
Tbilisi
GeorgiaWhere Europe meets Asia in a wine-soaked embrace. Georgia's captivating capital tumbles down hillsides of colorful balconies, ancient churches, and legendary hospitality.
Quick Facts: Tbilisi
- Cheapest fare
- ฿10,430
- Cheapest month
- October
- Airlines
- 11 carriers
- Flight time
- ~12h 30m
- Avg temperature
- 14°C
- Climate
- Mild
- Distance
- 0 km
Where Europe meets Asia in a wine-soaked embrace. Georgia's captivating capital tumbles down hillsides of colorful balconies, ancient churches, and legendary hospitality.
Best Deals
Price Intelligence
Historical pricing for flights to Tbilisi
Year avg
฿16,718
Cheapest seen
฿10,430
Plan Around a Holiday
Long weekends & public holidays
About Tbilisi
Tbilisi is one of those rare cities where every turn reveals a new visual surprise. The Old Town cascades down a hillside beneath the ancient Narikala Fortress, its leaning wooden balconies and ornate Art Nouveau facades creating a kaleidoscope of architectural styles accumulated over 1,500 years. Persian-influenced bathhouses, Georgian Orthodox churches, a mosque, and a synagogue stand within a few blocks of each other, reflecting the city's position as a crossroads of civilizations. The sulfur baths in Abanotubani are a must — brick-domed bathhouses fed by natural hot springs where you can soak and get scrubbed by a masseur, emerging renewed for just a few dollars. Above the old town, the Narikala Fortress offers sweeping views over the Mtkvari River, and the Peace Bridge — a futuristic glass-and-steel pedestrian span — connects the ancient quarter to Rike Park and the modern city beyond.
Georgian cuisine is built for celebration, and Tbilisi is where it reaches its fullest expression. The centerpiece of Georgian dining is the supra — a traditional feast presided over by a tamada (toastmaster) who leads elaborate toasts with horn cups of wine. Start with khachapuri Adjaruli, a boat-shaped bread filled with molten cheese, butter, and a raw egg stirred in at the table — it's messy, rich, and utterly irresistible. Follow with khinkali, hefty pleated dumplings filled with spiced meat and broth that you eat by biting a corner and slurping the juices before devouring the rest. Add plates of pkhali (walnut-herb vegetable pâté), badrijani (fried eggplant with walnut paste), and lobio (spiced bean stew) for a vegetable-heavy spread that makes Georgian food remarkably balanced. The wine is equally remarkable — Georgia claims to be the birthplace of wine, with 8,000 years of winemaking tradition and a unique method of fermenting in buried clay vessels called qvevri, producing orange wines with complex, tannic character.