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For most travellers, renting a car in Georgia is the only realistic way to see what brings them here in a single trip — the wine villages of Kakheti, the hairpin bends of the Georgian Military Highway, the frescoes at Gelati, the beaches of Adjara. Public transport doesn't connect those dots in a week, mountain taxis get expensive fast, and tour transfers tie your day to someone else's schedule.

We meet clients by flight number. A couple from Manchester signed the contract on the bonnet last August — fastest five minutes I've ever done. Meanwhile the queue at the global chains was still waiting for a shuttle.

Most of our guests are independent European travellers — from the UK, Germany, Poland, Czechia, Italy, France and Israel, with a steady share arriving on Wizz Air to Kutaisi. Couples, friends and families who book their own flights and want to fit as much of the Caucasus as possible into 5–10 days. Pickup and drop-off are usually both at the airport.

How much it costs to rent a car in Georgia

Georgia is still one of the most affordable destinations in the region. In low season the starting rate is from $22 a day for a recent hybrid — a Ford Fusion 2020 or a Toyota Prius. A week with airport delivery from a local host works out to roughly $170–180. A Toyota Camry 2016 sits around $28 a day, a Jeep Compass 2019 around $29, an older Ford Escape from $24.

Real value kicks in from five days. Below that we're effectively on the daily rate.

In peak season, especially July and August, the same economy cars climb to $35–45 a day, and demand for SUVs and convertibles peaks in Batumi. The premium tier is real: Mini Cooper, Mustang Cabriolet and Mercedes AMG in the $200–600 range, with the occasional Porsche 911 and the odd Lamborghini Urus.

Mid-July last year the cheapest thing we had left was an automatic Hyundai i30 at $52 a day — by Friday that was gone too. Book 4–6 weeks ahead in peak season, honestly.

The natural starting point is car hire in Tbilisi — the main fleet, the best choice, and the most competitive prices.

Most tourists in Georgia start their trip here

What our users say

Which car to choose in Georgia

The short answer: a Subaru Forester or a Toyota Prius. Both are local classics. The Forester rules in the mountains — proper AWD, decent ground clearance, and an enormous local fleet. Some hosts run up to 70 identical Foresters, with a whole spare-parts economy built around them. The Prius is the city and motorway workhorse: hybrid, cheap to fuel, forgiving in Tbilisi and Batumi traffic.

Heading into the mountains? Take a Forester or a Crosstrek. Clearance and real AWD matter more than any 4×4 sticker on the back of a crossover.

On fuel, petrol — no question. Diesel quality in Georgia is hit-and-miss, and even diesel owners are reluctant to send their cars on long mountain runs. Japanese cars (Prius, Corolla, Fit) take 95-octane only; anything lower lights up the dashboard within minutes.

One guest filled a Prius with 92 in Gori. Three hours later we were towing him back. Now we tape a "95 only" sticker on the fuel cap.

Right-hand-drive cars are part of the picture too. A chunk of the economy fleet is imported second-hand from Japan and converted to left-hand drive; you can spot the conversion by the wing mirror still on the right wing. For city and motorway driving they're fine, and car rental in Kutaisi is often built on this kind of fleet.

Real reviews on TakeCars in Georgia

Kakhaber Malatsidze
Kakhaber Malatsidze
🇧🇪

Subaru Forester Limited in Georgia

everything was very good

August 2023
Martin Hrbac
Martin Hrbac
🇨🇿

Mitsubishi Outlander Sport in Georgia

I was satisfied with the car rental.

October 2023
Denis Yessengulov
Denis Yessengulov
🇷🇺

Toyota Rav4 in Georgia

Thank you, everything went well. First time using the site. Everything went smoothly. Thank you very much!

April 2025
Ivan Merkulov
Ivan Merkulov
🇬🇪

Toyota Camry in Georgia

I had a great experience with this car rental company. Firstly it didn't take much time to book the car. Secondly they have reasonable prices and the third they have cars in good conditions. Definitely recommend this company!

July 2022
Alexander Popov
Alexander Popov

Audi Q5 in Georgia

Excellent service! Took a luxury car for a wedding trip! We recommend it unequivocally!

Mahmoud Matar
Mahmoud Matar
🇦🇪

Mitsubishi Pajero Io in Georgia

It was good car and good price as well

December 2022
Samuel Barkoci
Samuel Barkoci
🇨🇿

Nissan X-Trail in Georgia

All good, car was clean, strong and worked well.

October 2019
Tim De graaf
Tim De graaf
🇳🇱

Subaru Forester in Georgia

Hi the Mitsubishi was fine. It was only a bit hard to drive sometimes because it was originally righthanddrive. Like the screenwhipers and direction lights. But it worked pretty well on the steep roads because of the 4x4.

September 2019
Vitali Dyatlov
Vitali Dyatlov
🇧🇾

Toyota Prius C in Georgia

Everything is great. No questions about the car, the owner is also friendly. I took the car in Tbilisi and returned it in Batumi.

August 2023
Vladimir Merkin
Vladimir Merkin
🇷🇺

Subaru Forester in Georgia

The rent went great. We were met, showed and explained everything. There were no problems with the car.

June 2019
Stepan Ivanov
Stepan Ivanov
🇺🇦

Toyota Prius in Georgia

Thank you, I liked everything,the car is in good condition, the guys did everything clearly

May 2021
Mikhail Gogolev
Mikhail Gogolev
🇷🇺

Toyota Prius C in Georgia

Everything is great, delivered the car, and they waited too

June 2025
Aleksandr Volniago
Aleksandr Volniago
🇷🇺

Toyota C-HR in Georgia

Georgia is a great country, on the background of beautiful nature, beautiful people, delicious food and cozy cities (we visited seven) the little things did not change the overall impression. About the car and service: The car was brought at the appointed time, the return took little time, the person who communicated with us was polite. The car was comfortable, I felt confident in it on the road. From the minuses: The interior was all in dust and crumbs of food; on the torpedo was spilled something sticky (smelled unpleasant), the interior was saturated with the smell of tobacco, my spouse from it periodically vomited. It was not very pleasant to get into the car every time.

May 2025

Take Cars in Georgia

Georgia gives us one of the densest networks of local hosts in the region — small, often family-run fleets where every customer counts, and a free upgrade to the next class is still a normal gesture rather than a once-a-year marketing trick.

Tamuna

Tbilisi
4.7
Tamuna

Tamaz

Tbilisi
4.8
Tamaz

Avtandil

Tbilisi
4.8
Avtandil

Ashkan

Kutaisi
4.9
Ashkan
RENT A CAR
  • Real reviews on the actual car

    Every listing shows feedback from previous renters of that specific vehicle, not just the company average.

  • Free upgrade when your class is sold out

    If the car you booked is taken, local Georgian hosts often hand over the next class up at no extra charge.

  • Direct chat with the host before booking

    Message your host on the platform to confirm delivery time, child seats, roof boxes and anything else in writing — well before you pay.

Documents, insurance and deposit

EU and UK licences are accepted without an IDP — the licence just needs to be in Latin script, which most European ones are. Drivers with a non-Latin-script licence should bring an IDP. Minimum age 21, one year on the licence.

Travel medical insurance is mandatory. Georgia introduced the rule on 1 January 2026 and it's in force now: minimum cover 30,000 GEL (~$11,000). Buy the policy before you fly; without it, border guards can turn you back.

A couple from Berlin took the basic CDW in March, then clipped a stone on the Batumi road. Windscreen wasn't covered. The repair cost almost as much as the rental.

Third-party liability is included. Basic CDW covers most bodywork but not the windscreen, tyres or underbody. Super CDW adds glass and underbody — the most common claims on mountain roads. Tyres are excluded by almost every insurer in Georgia.

Deposit

A Georgian quirk: many economy cars come with no deposit at all. When a deposit is required, it's typically 600–900 GEL (~$220–330) in cash on collection, refunded in full on return.

Any scratch — call the host straight away. Without that call, no insurance will pay out, whatever package you bought.

Routes, mountains and off-road

80% of Georgia's postcard spots are reachable in a saloon or a crossover. The Georgian Military Highway up to Kazbegi handles a saloon in anything short of heavy snow. Kakheti, Borjomi and the Adjarian coast are standard tarmac.

One guest followed Google Maps off the Lentekhi road and parked at a sheep farm overnight. We pulled him out at six in the morning. If the tarmac runs out — turn around while there's still space.

Svaneti has changed since 2024–25: Mestia–Ushguli takes a saloon, and the Zagaro Pass to Lentekhi is now sealed. Tusheti and the Abano Pass are a different world — most hosts ban rentals on these routes, fit GPS trackers and can recall a car remotely. Shatili, Trusso and Juta are in the same group; the standard way in is a local Mitsubishi Delica share with a driver.

On any mountain road, switch on dipped headlights and use the horn before blind bends. Locals do it for a reason.

Winter in the mountains

From 1 December to 1 March winter tyres are mandatory on mountain roads. Hosts swap them in advance; if you book in March for Gudauri, Bakuriani or Kazbegi, confirm the tyres at booking. Snow chains are often needed for Svaneti.

Georgia with locals

Driving rules, fines, parking and borders

Speed limits: 50 km/h in town, 90 on rural roads, 110 on the Tbilisi–Batumi motorway. Cameras trigger from +10 km/h over the limit. The average speeding or parking fine is around 50 GEL (~$18); what really hurts is being towed.

A guest from Tashkent once tried to tip a traffic cop in Tbilisi. The cop laughed and pointed to the bank terminal across the street. Every fine in Georgia goes through a bank — that's the reform reputation in practice.

The drink-drive limit is 0.3‰, stricter than most of Europe. A glass of wine in Kakheti already puts you over. The fine is around 700 GEL (~$255) plus a possible disqualification. There are no tolls or motorway vignettes in Georgia.

Parking

Tbilisi parking is mostly paid and settled through an app; your host sets it up or pays on your behalf via a code. In summer, central Tbilisi and the Old Town have very few free spots.

Borders

You can drive a Georgian rental into Turkey (via Sarpi), Armenia and Azerbaijan with a notarised authorisation from the host (2–3 working days). Tbilisi car rental with a cross-border option should be booked well ahead to leave time for the paperwork.

A one-way Tbilisi–Batumi is usually around $110 (300 GEL). The driver delivers the car and heads straight back to the capital.

Rates in Georgia vary throughout the year depending on the season and the rental length in days.

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chartHow expensive is renting a car in Georgia: average daily rates for a one-week car rental, across all car classes. Delivery across Georgia not included.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to rent a car in Georgia per day?

In low season, from $22 a day for an economy hybrid (Ford Fusion, Toyota Prius); a Camry from $28, crossovers from $29. In peak July and August, prices climb 30–50%, and premium classes go up by multiples. A weekly hire from a local host is usually better value than booking day by day.

Can I rent a car without a deposit?

Yes. In Georgia, some economy cars (most often the Toyota Prius) are rented out with no deposit at all — a regional quirk. When a deposit is required, it's around 600–900 GEL (~$220–330) in cash, refunded in full as soon as you return the car.

Do I need an International Driving Permit?

EU and UK driving licences are accepted in Georgia for tourist stays without an IDP. The licence has to be in Latin script — which most European ones are. Drivers with a non-Latin-script licence should bring an IDP to be safe. Carry your passport with the licence.

Is travel medical insurance mandatory right now?

Yes. Georgia introduced the rule on 1 January 2026 and it's in force. Minimum cover 30,000 GEL (~$11,000). Without it, border guards can turn you back. Any reputable European insurer issues a compliant policy — buy it before flying.

Can I pay with my card, or do I need cash?

Most international Visa and Mastercard cards are accepted for the online prepayment, and ATMs are widely available. The balance on collection is settled in cash, in USD or GEL. Small petrol stations and family-run shops outside the cities sometimes don't take cards — keep some lari on hand.

Do I need a 4×4 for Kazbegi or Svaneti?

In most cases, no. The Georgian Military Highway up to Kazbegi handles a saloon, and Mestia–Ushguli has been fine for a saloon since the 2024–25 resurfacing. A 4×4 makes sense in winter and for tracks beyond Ushguli. Tusheti is a separate story — see below.

Can I drive into Tusheti or Khevsureti in a rental?

With nearly every host, no. The Abano Pass, Shatili, Trusso and Juta are listed as banned routes; insurance doesn't apply there and GPS trackers will flag the trip. The standard alternative is a local Mitsubishi Delica share with a driver from Omalo or Telavi.

Can I drive a Georgian rental into Armenia?

Technically yes, with a notarised authorisation from the rental company (2–3 working days to issue). Not every host offers this option, so confirm at booking. Border queues can be long in peak summer — allow extra time for the day of the crossing.

What about Turkey and Azerbaijan?

Turkey via the Sarpi border is the most common cross-border route from Georgia, with a notarised letter from the host. Azerbaijan is also possible from a smaller pool of hosts. Both options need to be flagged at booking, since the paperwork takes 2–3 working days.

What's the difference between CDW and Super CDW?

Basic CDW (collision damage waiver) covers most bodywork damage but excludes the windscreen, tyres and underbody. Super CDW adds glass and underbody — the most common claims on Georgia's mountain roads. Tyres are almost never insured in Georgia.

Why are there so many right-hand-drive cars in Georgia?

A large share of economy cars is imported second-hand from Japan — Toyota, Honda, Subaru. Some are formally converted to left-hand drive; you can spot the conversion by the wing mirror still on the right wing. For city and motorway driving they're fine; on long trips you may notice some ergonomic quirks.

Should I rent a car in Kutaisi if I fly with Wizz Air?

Yes. Fewer hosts work out of Kutaisi than Tbilisi, but cars are delivered from the capital straight to the terminal. If your route is Kutaisi — Borjomi — Tbilisi, pick up locally; for a Kakheti or Kazbegi trip, it can be cheaper to fly back via Tbilisi instead.

Can I rent a car for a month or longer?

Yes. Long-term hire is a separate segment in Georgia, with monthly rates from around $400–700 depending on car class and season. Useful for ski seasons in Gudauri, summer-long stays on the coast, and remote workers in Tbilisi. Most hosts offer additional discounts beyond a month.

What's the alcohol limit while driving?

0.3‰ — stricter than most countries in Europe. A glass of wine at a tasting already puts you over the line. The fine is around 700 GEL (~$255) plus a possible disqualification. For wine tours in Kakheti, take a driver or a taxi rather than risk it.

Where can't I drive a rental car in Georgia?

Off-road and gravel tracks of any kind — insurance doesn't apply there, and most hosts fit GPS trackers. Specifically, Tusheti (the Abano Pass), Khevsureti (Shatili), Trusso and Juta are banned. Run your route past the host on collection — they'll flag risky sections and suggest safe alternatives.

Got questions?

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