
A-YA (A-JA), Cyrillic:«a-Я» — журнал неофициального русского искусства, was an underground Russian art revue. A-YA was a magazine illegally prepared in the Soviet Union and then published in Paris from 1979 to 1986.

Arena is a Swedish-language bi-monthly left-leaning magazine. It publishes reports, interviews and essays on politics and culture. In 2017 the magazine went on online-only format.

Exberliner is an English-language magazine published in Berlin that was launched in 2002. It is published monthly and available for €3.90 at newsstands around the city or by subscription. The magazine offers cultural listings, reviews, journalistic articles, opinion columns and a large classified section which is also continually updated online. It also regularly organizes parties and cultural events in English. The magazine was founded as a free newspaper in 2002 named The Berliner but was forced to change the name, which was already trademarked. The new name is intended as a play on expatriate. The publishing house Iomauna Media GmbH also operates Exberliner Flat Rentals, which helps foreigners rent apartments in Berlin, as well as Exberliner Jobs, a job board for internationals in Berlin.

The Figaro was an Austrian German-language satirical magazine, published weekly in Vienna between 1857 and 1919. Its orientation was liberal-humorous.

Glänta is a Swedish quarterly cultural magazine published in Sweden. Glänta was established by Göran Dahlberg in 1993. He is also the editor of the magazine which publishes articles about philosophy, politics, aesthetics, literature, art, and history. The editorial office is situated in Göteborg, Sweden.

Iceland Review is the oldest English-language magazine about Iceland, having originally been published in August, 1963. It also runs a news website which covers current events in Iceland. Since 2009, the online version is offered in German as well. The Iceland Review magazine publishes reports on Icelandic society, politics, pop culture, music, art, literature, current events, as well as interviews with notable Icelanders, articles on traveling in Iceland, and photo essays on Iceland. The magazine is published on a bi-monthly basis.

Die Insel was a German literary and art magazine that was published in Munich from 1899 to 1901 by Otto Julius Bierbaum, Alfred Walter Heymel, and Rudolf Alexander Schröder.

Merkur, subtitled Deutsche Zeitschrift für europäisches Denken, is Germany's leading intellectual review, published monthly in Stuttgart by Klett Cotta.

MilK Magazine is a contemporary children's fashion and lifestyle quarterly magazine based in Paris, France.

The Ottoman-Turkish journal Nahid was published in Istanbul in 1886 and 1887 in a total of 28 issues. Its content focused largely on literary topics as well as articles on art and culture of that time.

Neradnik is countercultural youth fanzine from the south Belgrade suburbs, Serbia.

Opernwelt is a monthly German magazine for opera, operetta and ballet. It includes news about current performances, portraits of composers and performers, articles about opera houses, performance spaces, and contemporary and historical subjects from the world of opera and classical music. It reviews recordings and books and publishes monthly schedules of German and international opera houses. The magazine's website offers full text search for past issues. A year book is published every October.

Positif is a French film magazine, founded in 1952 by Bernard Chardère in Lyon. It is one of two major French-language film magazines, created several months after Les Cahiers du cinéma. The magazine is headquartered in Paris and is published monthly.

The Reykjavík Grapevine is an English language Icelandic magazine based in the Icelandic capital of Reykjavík. The magazine debuted on June 13, 2003. Its first six issues were edited by Jón Trausti Sigurðarson and Valur Gunnarsson. In its second year, the magazine grew in circulation from 25,000 issues to 30,101. In its third year, American-born Bart Cameron took over as editor, also editing Inside Reykjavik, the Grapevine Guide, in 2006, through the Mál og Menning imprint of Edda Press.

Shonqar is a Bashkir language monthly youth culture and entertainment magazine that has been published in Ufa since January 1994.

SixDegrees is a monthly published free English language magazine in Finland. It focuses on multicultural events, people, matters and phenomena.