The Ultimate Georgia Wine Travelers Guide   Recently updated!


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WINE TRAVELLERS GUIDE

THE ULTIMATE TRAVEL GUIDE

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Georgia Wine Traveller’s Guide

Georgia Wine Traveller’s Guide

8,000 years of winemaking. 525 native grapes. Royal palaces, mountain tunnels, harvest feasts that last till dawn. Every winery includes GPS, transport, prices, fun facts and top tips. Ready for your next trip.

1. Intro & Pro Tips

Georgia isn’t just the birthplace of wine—it’s the soul of winemaking. Eight millennia ago, Neolithic farmers buried clay qvevris here and accidentally invented amber wine.

Today, 525 indigenous grapes thrive in Kakheti’s sun-drenched valleys, producing bold Saperavi reds and skin-fermented whites that taste like liquid history.

From Tbilisi’s secret cellars to family maranis where grandmothers still tread grapes barefoot, every glass is a toast to resilience.

This guide distills 50+ trips into ten perfect experiences. Whether you have one day or one week, you’ll drink 8,000 years in every sip. Gaumarjos!

Georgia has more native grape varieties than France, Italy & Spain combined – 525 and counting!
Bring an empty 5 L plastic bottle – every babushka will fill it with 10-year garage Saperavi for 40 GEL.
2. About Georgian Wine

In 5980 BC, Georgians fermented grapes in buried qvevris—6,000 years before France existed. UNESCO protects this zero-additive method.

White grapes macerate with skins for months, creating amber wines bursting with apricot, walnut, and tannin. Georgia guards 525 native varieties—more than the rest of Europe combined.

Kakheti alone produces 70 % of the nation’s wine, from bone-dry Rkatsiteli to honeyed Kindzmarauli. Wine isn’t a drink here; it’s religion.

Supras last twelve hours with endless toasts led by a tamada. Monasteries still press grapes underfoot, and every family keeps a marani. Taste Georgia once, and every other wine feels young.

The English word “wine” comes from Georgian “ghvino” – linguists agree Georgia invented both the drink and the name.
Never refill your own glass at supra – it’s the ultimate faux pas. Wait for the tamada!
3. Tsinandali Estate

Step into 1835 at Tsinandali, where poet-prince Alexander Chavchavadze built Georgia’s first bottled-wine estate.

Italianate palace, English maze garden covering 18 hectares, and a cellar hiding an 1814 Bordeaux survive untouched.

The love tunnel of 200-year-old wisteria remains Kakheti’s favorite proposal spot. Radisson’s infinity pool now overlooks the same Alazani Valley that inspired Lermontov.

Taste the iconic Tsinandali blend—crisp Rkatsiteli kissed by Mtsvane—while peacocks roam. One visit and you’ll understand why Russian tsars begged for crates.

Location: Tsinandali village, Telavi municipality, Kakheti
GPS: 41.8955° N, 45.5701° E
Distance from Tbilisi: 90 km (1.5 hrs)
Transport: GoTrip.ge private driver 180–250 GEL round trip • Marshrutka to Telavi + taxi 25 GEL
Tsinandali beat Bordeaux in blind tasting at 1900 Paris Expo!
Book high tea on the veranda (120 GEL pp) – best view in Kakheti at golden hour.
4. Pheasant’s Tears

In Sighnaghi’s cobbled lanes, American painter John Wurdeman and Georgian winemaker Gela Patalishvili resurrected 400 forgotten qvevris.

Pheasant’s Tears is zero-sulfite, zero-filtration prayer to Georgia’s past. Taste 50-year-old Chinuri that bites like lightning.

Saturday supras stretch till dawn: twelve courses, polyphonic songs, tamada toasts that make grown men weep.

Their tavern feels like stepping into a 19th-century painting—wooden balconies, clay cups, stories thicker than the wine.

Location: Sighnaghi old town, Kakheti
GPS: 41.6186° N, 45.9215° E
Distance from Tbilisi: 110 km (2 hrs)
Transport: GoTrip 250 GEL • Bolt taxi + marshrutka 40 GEL
Name comes from legend: only sweetest grapes make pheasants cry tears of joy.
Ask for “library wines” – 10-year-old amber masterpieces not on the menu.
5. Shumi Winery

Shumi isn’t a winery—it’s Noah’s Ark for Georgian grapes. 247 of the country’s 525 varieties grow here.

A qvevri-shaped museum guards 3,000 artifacts, including 8,000-year-old seeds.

Taste Buera, a grape so rare only twelve bottles exist annually—500 GEL each, worth every lari.

Golden hour turns the valley into liquid amber. Shumi proves Georgia safeguards humanity’s vinous DNA.

Location: Tsinandali village (2 km from estate), Kakheti
GPS: 41.8970° N, 45.5850° E
Distance from Tbilisi: 92 km (1.5 hrs)
Transport: Same driver as Tsinandali (combo tour 280 GEL)
Shumi grows Buera – extinct everywhere else on Earth.
Visit vine library at 4 PM – golden hour photos are Instagram legend.
6. Château Mukhrani

Just 25 km from Tbilisi stands Georgia’s Versailles. Built in 1878, this French-style château supplied tsars.

Horse-drawn carriages rattle past 150-year-old cellars where Goruli Mtsvane sleeps in oak.

Saturday chacha masterclasses let you distill your own firewater under crystal chandeliers.

One visit feels like crashing a Romanov dinner party that never ended. European elegance, Caucasian heart.

Location: Mukhrani village, Mtskheta-Mtianeti
GPS: 41.9365° N, 44.5872° E
Distance from Tbilisi: 25 km (35 min)
Transport: Bolt taxi 35 GEL • GoTrip 120 GEL round trip
Supplied wine to Nicholas II’s coronation.
Saturday chacha masterclass – distill your own bottle to take home!
7. Khareba Tunnels

In 1952, Soviets carved 7.7 km of tunnels into the Caucasus to hide wine from nuclear winter.

Today, Khareba’s mountain cathedral stores 25,000 bottles at perfect 12 °C.

Golf carts glide past walls dripping with 1975 Kindzmarauli—1,000 GEL per bottle, liquid velvet.

Visitors emerge blinking into sunlight, cheeks flushed, carrying bottles older than their grandparents.

Location: Kvareli, Kakheti
GPS: 41.9780° N, 45.8110° E
Distance from Tbilisi: 140 km (2.5 hrs)
Transport: GoTrip 300 GEL • Marshrutka to Kvareli 15 GEL + taxi
Tunnels were “strategic resource” to survive nuclear war.
Visit at 10 AM – tunnels empty, perfect dramatic photos.
8. Perfect 1-Day Wine Escape

Dawn in Tbilisi. By 9 AM you’re sipping royal reserve at Château Mukhrani, horses clopping past 1878 cellars.

Noon brings Barbarestan’s Saperavi-paired khinkali. Afternoon: Azarphesha’s underground lair—50 qvevris, pure amber alchemy.

Sunset at g.Vino rooftop watching Old Tbilisi glow crimson. Dinner at 8000 Vintages: 12 courses, 12 wines, polyphonic singers.

Midnight supra spills into Fabrika courtyard. By sunrise you’ve lived 8,000 years in 24 hours, heart permanently Georgian.

Base: Tbilisi
Transport: GoTrip private driver 180 GEL full day (recommended) • Bolt taxi between venues 50 GEL total
Tbilisi has more qvevris per square km than anywhere else on Earth.
Book GoTrip driver night before – zero stress, zero DUI.

Day 1 – Royal & Rebel Tbilisi

08:30 GoTrip pickup
09:30 Château Mukhrani royal tasting + chacha class
12:30 Barbarestan Saperavi lunch
15:00 Azarphesha underground
18:00 g.Vino rooftop sunset
20:00 8000 Vintages 12-course supra
23:00 Fabrika courtyard dancing

Total ~450 GEL pp (all inclusive)
9. Epic 3-Day Kakheti Immersion

Day 1: Tsinandali’s palace at golden hour, infinity pool sunset over Caucasus.

Day 2: Sighnaghi’s city of love—Pheasant’s Tears supra till dawn, 12 courses, songs that break hearts open.

Day 3: Khareba’s mountain tunnels—7.7 km of Soviet secrets, 1975 Kindzmarauli tasted by candlelight.

Three days, three centuries compressed into memory. You leave with 12 bottles, 50 new friends, and a “Gaumarjos” tattoo.

Base: Tsinandali → Sighnaghi → Kvareli
Transport: GoTrip private driver 250 GEL/day (750 GEL total)
Rtveli harvest (Sep 15–Oct 20) = free wine everywhere – just show up and help!
Stay at Radisson Tsinandali – infinity pool facing Caucasus is life-changing.

Day 1 – Royal Tsinandali

09:00 Depart Tbilisi
11:00 Palace tour + tasting
18:00 Infinity pool sunset
20:00 Alaverdi dinner

Stay: Radisson (350 GEL)

Day 2 – Sighnaghi Supra

11:00 Pheasant’s Tears qvevri
19:00 Legendary supra
23:00 Polyphonic till dawn

Book 3 months ahead!

Day 3 – Tunnels & Saints

08:00 Khareba tunnels
13:00 Babushka lunch
15:00 Bodbe Monastery
19:00 Back Tbilisi

Total ~1,200 GEL pp
10. Ultimate 5-Day Wine Odyssey

Days 1–2: Tbilisi’s underground empire—Vino Underground, Azarphesha after midnight.

Day 3: Mukhrani’s royal carriage ride, chacha distillation in tsarist cellars.

Day 4: Kakheti conquest—Tsinandali roses, Pheasant’s Tears harvest feast where you tread Saperavi barefoot.

Day 5: Khareba tunnels at dawn, Alaverdi monks pressing grapes under 11th-century frescoes. You board the plane clutching 15 liters of garage amber.

Route: Tbilisi → Mukhrani → Tsinandali → Sighnaghi → Kvareli → Alaverdi → Tbilisi
Transport: GoTrip private driver 250 GEL/day × 5 = 1,250 GEL total
Alaverdoba festival (Sep 14) = 100,000 pilgrims + free wine river for 3 days.
Join Rtveli harvest for free at any family winery – just smile and say “me vindzar!”

Day 1 – Tbilisi Underground

14:00 Vino Underground
20:00 Azarphesha supra
02:00 Fabrika

Day 2 – Royal Mukhrani

09:00 Carriage tour
11:00 Chacha class
17:00 g.Vino

Day 3 – Tsinandali Roses

11:00 Palace + roses
15:00 Shumi library

Day 4 – Harvest Feast

10:00 Barefoot treading
14:00 12-course supra

Day 5 – Farewell

07:00 Khareba sunrise
10:00 Alaverdi monks
13:00 Telavi bazaar

Total ~2,800 GEL pp