The best hotels in Kutaisi
Kutaisi has 8,000+ places to stay, and most of them aren't worth your time or money. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Kutaisi
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Hotel Bagrati
Bagrati Cathedral District, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kutaisi Marriott Hotel
City Center, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Distinguished Kutaisi
Rustaveli Street, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Rioni River Hotel
Rioni Embankment, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel David Agmashenebeli
Central Kutaisi, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Colchi Boutique Hotel
City Center, Kutaisi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa
Spa District, Tskaltubo
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 | Hostel Kutaisi Inn | Old Town, Kutaisi | $45–70/night | 7.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Hotel Bagrati | Bagrati Cathedral District, Kutaisi | $65–95/night | 8.1/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Kutaisi Marriott Hotel | City Center, Kutaisi | $110–180/night | 8.6/10 | Most Popular |
| 4 | Hotel Distinguished Kutaisi | Rustaveli Street, Kutaisi | $120–175/night | 8.9/10 | Top Rated |
| 5 | Hotel Gelati | East Kutaisi, Kutaisi | $130–190/night | 8.4/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Rioni River Hotel | Rioni Embankment, Kutaisi | $145–200/night | 8.7/10 | Best Location |
| 7 | Hotel David Agmashenebeli | Central Kutaisi, Kutaisi | $160–210/night | 8.5/10 | Business Pick |
| 8 | Art Hotel Kutaisi | Old Town, Kutaisi | $185–240/night | 9/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 9 | Colchi Boutique Hotel | City Center, Kutaisi | $260–340/night | 9.2/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa | Spa District, Tskaltubo | $310–450/night | 9.3/10 | Top Rated |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Hostel Kutaisi Inn
This small guesthouse sits on Giorgi Dadiani Street, a short walk from the Colchi Fountain in the city center. Rooms are basic but clean, with good natural light and decent Wi-Fi. The shared common area is a good spot to meet other travelers passing through western Georgia. Staff are genuinely helpful with directions to Gelati Monastery and Prometheus Cave. It does the job well for the price and nothing more.
Check Availability
Hotel Bagrati
The hotel is positioned directly below Bagrati Cathedral hill, giving upper-floor rooms a clear view of the UNESCO-listed church. Rooms are simple and tidy, with older furnishings that are well maintained. Breakfast is included and features local Georgian staples like churchkhela and fresh bread. The location puts you close to the Rioni River embankment for evening walks. For the price, this is one of the more practical bases in Kutaisi.
Check Availability
Kutaisi Marriott Hotel
The Marriott sits on the main boulevard near Kutaisi's central square, giving guests easy access to the city's restaurants and transport links. Rooms are well-sized with reliable air conditioning and firm beds, meeting the brand's usual standard. The on-site restaurant serves both Georgian and international food, and the quality is consistent. Business travelers appreciate the meeting facilities and stable internet throughout the building. A safe and comfortable choice that removes uncertainty from your stay.
Check Availability
Hotel Distinguished Kutaisi
Located on Rustaveli Street, this boutique property has become a consistent favorite among travelers to Kutaisi for its attentive service and well-designed rooms. The building has a restored early Soviet-era facade with modern interiors that blend Georgian motifs with contemporary furniture. Breakfast here is generous and cooked to order, which sets a good tone for day trips to nearby monasteries. Staff will arrange private transfers to Prometheus Cave and Okatse Canyon without any fuss. One of the better mid-range options in the city right now.
Check Availability
Hotel Gelati
Hotel Gelati sits on the eastern edge of the city, closer to the road leading up to Gelati Monastery, which makes it a good pick for those focused on the historic sites rather than downtown dining. The rooms are spacious compared to other properties in this price range, and the garden terrace is a genuine highlight in summer. Wi-Fi is fast and consistent throughout the property. The restaurant does excellent khinkali and is often filled with locals, which is always a good sign. It feels quieter and more relaxed than the central hotels.
Check Availability
Rioni River Hotel
This hotel sits right on the Rioni River embankment, and the riverside rooms offer a genuinely pleasant view, especially in the evening when the bridges are lit. The interior design leans toward modern Georgian, with stone accents and warm wood finishes throughout. Rooms are well-insulated from street noise despite the central position. The bar on the ground floor is popular with both guests and locals, creating a lively atmosphere most nights. Walking distance to the Green Bazaar market makes mornings here very easy.
Check Availability
Hotel David Agmashenebeli
Named after the Georgian king credited with building Gelati Monastery, this mid-sized hotel takes its branding seriously and carries Georgian historical themes through its decor without being overdone. The conference room and business center make it a practical option for corporate travelers coming through western Georgia. Beds are comfortable and the blackout curtains actually work. The included breakfast buffet is one of the more comprehensive in the city, with hot and cold options. It lacks the character of smaller boutique properties but compensates with reliability.
Check Availability
Art Hotel Kutaisi
Art Hotel Kutaisi occupies a restored merchant-era building in the Old Town, steps from the covered market and within walking range of the theatre on Rustaveli Street. Each room has a distinct design with original artwork commissioned from Georgian artists, and the attention to detail is obvious throughout. The courtyard is small but well kept, with seating that is genuinely peaceful in the mornings. Couples seem to gravitate here and the staff adjust their service accordingly without any awkwardness. It is the most atmospheric property in this price tier in Kutaisi.
Check Availability
Colchi Boutique Hotel
The Colchi is the most polished hotel in Kutaisi, with a rooftop terrace that overlooks the Colchi Fountain square and the surrounding city. Rooms are large, with high ceilings, premium linens, and marble bathrooms that feel genuinely luxurious rather than aspirational. The restaurant on the ground floor sources ingredients from western Georgia specifically, and the wine list covers the full breadth of Georgian appellations. Service is unhurried and the concierge team handles day-trip logistics without charging a premium. For travelers who want comfort as a baseline, not an upgrade, this is the only real option in Kutaisi.
Check Availability
Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa
Located in Tskaltubo, a short 10-minute drive from central Kutaisi, this resort takes full advantage of the town's famous radon and carbonate mineral spring baths that made the area a Soviet-era spa destination. The property has been comprehensively renovated and the spa facilities are among the best in the Imereti region, offering traditional Georgian treatments alongside standard European options. Suites are large with private balconies overlooking landscaped gardens and the forested hills beyond. Prometheus Cave is literally 15 minutes by car, making day trips effortless. A destination in itself as much as a base for exploring the region.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Kutaisi
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Old Town vs City Center: Which should you book?
The Old Town around Davit Aghmashenebeli Square puts you within walking distance of the White Bridge, the Colchis Fountain, and the best chacha bars on the side streets off Rustaveli. It's atmospheric, a little rough around the edges, and genuinely enjoyable to navigate on foot.
City Center is smoother, more modern, and better for business travelers or anyone who wants consistent service. You'll pay a premium. mid-range rooms on Rustaveli Street run $110-175/night versus $65-95 in the Bagrati Cathedral District. Both work. It just depends whether you want character or convenience.
The honest truth about Bagrati Cathedral District hotels
A lot of hotels in this district advertise 'cathedral views' and deliver a glimpse of the dome if you crane your neck from the stairwell. The actual walk up Bagrati Hill is steep. plan for 15-20 minutes on foot from Mtsvane Kvavila Street at the base.
Hotel Bagrati is the honest option here. It doesn't oversell the view, the rates are fair at $65-95/night, and you're genuinely close to both the cathedral and the Green Bazaar. We've seen overpriced guesthouses in this district charge City Center rates for rooms that need a serious renovation.
Getting around Kutaisi without a car
Marshrutkas (shared minibuses) cover most of the city for 0.50-1 GEL per ride. Taxis via the Bolt app are reliable and cheap. a cross-city ride rarely costs more than 8-12 GEL ($3-5). From the Rioni Embankment to Bagrati Cathedral is about 20 minutes on foot or 5 minutes by taxi.
If you're based in East Kutaisi near Hotel Gelati, factor in an extra 15-20 minutes to reach the Old Town. It's not a dealbreaker, but don't book there expecting to walk everywhere. For Tskaltubo, you'll want a taxi or rental car. it's 18 km from City Center and marshrutkas only run a few times daily.
Spa hotels and Tskaltubo: what you need to know
Tskaltubo was a Soviet-era spa destination, and some of that infrastructure is genuinely impressive. the radon and carbonate mineral baths still draw wellness tourists from across Georgia and beyond. Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa is the best modern option, sitting right in the Spa District, 3 km from Prometheus Cave.
Don't expect a Bali-style wellness retreat. This is Eastern European spa culture: mineral pools, therapeutic treatments, and serious hydrotherapy. At $310-450/night, Prometheus Resort delivers genuine luxury within that context. But if you're after yoga retreats and açaí bowls, you're in the wrong city.
Where to eat near your hotel in Kutaisi
The best Georgian food in Kutaisi isn't in your hotel. It's at the small family restaurants tucked behind Rustaveli Street and around the Green Bazaar on Tsereteli Street. Khinkali (dumplings) from a local spot near the bazaar costs 0.60-0.80 GEL each. You'll spend 15-20 GEL for a proper meal with wine.
Most mid-range hotels on Rustaveli Street are within 10 minutes walk of at least 5 solid local restaurants. The Rioni Embankment area has a few newer spots with river views, though prices there run 20-30% higher than backstreet equivalents. Skip any restaurant attached to a budget hotel near the bus station. they're almost universally mediocre.
Booking timing and seasonal prices in Kutaisi
Book 3-4 weeks ahead for May and September, and 6-8 weeks ahead if you're visiting during the Kutaisi Jazz and Blues Festival in summer or around Orthodox Easter (dates vary, typically April). Those windows push hotel availability down fast, especially at Art Hotel Kutaisi and Rioni River Hotel.
Winter (December-February) is genuinely quiet. Temperatures drop to 2-8°C, and you'll find $45-70/night rooms at properties that charge double in peak season. The downside: Gelati Monastery gets muddy and some smaller guesthouses close. January is the real bargain month if you don't mind a quiet, slightly grey Kutaisi.
Kutaisi's best neighborhoods
Start your search in the Old Town or along Rustaveli Street. walkable, full of character, and close to everything that matters. If you want the river view and don't mind paying for it, the Rioni Embankment is the one area worth the upgrade.
Old Town & Rustaveli Street 3 vetted hotels Walkable, characterful, and the best base for first-timers.
Walkable, characterful, and the best base for first-timers.
This is where Kutaisi actually feels like itself. Rustaveli Street connects the Colchis Fountain on Davit Aghmashenebeli Square westward through the old commercial core, lined with balconied houses, wine shops, and cafes that don't close before midnight. You're 10-12 minutes walk from the Rioni River and 20 minutes from Bagrati Hill.
Hostel Kutaisi Inn keeps it affordable at $45-70/night and is a solid budget pick in the heart of the Old Town. Art Hotel Kutaisi at the other end of the spectrum runs $185-240/night and earns its 9.0 rating. it's the best option in this part of the city for couples who want character without roughing it.
Avoid booking anything marketed as 'Old Town' that sits north of the Rioni River. That's a different neighborhood, heavier on traffic and light on charm. The real Old Town action is south of the White Bridge, between Davit Aghmashenebeli Square and the base of Bagrati Hill.
City Center & Bagrati Cathedral District 3 vetted hotels Modern, convenient, and the right choice if you want reliable service.
Modern, convenient, and the right choice if you want reliable service.
City Center around the Kutaisi Marriott sits at the functional heart of the modern city. transit connections are easy, restaurants are nearby on Tsereteli Street, and the Green Bazaar is 10 minutes walk. This is where business travelers land and where tourists who've done their research end up.
Hotel Bagrati in the Cathedral District gives you proximity to the main UNESCO site at a fair $65-95/night. but know that the cathedral itself is a 15-minute uphill walk from Mtsvane Kvavila Street. The Kutaisi Marriott ($110-180/night) is the most consistently reliable mid-range option in the city. Both deliver what they advertise.
Hotel Distinguished Kutaisi on Rustaveli Street edges into this region and sits at the top of the mid-range bracket at $120-175/night. It's the highest-rated non-luxury hotel in Kutaisi at 8.9. If you want the best mid-range experience in the city, this is it.
Rioni Embankment & Central Kutaisi 2 vetted hotels The river view is real here. and worth paying for.
The river view is real here. and worth paying for.
The Rioni Embankment is Kutaisi's most scenic stretch, running along the south bank of the river with views toward the White Bridge and the wooded hills beyond. It's a 15-minute walk west to the Old Town and 20 minutes east to the Kutaisi Drama Theatre. Evenings here are genuinely lovely.
Rioni River Hotel ($145-200/night, 8.7 rating) earns its Best Location badge. The views are legitimately good, service is consistent, and you're close enough to the city center without being in the middle of the noise. Hotel David Agmashenebeli ($160-210/night) in Central Kutaisi is the pick for business travelers who want more space and meeting facilities.
This stretch gets livelier in summer when locals use the embankment promenade daily. Prices at Rioni River Hotel creep up 15-20% in July-August. Book the river-facing rooms specifically. the courtyard-facing rooms don't justify the rate.
East Kutaisi & Tskaltubo 2 vetted hotels Further out, but the right choice for spa stays and monastery visits.
Further out, but the right choice for spa stays and monastery visits.
East Kutaisi sits closer to Kutaisi International Airport and is a practical base for Gelati Monastery (15 minutes drive) and Sataplia Nature Reserve (20 minutes drive). It's not the most walkable part of the city, but Hotel Gelati at $130-190/night fills a real gap for travelers who want comfort without the city center crowds.
Tskaltubo, 18 km northwest of central Kutaisi, is its own destination built around Soviet-era mineral spa baths. Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa ($310-450/night) is the city's highest-rated property at 9.3 and the only option if you want genuine resort-level spa facilities near Prometheus Cave. Don't combine this with a tight city itinerary. the logistics don't quite work.
Tskaltubo gets busy in summer with Georgian domestic spa tourists. The radon mineral baths at the old Soviet-era spa halls are open to non-guests for around 20-30 GEL per session. It's a strange, fascinating place to spend a morning even if you're not staying there.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Kutaisi.
Romantic Stay
Art Hotel Kutaisi in the Old Town is the standout for couples. $185-240/night, 9.0 rating, and the kind of atmospheric interiors you'll actually want to spend time in. The backstreets off Rustaveli Street are perfect for evening walks.
Culture & History
Base yourself in the Bagrati Cathedral District for the UNESCO heavyweight sites: Bagrati Cathedral uphill and Gelati Monastery 20 minutes east. Hotel Bagrati at $65-95/night keeps costs down without sacrificing location.
Family Travel
City Center hotels like the Kutaisi Marriott ($110-180/night) give families reliable service, space, and easy access to Sataplia Nature Reserve. the dinosaur footprint trail is 20 minutes drive from Tsereteli Street.
Budget Travel
Hostel Kutaisi Inn in the Old Town starts at $45/night and puts you within 10 minutes walk of the Green Bazaar and the White Bridge. It's the most honest budget option in the city.
Spa & Wellness
Tskaltubo's Spa District is the only real answer here: Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa at $310-450/night delivers mineral pool therapy and spa facilities that genuinely justify the rate.
Foodie Stay
Stay near Rustaveli Street or Tsereteli Street in City Center. you're within 5 minutes walk of the Green Bazaar and the best churchkhela, mtsvadi, and megrelian khachapuri spots in western Georgia.
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.
When to Visit Kutaisi
When to visit Kutaisi and what to pay.
Spring (March-May)
April and May are when Kutaisi looks its best: the hills around Gelati Monastery are green, temperatures are 10-22°C, and hotel prices haven't hit summer peaks yet. Orthodox Easter (typically April) brings a spike in local tourism, so book Rustaveli Street hotels 4-5 weeks ahead. Mid-range rooms in City Center run $110-160/night through May.
Summer (June-August)
July and August push temperatures to 30-35°C and fill the city with domestic Georgian tourists on holiday. The Kutaisi Jazz and Blues Festival in summer is genuinely worth attending, but it tightens hotel availability citywide for a full week. Expect to pay 20-30% above shoulder-season rates across all categories during festival dates.
Autumn (September-November)
September is arguably the best month in Kutaisi. Temperatures drop to a comfortable 18-24°C, the grape harvest season adds a festive feel around the Green Bazaar, and hotel rates settle back to $60-175/night depending on category. October gets quieter and cooler (10-15°C) but the hiking around Sataplia Nature Reserve is excellent.
Winter (December-February)
Winter is quiet, cheap, and a little grey. Budget rooms in the Old Town drop to $45-55/night, and even mid-range City Center hotels sit at $90-120/night. Bagrati Cathedral and Gelati Monastery are genuinely atmospheric with no crowds, but Tskaltubo's spa facilities are at full operation. locals come specifically in winter for the therapeutic baths.
Booking Tips for Kutaisi
Insider tips for booking hotels in Kutaisi.
Don't book 'near Bagrati Cathedral' without checking the walk
A lot of hotels in the Bagrati Cathedral District list the cathedral as a 5-minute walk. That's technically true from the base of the hill on Mtsvane Kvavila Street. The actual walk to the cathedral entrance is 15-20 minutes on a steep incline. If you have mobility concerns, stay in City Center and take a 5-GEL taxi up instead.
Use Bolt for taxis. don't hail from the street
The Bolt app works reliably in Kutaisi and keeps prices fixed. Hailing taxis near the airport or the Central Bus Station on Gelati Street without the app can cost 2-3x more. A standard in-city ride should be 5-12 GEL ($2-5). Airport to City Center runs 30-40 GEL ($11-15) on Bolt.
Book Rioni River Hotel river-view rooms specifically
Rioni River Hotel has courtyard-facing rooms that cost nearly the same as river-facing ones. The whole point of staying here is the embankment view toward the White Bridge. When booking, specifically request a river-view room. or email the hotel directly before arrival. At $145-200/night, you're paying for that view.
Prometheus Cave books out fast in summer
If you're staying at Prometheus Luxury Resort or Hotel Gelati specifically to visit Prometheus Cave, book your cave tour tickets at least 1-2 weeks ahead in July-August. Entry is around 23 GEL ($8) per person for the standard route. The cave is 3 km from Tskaltubo's Spa District and 25 km from Kutaisi City Center.
Georgian breakfast starts early. know the hotel's timing
Most Kutaisi hotels serve breakfast from 8:00-10:00. If you're catching an early marshrutka to Tbilisi from the bus station on Gelati Street (departures from 7:00), confirm whether your hotel can accommodate breakfast before departure or pack supplies from the Green Bazaar the night before.
Mid-week rates drop noticeably at luxury hotels
Colchi Boutique Hotel and Prometheus Luxury Resort both see rate drops of 10-20% on Tuesday-Thursday nights compared to weekends. If your itinerary is flexible, shifting your stay to midweek at these properties can save $30-80/night. This applies less to budget and mid-range hotels, where pricing is more static.
Hotels in Kutaisi — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Kutaisi.
What's the best area to stay in Kutaisi?
The Old Town and Rustaveli Street are your best bets. You're within 10-15 minutes walk of Bagrati Cathedral, the Green Bazaar, and the Colchis Fountain on Davit Aghmashenebeli Square. The Rioni Embankment is worth it if you want a proper river view and don't mind paying $145-200/night for it.
How much do hotels in Kutaisi cost?
Budget hostels in the Old Town run $45-70/night. Mid-range hotels on Rustaveli Street or in City Center sit at $110-175/night. Luxury options like Colchi Boutique in City Center or Prometheus Resort in Tskaltubo push $260-450/night. You get a wider range here than most Georgian cities.
Is Kutaisi worth visiting beyond just Bagrati Cathedral?
Yes, easily. Gelati Monastery alone is a 20-minute drive east and one of the finest medieval sites in the Caucasus. Add Sataplia Nature Reserve with its dinosaur footprints, the Prometheus Cave near Tskaltubo, and a morning at the Green Bazaar on Tsereteli Street. that's a solid 3-day itinerary without repeating yourself.
Which hotels are closest to Kutaisi International Airport?
The airport is about 18 km east of the city center, and most hotels are 25-35 minutes by taxi. A standard taxi from the airport to Rustaveli Street costs around 30-40 GEL ($11-15). Hotels in East Kutaisi, like Hotel Gelati, shave 5-8 minutes off that ride.
When is the best time to visit Kutaisi?
May and September are the sweet spots. Temperatures are 18-24°C, crowds are manageable, and hotel prices haven't hit summer peak rates. July-August gets hot (30-35°C) and busy with domestic Georgian tourists, which pushes mid-range rates up by 20-30%.
Are there good luxury hotels in Kutaisi?
Colchi Boutique Hotel on City Center is the top pick in the city itself, at $260-340/night and a 9.2 rating. If you want a full resort experience, Prometheus Luxury Resort and Spa in Tskaltubo's Spa District runs $310-450/night and is genuinely worth the extra 20-minute drive from central Kutaisi.
What areas of Kutaisi should I avoid for hotels?
Skip the strip near Kutaisi Central Bus Station on Gelati Street. it's loud, gritty, and hotels there over-charge for what they deliver. The industrial stretch north of the Rioni River past Nikea Street looks cheap on maps but adds 25+ minutes to any sightseeing on foot.
Can I get to Gelati Monastery easily from central Kutaisi hotels?
From hotels on Rustaveli Street or City Center, it's a 20-minute drive or about 40 minutes by marshrutka (minibus). Taxis from the center cost 15-20 GEL ($6-8) one way. Hotel Gelati in East Kutaisi is the closest base, cutting your travel time to Gelati Monastery by roughly 10 minutes.
Is Tskaltubo worth staying in instead of Kutaisi?
Only if you're here specifically for the spa baths or Prometheus Cave, which is literally 3 km from the Tskaltubo Spa District. Otherwise, Kutaisi's Old Town and City Center give you better restaurants, more nightlife on Rustaveli Street, and easier access to Georgia's western regions.
Do Kutaisi hotels include breakfast?
Most mid-range and luxury hotels include breakfast, but budget guesthouses in the Old Town often charge extra. typically 10-15 GEL ($4-6) per person. Art Hotel Kutaisi and Rioni River Hotel both include full Georgian breakfasts. Always confirm before booking.
How do I get from Kutaisi to Tbilisi?
The fastest option is the train from Kutaisi Station on Tamar Mepe Street. it takes about 5 hours and costs 17-25 GEL ($6-9). Marshrutkas are faster at 3-3.5 hours and depart from the Central Bus Station on Gelati Street. Taxis take 2.5-3 hours and run $50-70 for the full car.
Are Kutaisi hotels safe?
Kutaisi is one of Georgia's safest cities. Street crime is low, and solo travelers do fine even late at night around Rustaveli Street and the Old Town. Standard precautions apply: keep your valuables secure near the Green Bazaar on Tsereteli Street, which gets crowded on weekend mornings.