a strategy for active prevention of cardiovascular pathology that covers public at large starting from younger age groups.