The best hotels in Armenia
Armenia has 5,000+ places to stay, and most of them will disappoint you with thin walls, misleading photos, or a 'city view' that's actually a parking garage. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Armenia
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Avan Dzoraget Hotel
Dzoraget River Valley, Lori Province
Free cancellation & Pay later
Parakar Hotel
Near Etchmiadzin Cathedral, Vagharshapat
Free cancellation & Pay later
Mikaelyan Hotel
Central Dilijan, Dilijan
Free cancellation & Pay later
Tufenkian Historic Yerevan Hotel
Kentron, Yerevan
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Alexander, a Luxury Collection Hotel
Kentron, Yerevan
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Envoy Hostel & Hotel | Kentron, Yerevan | $45–75/night | 8.6/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Hotel Ani | Old Town, Gyumri | $60–90/night | 8.1/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 3 | Avan Dzoraget Hotel | Dzoraget River Valley, Lori Province | $130–200/night | 8.8/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 4 | Old Mill Hotel | Old Town, Goris | $140–210/night | 8.7/10 | Best Value |
| 5 | Parakar Hotel | Near Etchmiadzin Cathedral, Vagharshapat | $150–220/night | 8.3/10 | Family Friendly |
| 6 | Mikaelyan Hotel | Central Dilijan, Dilijan | $160–230/night | 9.1/10 | Top Rated |
| 7 | Tufenkian Historic Yerevan Hotel | Kentron, Yerevan | $110–175/night | 9/10 | Best Location |
| 8 | Hotel Ararat | Kentron, Yerevan | $120–180/night | 8.5/10 | Most Popular |
| 9 | Ani Plaza Hotel | Kentron, Yerevan | $260–380/night | 8.9/10 | Business Pick |
| 10 | The Alexander, a Luxury Collection Hotel | Kentron, Yerevan | $320–520/night | 9.3/10 | Luxury Pick |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Envoy Hostel & Hotel
Envoy sits on Moskovyan Street in the heart of Kentron, walkable to Republic Square and the Cascade. Private rooms are compact but clean, with good beds and strong AC. The common areas are social and the staff genuinely helpful with transport and tours. Breakfast is simple but included. A solid base for budget travelers who plan to spend most of their time exploring the city.
Check Availability
Hotel Ani
Hotel Ani is a small family-run property on Abovyan Street in Gyumri's historic old town, close to the Black Fortress and the main bazaar. Rooms are basic but tidy, with traditional Armenian touches in the decor. The owners cook breakfast to order each morning which is a genuine highlight. Gyumri gets overlooked by tourists and this hotel is a good reason to stay a night or two. Prices are very fair for what you get.
Check Availability
Avan Dzoraget Hotel
Avan Dzoraget sits directly on the edge of the Dzoraget River gorge in northern Armenia, about 20 kilometers from Alaverdi. The setting is genuinely dramatic, with rooms in stone bungalows built into the hillside above the river. It is most useful as a base for visiting Haghpat and Sanahin monasteries, both UNESCO sites within 30 minutes by car. The restaurant serves fresh trout from the river and Armenian highland cuisine. This is not a place to visit without your own transport or an arranged driver.
Check Availability
Old Mill Hotel
Old Mill Hotel is built inside a restored 19th-century mill in the old part of Goris, a town of distinctive stone architecture in southern Armenia near Tatev. The building itself is the main attraction, with exposed stone walls and wooden beams throughout the common areas. Rooms are well-appointed and quiet, overlooking the garden and small stream. The staff are among the most helpful in the country and will arrange Tatev cable car tickets and cave city tours. Southern Armenia is undervisited and this hotel makes a good case for spending several nights in the region.
Check Availability
Parakar Hotel
Parakar is a comfortable mid-range hotel located in Vagharshapat, also known as Etchmiadzin, just outside Yerevan and a short walk from the Etchmiadzin Cathedral complex. The property has large rooms suitable for families and a generous outdoor pool area that sees heavy use in summer. Breakfast is hearty and the kitchen will prepare packed lunches on request for day trips. The location is quieter and more affordable than central Yerevan while still being only 20 minutes by marshrutka from Republic Square. Good parking for travelers with rental cars.
Check Availability
Mikaelyan Hotel
Mikaelyan Hotel is a well-regarded property on the main street of Dilijan, a forested resort town in the Tavush region often called the Armenian Switzerland. The building is modern but designed to blend with the surrounding woodland setting. Rooms are clean and quiet, with good insulation from street noise. The hotel is walking distance from the restored Old Town craft quarter and the Sharambeyan Street artisan workshops. Dilijan National Park trails start within a few minutes drive and the hotel staff have detailed maps and hiking advice.
Check Availability
Tufenkian Historic Yerevan Hotel
This boutique hotel occupies a restored 19th-century building on Hanrapetutyan Street, steps from Republic Square. Rooms are decorated with hand-knotted Armenian carpets and local artwork, giving it a distinct character that chain hotels completely lack. Service is attentive and the staff arrange wine tours and driver hire with minimal fuss. The on-site restaurant serves excellent Armenian food. Corner rooms on the upper floors have partial views toward Mount Ararat on clear days.
Check Availability
Hotel Ararat
Hotel Ararat is a well-established mid-range option on Grigor Lusavorich Street, a short walk from the Yerevan Opera House. The rooms are spacious by city standards and the beds are genuinely comfortable. Breakfast buffet is extensive with both Armenian and continental options. The rooftop terrace has clear views of Mount Ararat when the weather cooperates, which makes it a popular spot in the evenings. WiFi is fast and reliable throughout the building.
Check Availability
Ani Plaza Hotel
Ani Plaza is one of Yerevan's most established upscale hotels, located directly on Saiat-Nova Avenue facing the Opera House and adjacent park. The lobby and rooms were fully renovated recently and the result is polished without being sterile. Business facilities are among the best in the city, with a proper conference center and fast connectivity throughout. The outdoor pool on the upper terrace is a genuine luxury during Yerevan's hot summers. Service is professional and the concierge team speaks English, Russian, and French fluently.
Check Availability
The Alexander, a Luxury Collection Hotel
The Alexander is Marriott's Luxury Collection property in Yerevan, occupying a landmark position on Abovyan Street in the city center. Rooms are large and genuinely luxurious, with high-quality Armenian stone and textile details incorporated throughout the design. The spa is the best in the country and the rooftop restaurant has unobstructed views of Mount Ararat on clear days. Breakfast at this level of quality is hard to find elsewhere in Armenia. It is expensive by local standards but competitive with equivalent European luxury hotels.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Armenia
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
Yerevan neighborhoods: where to actually stay
Kentron is Yerevan's center in every sense. Republic Square, the Cascade steps on Tamanyan Street, and the Opera House on Sayat-Nova Avenue are all within a 15-minute walk of each other. Hotels here range from $45 at Envoy Hostel to $520/night at The Alexander, and every price bracket has a solid option.
Avoid booking in the Shengavit or Davtashen districts if you want walkability. They're residential and quiet, which sounds nice until you realize the nearest decent restaurant is a $4 taxi ride away. Stick to Kentron and you'll never need to explain to a driver where you're going.
Getting around Armenia without losing your mind
Inside Yerevan, the metro covers the basics for 100 AMD a ride. But the city is walkable if you're based in Kentron. Republic Square to the Cascade is 12 minutes on foot, and Northern Avenue is right in between. GG is the local ride-hailing app and it works better than flagging a cab on Abovyan Street.
For the rest of Armenia, marshrutkas connect Yerevan's Kilikia and Gai bus stations to most major towns. Dilijan is 1,500 AMD, Gyumri is around 1,800 AMD, Goris is roughly 3,500 AMD. Renting a car in Yerevan runs $35-55/day and is genuinely worth it if you're hitting Tatev, Noravank, and Khor Virap in one trip.
Armenia in spring vs. fall: which season wins
Spring (April-May) means apricot blossoms on the Ararat Plain, temperatures of 14-22°C, and hotels at their most competitive rates before the summer surge. Yerevan's streets around the Cascade fill up with outdoor cafes and the city genuinely comes alive. Book at least 3 weeks out for Kentron hotels in May.
September is fall's strongest argument. Grape harvest season in Vayots Dzor, temperatures cooling to 16-20°C, and slightly lower rates than July-August. The road through the Azat River Gorge to Geghard Monastery is spectacular in early fall light. Both seasons beat summer, when July heat in Yerevan regularly hits 35°C and AC becomes non-negotiable.
What to eat near your hotel in Yerevan
The streets around Tumanyan and Pushkin in Kentron are where you eat well without paying tourist prices. Lavash with fresh herbs and white cheese from any neighborhood bakery costs almost nothing. For a proper sit-down meal, the restaurants along Saryan Street have built a small food corridor that locals actually use.
One mistake travelers make: eating every meal at their hotel restaurant. Even the good hotels in Kentron can't compete with what's 5 minutes outside the door. Ask your hotel which khinkali spot they personally go to, not which one they're paid to recommend. There's always a difference.
Booking tips for Armenia's high season
Yerevan hotels fill fast around Vardavar (water festival, usually mid-July), New Year's Eve, and the week around April 24th. Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, when diaspora visitors flood Kentron. For those specific weeks, book 6-8 weeks ahead or you'll pay 40-60% above normal rates. The Alexander and Ani Plaza both hit their ceiling prices during these windows.
Outside peak weeks, Armenia rewards late-ish booking. October and March are low-demand months, and hotels in Dilijan and Goris especially tend to drop rates. Mikaelyan Hotel in Dilijan sometimes posts same-week deals at $130-150/night, which is $30-40 off the standard rack rate.
Day trips from Yerevan worth building your hotel stay around
Garni Temple and Geghard Monastery are 45-60 minutes east through the Azat River Gorge. you can do both in a half-day and be back in Kentron for lunch. Khor Virap to the south gives you that famous Ararat view, best before 10am when haze builds. A private driver for either route runs $30-50 from most Yerevan hotels.
Lake Sevan is 1.5 hours northeast on the M4 highway and worth a full day in summer. The north shore near Sevan town is less crowded than the south. If you're heading to Dilijan after Sevan, it makes sense to book two nights at Mikaelyan Hotel and not rush back to Yerevan the same evening.
Explore Armenia by city
We cover 5 destinations across Armenia. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Armenia's best hotel regions
Start with Yerevan. Kentron is where everything happens, and you'll waste time and money staying anywhere else in the capital. After that, Dilijan and the Lori Province are worth the drive north.
Yerevan 4 vetted hotels Armenia's capital, and where most visitors should base themselves.
Armenia's capital, and where most visitors should base themselves.
Kentron is the core of Yerevan and the only neighborhood worth booking in for a first visit. Republic Square, the Cascade on Tamanyan Street, and the Opera area on Sayat-Nova are all connected on foot. You're also 20 minutes by GG taxi from Zvartnots International Airport, which keeps arrivals painless.
Hotels here run the full range. Envoy Hostel delivers a $45-75/night budget option with a Kentron address that would cost double in many European capitals. At the top end, The Alexander on Abovyan Street offers $320-520/night with a level of finish that genuinely competes with five-star properties in Istanbul or Tbilisi.
Avoid the cluster of guesthouses near Yerevan's Central Railway Station on Tigran Mets Avenue. The prices look attractive but the noise, distance from the center, and general condition of those properties make them a false economy. Spend $20 more and stay in Kentron.
Browse all Yerevan hotels → Dilijan & Lori Province 2 vetted hotels Forested hills, clean air, and Armenia's best nature hotels.
Forested hills, clean air, and Armenia's best nature hotels.
Dilijan sits 1,500 meters above sea level in a forested valley, and the air genuinely feels different the moment you step out of the car. Mkhitar Gosh Street in central Dilijan has the restored Old Town quarter, with workshops and cafes that feel nothing like Yerevan. The Dilijan National Park trails start practically at your hotel door.
Mikaelyan Hotel is the top-rated property in our entire Armenia list at a 9.1. It's in central Dilijan, 10 minutes' walk from the Old Town craft quarter and 15 minutes from the Haghartsin Monastery trailhead. At $160-230/night it's the most expensive option outside Yerevan's luxury tier, but the setting earns every dollar.
Lori Province to the north adds the Avan Dzoraget Hotel in the Dzoraget River Valley, which is genuinely remote in the best possible way. It's a 2-hour drive from Yerevan on the M6, and pairs perfectly with visits to Sanahin and Haghpat Monasteries, both UNESCO sites within 40 minutes of the property.
Browse all Dilijan & Lori Province hotels → Southern Armenia (Goris & Syunik) 1 vetted hotel Canyon country with one outstanding hotel and some of Armenia's best monasteries.
Canyon country with one outstanding hotel and some of Armenia's best monasteries.
Goris is a 3.5-hour drive south from Yerevan on the M2, and the landscape alone is worth the trip. The town sits in a canyon carved by the Goris River, with basalt rock formations rising behind the Old Town quarter. It's the base for Tatev Monastery, one of the most dramatic medieval buildings in the South Caucasus.
Old Mill Hotel in Goris's Old Town is our pick here and carries the Best Value badge for good reason. At $140-210/night, you're getting a meticulously restored historic property 8 minutes' walk from the main Mashtots Street square and 15 minutes from the Wings of Tatev ropeway station. The ropeway itself drops you at Tatev Monastery in 12 minutes, which beats the old 45-minute road any day.
There's not much else vetted in this region, which is partly the point. You come to Syunik for Tatev, Noravank (2 hours north in Vayots Dzor), and the cave city of Khndzoresk. The Old Mill is the right base for all of it.
Browse all Southern Armenia (Goris & Syunik) hotels → Vagharshapat & Araratian Plain 1 vetted hotel UNESCO cathedrals, the Ararat view, and the spiritual center of Armenian Christianity.
UNESCO cathedrals, the Ararat view, and the spiritual center of Armenian Christianity.
Vagharshapat, also known as Etchmiadzin, is 20 minutes west of Yerevan along the A1 highway. It's home to the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the center of the Armenian Apostolic Church, and several UNESCO-listed cathedral complexes. Khor Virap Monastery, with its unobstructed view of Mount Ararat, is another 30 minutes south.
Parakar Hotel here is our Family Friendly pick at $150-220/night. It sits a short drive from the Etchmiadzin Cathedral complex and offers the kind of space that compact Kentron hotels simply can't match. Families with kids do better here than they would in central Yerevan, where a decent family room costs the same or more.
The trade-off is you're not walking to restaurants and bars the way you would in Kentron. But the Araratian Plain is stunning at sunrise, the air is clearer than the capital, and you're well-positioned for a Khor Virap morning visit before the tour buses arrive around 10am.
Browse all Vagharshapat & Araratian Plain hotels → Gyumri & Shirak Region 1 vetted hotel Armenia's second city, underrated by tourists and beloved by locals.
Armenia's second city, underrated by tourists and beloved by locals.
Gyumri sits 130 kilometers north of Yerevan and gets a fraction of the tourist traffic, which is exactly its appeal. The Kumayri Historic District has some of the best-preserved 19th-century basalt architecture in the South Caucasus. Streets around the Vardanantz Square area feel genuinely lived-in, not staged for visitors.
Hotel Ani in Gyumri's Old Town is our Hidden Gem pick, though we've sworn off that phrase elsewhere. Call it what it is: a solid, affordable hotel in a neighborhood that rewards curious travelers. At $60-90/night, you're staying 10 minutes' walk from the Sev Berd (Black Fortress) and close to the best art galleries and workshops in the city.
The Yerevan-Gyumri train takes about 2.5 hours and costs next to nothing. roughly 1,200 AMD. and the journey through the Kasakh River valley is scenic. Or take the marshrutka from Kilikia bus station for a similar price and 1.5-hour trip on the M1 highway.
Browse all Gyumri & Shirak Region hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Armenia.
Romantic
The Dzoraget River Valley in Lori Province is where you go when you want isolation, forest, and the sound of a river instead of traffic. Avan Dzoraget Hotel makes it effortless, with no crowds and the Debed Canyon as your backdrop.
Culture
Kentron in Yerevan puts you within 15 minutes of the National Gallery on Arami Street, the History Museum on Republic Square, and the Cascade with its outdoor sculpture collection. Tufenkian Historic Yerevan Hotel is the cultural traveler's natural address.
Family
Vagharshapat near Etchmiadzin Cathedral gives families space, a car-friendly base, and easy access to the Ararat Plain without the chaos of central Yerevan. Parakar Hotel here has the room sizes and facilities that work when you're traveling with kids.
Budget
Kentron doesn't have to mean expensive. Envoy Hostel at $45-75/night proves that. You're on the same streets as the $400/night properties, just without the marble lobby.
Beach
Armenia is landlocked, but Lake Sevan's north shore near Noratus village is where locals go to swim in July-August. The nearest vetted base is Yerevan (1.5 hours), making it a day trip rather than a stay.
Foodie
Saryan Street in Kentron has become Yerevan's best food strip, with wine bars, modern Armenian restaurants, and a craft beer scene that didn't exist five years ago. Stay in Kentron and walk to all of it.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed 5,000+ options across the main regions of Armenia. We cut hotels that overcharge for 'Soviet charm' while delivering broken radiators. We cut anything within 500 meters of the Yerevan train station on Tigran Mets Avenue, where half the guesthouses haven't updated their mattresses since 1994. We also dropped anything with fake review spikes around Vardavar or New Year's week. What's left are places we'd actually send a friend.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Armenia: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Spring (April-May)
April is Genocide Remembrance season. April 24th brings large diaspora crowds to Yerevan, and Kentron hotels near Tsitsernakaberd Hill spike 30-40%. Book Tufenkian or Hotel Ararat at least 6 weeks ahead for that specific week. By May the rush fades, apricot trees bloom across the Ararat Plain, and temperatures are perfect for walking between Garni and Geghard.
Summer (June-August)
Yerevan in July is hot, around 34-36°C most afternoons, and Kentron's black basalt sidewalks radiate heat well into the evening. Vardavar water festival in mid-July draws huge crowds and pushes hotel rates to their annual ceiling. Dilijan and the Lori Province are significantly cooler at altitude, and Mikaelyan Hotel makes a strong case for skipping the capital heat entirely.
Autumn (September-October)
This is the best season in Armenia, and we'll stand by that. Grape harvest in Vayots Dzor happens in September, the Areni Wine Festival draws visitors to the cave-village near Noravank, and temperatures finally drop to something comfortable. Hotel prices in Yerevan come down 20-30% from August peaks, and Goris and Dilijan are at their most beautiful with fall foliage.
Winter (November-March)
Yerevan winters are cold and grey, but the city doesn't shut down. Republic Square gets a Christmas market in December, and New Year's Eve is a major local event with hotels on Abovyan Street filling up fast. January and February are rock-bottom for hotel prices, with even The Alexander occasionally offering rates under $200/night. Tsaghkadzor ski resort, 1.5 hours from Yerevan, adds a reason to visit in January-February.
How to Book Hotels in Armenia
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Use GG, not street taxis
The GG ride-hailing app is the standard in Yerevan. A ride from Kentron to Zvartnots Airport runs 2,500-3,500 AMD, compared to the 5,000-8,000 AMD a street taxi outside your hotel will quote. Download it before you land and you'll never get overcharged.
Book April 24th week months ahead
Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24th brings thousands of diaspora visitors to Yerevan for ceremonies at Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Hill. Every decent hotel in Kentron fills up 6-8 weeks out, and prices jump 40-60% above normal. If you're not specifically here for the commemorations, that week is worth avoiding entirely.
Carry AMD for smaller towns
Card payments work fine in Yerevan's hotels and most restaurants on Saryan or Tumanyan Street. Outside the capital, especially in Goris, Gyumri Old Town, and small guesthouses near Dilijan, cash is still king. Exchange at Yerevan's Nor Nork or Kentron exchange bureaus. rates are 5-8% better than at Zvartnots Airport.
Upgrade your room for the Ararat view
Several Kentron hotels offer rooms with a Mount Ararat view, but only on specific upper floors facing southwest. At Hotel Ararat on Abovyan Street, it's worth asking for an upper-floor southwest-facing room when booking. The mountain is visible roughly 60-70% of mornings before haze builds after 10am, and it's one of those views that genuinely stops you cold.
Hire a driver for Tatev and Noravank
Public transport to Tatev Monastery in Syunik doesn't connect well. A private driver from Goris's Old Mill Hotel to the Wings of Tatev ropeway runs $15-25 round trip, and the ropeway itself costs about 7,000 AMD return. Doing it as a day trip from Yerevan is a 7-hour commitment. much better to overnight in Goris and treat it properly.
Check if your hotel includes breakfast before ordering
Most mid-range and luxury Armenian hotels include breakfast, but it's not always flagged clearly at booking. Tufenkian, Hotel Ararat, and Mikaelyan all include it at standard rates. The difference between an included Armenian breakfast. fresh lavash, matsun, white cheese, honey, herbs. and paying 3,500-5,000 AMD per person separately is worth a quick confirmation email before arrival.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Armenia
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Armenia.
What's the best area to stay in Yerevan?
Kentron is the answer, full stop. You're within 10 minutes' walk of Republic Square, the Cascade, and Northern Avenue, which is where you'll actually spend your evenings. Staying outside Kentron saves you maybe $15/night but costs you an extra 30 minutes of taxi rides every day. Not worth it.
How much does a good hotel in Armenia cost per night?
You can stay well from $45-75/night at places like Envoy Hostel in Kentron, where you're not sacrificing location. Mid-range runs $110-210/night and covers solid hotels like Tufenkian Historic or Old Mill Hotel in Goris. Luxury in Yerevan at The Alexander hits $320-520/night, and it genuinely earns it.
When is the best time to visit Armenia?
May and September are the sweet spots. Temperatures sit around 18-24°C, the apricot harvest starts in late June, and hotel prices haven't spiked yet. Avoid the last week of September during Yerevan's brandy festival week around the AGBU area, when Kentron hotels jump 30-40% overnight.
Is it safe to visit Armenia as a solo traveler?
Very safe, honestly. Yerevan's Kentron district is walkable at night, and solo travelers rarely report issues on the streets around Abovyan or Sayat-Nova Avenue. The main thing to watch: taxis without meters around Yerevan Central Bus Station will quote tourist prices. Use the GG app instead. you'll pay 600-900 AMD for most in-city rides.
Do I need a visa to visit Armenia?
Citizens of over 60 countries, including the US, EU nations, and Russia, get visa-free entry for 90-180 days. Everyone else can grab an e-visa at evisa.mfa.am for around $6. Check the official Ministry of Foreign Affairs site before you book, because the list updates regularly.
What's the cheapest way to get from Yerevan to Dilijan?
A shared marshrutka from Yerevan's Kilikia bus station to Dilijan costs around 1,500-2,000 AMD and takes about 1.5 hours. Private taxis run 8,000-12,000 AMD and make sense if you're 3-4 people splitting the fare. The marshrutka drops you near Dilijan's central Mkhitar Gosh Street, a 5-minute walk from most hotels.
Are hotels in Gyumri worth visiting?
Gyumri gets overlooked, and that's exactly why it's interesting. Hotel Ani in the Old Town sits near the Kumayri Historic District, a 10-minute walk from the Black Fortress. Prices are $60-90/night and you're getting a genuinely local experience, not a tourist corridor.
What currency do hotels in Armenia use?
The Armenian Dram (AMD) is the local currency, but most mid-range and luxury hotels quote prices in USD. In 2025, the exchange rate hovers around 385-400 AMD per dollar. Pay in AMD where possible. you'll often get a better effective rate than paying by card in dollars.
Which Armenian hotels are best for families with kids?
Parakar Hotel near Etchmiadzin Cathedral in Vagharshapat is our top family pick. It's 5 minutes' drive from the UNESCO-listed Cathedral complex and has the space and facilities that cramped Kentron hotels just don't offer. Rates run $150-220/night, which is reasonable for a family room with the included breakfast.
Is there a metro or public transport in Yerevan?
Yerevan has a single metro line with 10 stations, running from Davitashen in the west to Charbakh in the east. A single ride costs 100 AMD. The Yeritasardakan station puts you right in Kentron, 7 minutes' walk from Republic Square. For everything outside the center, GG taxis are cheap and reliable.
What areas of Yerevan should I avoid when booking a hotel?
Skip anything advertised near Yerevan's Sasuntsi Davit metro station or along Tigran Mets Avenue close to the train station. That stretch is noisy, grittier than the photos suggest, and 25-35 minutes' walk from the places you actually want to be. You'll pay $20/night less and spend $15/day more on taxis.
Can I visit Khor Virap and Noravank as day trips from Yerevan?
Easily. Khor Virap Monastery is 45-50 minutes south of Kentron by car, with Ararat looming right behind it on clear days. Noravank in Vayots Dzor takes about 2 hours each way, so leave by 9am. Most Yerevan hotels can arrange a driver for $40-70 for the full day, which beats any tour bus option.
Useful links for Armenia
Government & official sources only. No booking sites, no ads.
Ready to book Armenia?
We vetted the best — but there are thousands more. Browse the full selection and filter by dates, price, and neighborhood.
Browse all Armenia hotels