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Armenia is one of the most underrated countries in the region to drive in — and one of the cheapest. EU, UK, US, Canadian, Australian and most other Latin-script passport holders enter visa-free for up to 180 days.

Where to rent a car in Armenia

Armenia is one of the most underrated countries in the region to drive in — and one of the cheapest. EU, UK, US, Canadian, Australian and most other Latin-script passport holders enter visa-free for up to 180 days. If your driving licence is in Latin script, no International Driving Permit is needed either. The road network has improved hugely in the last five years, and the country is small enough to see most of it on a single rental.

Prices on TakeCars start from $37 a day for a compact like a Ford Fiesta. SUVs and crossovers run $50–100, a Lada Niva $30–60, and a Ford Mustang convertible around $98. Two-week bookings get a 25–35% discount. Armenia sits well below Eurozone rental prices and is broadly comparable to Georgia.

"If you're booking a Lada Niva — and many road-trippers do, for Syunik or the Geghama mountains — book it early. Demand is high and supply is small."

Public transport doesn't really cover the country. Marshrutkas (shared minibuses) run on informal schedules and don't reach most of the famous monasteries — Tatev, Khor Virap, Noravank, Gegard, Garni — without a private car or an organised tour. A week-long rental tends to pay for itself by day three in saved time and avoided group-tour fees.

"Driving in Armenia is calm. Outside Yerevan traffic is relaxed, the roads to most attractions are paved and well-maintained, and you'll rarely need a 4×4 unless you specifically plan to visit the more remote mountain regions."

If you already have a city in mind, the easiest place to start is renting a car in Yerevan — the largest fleet, free delivery to most hotels and to Zvartnots airport. For trips focused on the north of the country or the Georgian border, renting a car in Gyumri is often more convenient than driving up from the capital.

Most tourists in Armenia start their trip here

Documents, payment and deposit — what to prepare

You'll need: your passport, a valid driving licence in Latin script (most EU, UK, US, Canadian, Australian and NZ licences qualify directly), at least 2 years' driving experience and a minimum age of 21. Premium and 4×4 classes need 23–25; under-25 drivers usually pay a $5–10/day young-driver fee.

Payment is flexible. Local TakeCars partners accept any debit or credit card for the 15–20% online prepayment, with the balance and deposit settled at pickup. The balance is fine in cash — US dollars, euros or Armenian dram are all accepted — or by card. Only the international chains (Sixt, Hertz, Avis) insist on a credit card in the main driver's name at the desk.

"Armenia is unusually accommodating with payment. Many of our cars come with no deposit at all, and the ones that do take a small cash sum returned at hand-back. There's no waiting weeks for a credit-card hold to clear."

Deposits at local partners are $100–300, usually in cash or blocked on a debit card, refunded the moment you return the keys. International chains hold $500–1,500 on a credit card, which can take 7–30 working days to release. If you want to skip the deposit altogether, TakeCars has a sizeable share of economy and mid-class cars listed as "no deposit" — full CDW is usually built into the rate, with only an excess on glass, alloys and undercarriage remaining.

"We try to show the deposit amount and how it's collected before you book. No 'you'll find out at the desk' — that's an old way of doing business."

Real reviews on local car hires in Armenia

Sergei Dikii
Sergei Dikii
🇷🇺

Kia Rio GT-line in Armenia

Everything went very well. The employees of the rental company were very kind, very detailed instructions both on the car and on the rules on the roads in Armeia. The car was fully operational and clean. Everything went very well, I am completely satisfied with the service. I would give them a rating of 5 out of 5

September 2025
Romain Daquilante
Romain Daquilante
🇫🇷

Lada Niva in Armenia

it was great.

May 2025
Natalia Tretyakova
Natalia Tretyakova
🇷🇺

Ford Fiesta in Armenia

Everything was perfect, from receiving the car to handing it back. The car was in good working order. Communication is as friendly as possible and the best impressions. Always on all questions received answers promptly on business. Thank you!

April 2025
Michal Tvrdon
Michal Tvrdon
🇨🇿

Lada Niva in Armenia

everything was perfect, car is very fun ti drive around Armenia ♥️ also customer service was very good. We enjoyed it 👍🏻

June 2023
Mari Manukyan
Mari Manukyan
🇦🇲

Kia Forte in Armenia

Honestly, I am delighted with this company - everything was handled very professionally. The price was very favorable, the car is in great condition and clean, with a full tank. I recommend renting a car from these guys if you want everything to be just right. Thank you very much for the great service!

February 2026
Daniel Melisanidi
Daniel Melisanidi
🇳🇱

Ford Explorer in Armenia

was good

August 2024
Vitalii Tsvetkov
Vitalii Tsvetkov
🇷🇺

Hyundai Staria in Armenia

Everything would have been fine if instead of the booked Hyundai Staria (2022) we were not given an old Citroen Transporter, which looked about 15 years old, wrinkled in several places on the outside and a torn seat inside. To make matters worse, the dashboard was constantly lit up with errors about engine failure etc. with an insistent recommendation to get it serviced immediately. One thing of merit was that it was on the road and caused no problems on the road.

May 2025
Enzo Faria
Enzo Faria
🇦🇲

Honda Odyssey in Armenia

Fresh car, great condition, nice staff. 24/7 support. Thanks to the team for a great service

February 2026
Aleksei C
Aleksei C
🇦🇲

Volkswagen Polo Sedan in Armenia

All good

May 2024
Fabian Bleisch
Fabian Bleisch
🇩🇪

Lada Niva in Armenia

The rental process was friendly and hassle-free, and the car was in excellent condition; it didn't give us any trouble at all during the 10 days we spent driving through Armenia. It was a pleasure—I highly recommend it. Best, Fabian

March 2026
Dmitriy Ovsyannikov
Dmitriy Ovsyannikov
🇷🇺

Ford Fusion Sedan in Armenia

Everything was great from the service to the comfort of the car. There was even a fire extinguisher and a first aid kit with a set of tools in the trunk. I would like to note that Adam, who provided us with a Ford, was very polite and punctual. Even met us with coffee at the airport))) We took it for a day for a ride to Dilijan - the car is very spacious and comfortable. We will take it again.

October 2023
Ekaterina Berezneva
Ekaterina Berezneva
🇷🇺

Mitsubishi Mirage in Armenia

Everything is wonderful. Great service. Nice and punctual guy. The car is in excellent condition. We will come to you next time :)

November 2024
Konstantin Eremich
Konstantin Eremich
🇷🇺

Nissan Qashqai in Armenia

I originally ordered a Nissan Rogue, but in fact they provided a Kia Sportage, as they said, it is higher class than the Nissan. The car is in excellent condition, there were no complaints or problems on the way. The trip was great. The checkout process is quite fast, the staff is very friendly and customer-oriented. They provided flexible terms on some points. In general I was very satisfied!

September 2023

Where you can drive across borders

Only Georgia. The Turkish border has been closed since 1993, the Azerbaijani border is closed in practice, and Iran — though technically open at Nordooz–Agarak — is off-limits to rental cars due to insurance and diplomatic constraints. For Georgia, some TakeCars partners issue a notarised cross-border permit. Processing takes 1–2 working days, so plan ahead. The cost ranges from $50–80 with smaller suppliers up to $150 with full paperwork support. The main crossing is Bagratashen. "If you're planning Yerevan–Tbilisi as a return trip, talk to us about the permit early. You'll also need to buy local Georgian TPL insurance at the border — it's about $20 in cash on the spot." One-way is also possible: pick up in Yerevan, drop off in Tbilisi (or vice versa). The fee is $100–300, and some partners waive it for rentals of five days or more.

Where you can drive across borders

Only Georgia. The Turkish border has been closed since 1993, the Azerbaijani border is closed in practice, and Iran — though technically open at Nordooz–Agarak — is off-limits to rental cars due to insurance and diplomatic constraints. For Georgia, some TakeCars partners issue a notarised cross-border permit. Processing takes 1–2 working days, so plan ahead. The cost ranges from $50–80 with smaller suppliers up to $150 with full paperwork support. The main crossing is Bagratashen. "If you're planning Yerevan–Tbilisi as a return trip, talk to us about the permit early. You'll also need to buy local Georgian TPL insurance at the border — it's about $20 in cash on the spot." One-way is also possible: pick up in Yerevan, drop off in Tbilisi (or vice versa). The fee is $100–300, and some partners waive it for rentals of five days or more.

David

Yerevan
4.8
David

Arsen

Yerevan
5.0
Arsen

Marta

Yerevan
4.9
Marta

Rafik

Yerevan
4.7
Rafik
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  • Real reviews on every car

    On TakeCars you see reviews tied to the specific car and supplier, not just the company overall. We ask every customer for feedback after each rental, so ratings stay current. You'll know in advance who's meticulous about details and who runs to a minimum standard.

  • Transparent price and deposit

    The rental price and deposit are shown before you book — no surprises at the desk. You see how to pay (cash, debit, credit), in which currency, and any fees for young driver, extra insurance or a cross-border permit are calculated upfront in the quote.

  • Free upgrades and swaps

    If your booked car is unavailable, our Armenian partners almost always provide an equivalent or higher-class vehicle at no extra cost. It isn't an emergency response — it's routine practice, and customers regularly mention it in their reviews.

How driving works in Armenia

Speed limits, cameras, road rules

Speed limits are straightforward: 20 km/h in residential zones, 60 in town, 90 outside town, 110 on motorways. The catch — there's no tolerance: speed cameras trigger from just +9 km/h above the limit. Yerevan is densely covered, and the Yerevan–Sevan and Yerevan–Gyumri trunk roads are heavily monitored. Tickets reach the supplier 2–4 weeks later.

"The most common ticket tourists pick up in Armenia is for speeding. We recommend keeping a navigation app open that flags live cameras and current speed limits — Waze does this well across Armenia."

Daytime headlights aren't mandatory — Armenia isn't Albania or Montenegro on this point. Use them in low visibility and tunnels.

Alcohol and fines

The alcohol limit is 0.0‰ — an absolute zero, one of the strictest rules in the world. Any alcohol detected is a 29,000 AMD fine (about $75) and 4 penalty points; above 0.5‰ means a one-year licence suspension. Don't drink at all before driving.

Fines are paid online at e-payments.am, at any Armenian bank, or via EasyPay and Telcell terminals. A police officer at the roadside cannot accept cash — it's treated as a bribe. If a ticket arrives at the supplier after you've returned the car, it comes off the deposit or your card, with a $20–40 admin fee added.

"Armenian police are professional and polite, but they will write the ticket. The 'sort it out on the road' approach some travellers expect doesn't work here — it's a criminal offence."

Parking

Yerevan has paid street parking marked with red and blue lines: red in the centre, blue around it. The first 15 minutes are free, then about 100 AMD per hour (~$0.25). Between 22:00 and 10:00 parking is free everywhere. Pay via the parkyerevan.am app, by SMS, or at a paystation. Outside Yerevan — in Gyumri, Dilijan, Tsaghkadzor and Sevan — parking is chaotic but free.

"If you're parking in central Yerevan and can't figure out the payment, the easiest option is to download the parkyerevan.am app — it works in any language. If you can't manage it, we settle parking on hand-back as standard."

Fuel

95-octane petrol runs about 500 AMD per litre (roughly $1.15), with diesel and 98-octane slightly more. The rule of thumb is to fill up at the major chains. Our partners recommend Shell, Gulf, CPS, Grand Petroleum and Max Group. Unbranded village pumps — particularly between Yerevan and Khor Virap — occasionally cause real engine trouble.

"Stick to the branded stations. The five extra minutes to reach a Shell or Gulf saves half a day at a mechanic. This applies to every rental, not just ours."

Winter and the mountains

Winter tyres are mandatory by law from 1 December to 1 March. Reputable suppliers fit them automatically during this window — no surcharge. Snow chains are recommended for Syunik, Dilijan, Aragats and Tsaghkadzor. Mountain passes (Vardenyats, Selim, Sisian) can close in heavy snow — check road.am before heading up.

For mountain trips and gravel roads, many road-trippers choose a Lada Niva. It isn't a novelty so much as a working tool: $30–60 a day, formally approved for off-road use (basic CDW would otherwise be voided), and it gets to places where a sedan physically can't.

Where to drive from Yerevan

Day trips

A single day from Yerevan covers Garni, Geghard and the Symphony of Stones — the classic first outing, around 60 km each way on paved road. Khor Virap, with its iconic view of Mount Ararat, is in the same range — an hour south on a good highway.

Lake Sevan is just over an hour east. The shoreline has plenty of viewpoints, fish restaurants and chapels worth a stop; many travellers continue from Sevan to Dilijan to spend the night.

"For day trips out of Yerevan almost any car works. The roads to Garni, Geghard, Khor Virap and Sevan are in good shape — there's no off-road involved. Things get rougher south of Sisian."

Longer routes

Tatev, Noravank and Khndzoresk are in Syunik, in the south. Tatev alone is around 250 km from Yerevan, so plan at least two nights. The "Wings of Tatev" cable car is the longest in the world — book the tickets ahead.

For the north, Dilijan, Lake Parz, Goshavank and Akhtala. From Yerevan it's easier to enter via Sevan and return through Vanadzor on the other side. From here many travellers continue on to the Georgian border.

If your trip is focused on the north or you're heading on to Georgia, it can make sense not to start from the capital but to rent a car in Gyumri — Armenia's second city and a more convenient launchpad for the north. For everything else, renting a car in Yerevan is the natural option, with delivery to Zvartnots airport or any hotel in the city.

"Armenia is small, but you can't see all of it in one trip. With a week, pick either the south with Syunik or the north with Lori — don't try to do both."

Below — the average daily rental price in Armenia by month.

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