🚲
Getting Around
The Tbilisi Metro is efficient, cheap, and covers key points near the Old Town including the Avlabari and Liberty Square stations. Minibuses called marshrutkas fill the gaps, and licensed taxis ordered through the Bolt app are reliable and affordable for reaching the sulfur baths and fortress.
⚖️
Cash or Card
Cash remains king in Old Tbilisi, particularly in the traditional markets, smaller wine bars, and family-run guesthouses around Abanotubani. Cards are accepted at hotels, larger restaurants, and chain shops, but carrying Georgian Lari for daily use will make every interaction smoother and often cheaper.
☁️
Good to Know
Georgians regard hospitality as something close to sacred, and an offer of food, wine, or coffee is rarely casual: accepting graciously matters far more than finishing everything on the table. Visitors who show genuine curiosity about Georgian history, wine, or the alphabet will find conversations that outlast the afternoon entirely.
🏧
ATMs
ATMs are widely available throughout Tbilisi Old Town, with reliable machines at Bank of Georgia and TBC Bank branches near Liberty Square and along Kote Afkhazi Street. Most machines dispense Lari and accept international Visa and Mastercard, though a modest foreign transaction fee from the home bank is common and worth checking before arrival.
💳
Currency
The Georgian Lari (GEL) is the national currency and the only one accepted for everyday transactions in the Old Town, though USD and EUR are sometimes taken at larger hotels. Exchange offices called 'savaluto' are plentiful along Rustaveli Avenue and offer competitive rates without the fees that bank counters sometimes charge.
🔌
Plugs
Georgia uses Type C and Type F outlets at 220V and 50Hz, compatible with most European two-pin plugs. Travelers from the US, UK, or Australia will need an adapter.
🛡️
Safety
Tbilisi Old Town is considered very safe for travelers, including solo visitors and those out late, and street crime targeting tourists is genuinely rare in the historic quarter. Standard city awareness applies around busy market areas and at night on unlit lanes near the fortress walls, but the atmosphere is overwhelmingly relaxed and welcoming.
✈️
Airports
Tbilisi International Airport (TBS), officially Shota Rustaveli Tbilisi International Airport, sits approximately 18 kilometers east of the Old Town and handles direct routes from Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia. A taxi via Bolt takes around 25 to 35 minutes depending on traffic, and the airport bus connects to Liberty Square for a fraction of the cost.