
Georgia tours & trips
Where Europe folds into the Caucasus — glacier peaks, ancient wine, and welcome that feels like family.
About Georgia
Georgia is a small country that travels big. In a single week you can stand beneath the glaciers of Kazbegi, taste wine made the way it was 8,000 years ago, wander frescoed monasteries older than most nations, and share a supra — the Georgian feast — with people who treat a guest as a gift from God. It is one of the last corners of Europe that still surprises you.
Most journeys begin in Tbilisi, a warm, weathered capital of sulphur baths, crooked balconies and natural-wine bars, before heading out along three very different routes. North lifts you into the High Caucasus: the Georgian Military Highway to Kazbegi and the medieval tower-villages of Svaneti and Tusheti, where footpaths cross 2,900-metre passes and shepherds still summer their flocks. East rolls into Kakheti, the sun-warmed wine country where families press grapes in clay qvevri buried underground. West falls toward the Black Sea, the subtropical greenery of Adjara and the palm-lined promenade of Batumi.
Our trips are built around that geography, not around a checklist. Group departures are small (typically 6–14 travellers), guided by licensed Georgian guides who grew up on these roads, and run in vehicles that are inspected and insured. Private trips are shaped entirely around you — the pace, the hotels, the balance of mountains and wine. Either way, no day is a bus-window blur: we build in the hike, the cellar, the roadside khinkali stop that people actually remember.
When to come. May to early July brings wildflowers and green alpine meadows; September and October are golden, warm and the grape harvest is in full swing — arguably the finest time to visit. July and August are hot in the lowlands but perfect high in the mountains. Winter turns Gudauri into a genuinely good, low-cost ski destination from December to March.
A few honest practicalities. Most nationalities enter visa-free for a year — we spell out the rules on each tour page. The currency is the lari (GEL); cards work in cities, cash rules in the mountains. It is, by every measure travellers report, one of the safest countries in the region for solo travellers, families and women. And it is still remarkably good value: comfort here costs a fraction of Western Europe.
Whatever route you choose, the thing people carry home from Georgia is rarely a photo of a mountain. It's the memory of being fed, toasted, and made to feel — by total strangers — completely at home.
Tours in Georgia
Georgia tours
Good to know
Do I need a visa to visit Georgia?
Citizens of 90+ countries — including the EU, UK, US, Canada, Australia and the Gulf — enter visa-free and can stay for up to one year. We list the exact rule for your nationality on each tour page and in our Georgia visa guide.
Is Georgia safe for tourists?
Yes. Georgia consistently ranks among the safest countries in the region, including for solo travellers, women and families. Our guides carry a 24/7 trip phone and all vehicles are inspected and insured.
What currency is used and can I pay by card?
The Georgian lari (GEL). Cards are accepted almost everywhere in cities; carry some cash for mountain villages, guesthouses and markets.
What language do the guides speak?
All our group tours are guided in English; Georgian and Russian are available, and other languages on request for private trips.
Reviews
Travellers on Traverse
“As a solo female traveller I felt completely safe and looked after the whole time. The scenery in Svaneti is unreal and the group was lovely. Traverse thought of everything.”
“Svaneti exceeded every expectation. The guesthouses were simple but the food and the families were incredible. Our guide adapted the hikes to our pace perfectly. This is real Georgia, organised by people who clearly love it.”
“Absolutely the best day of our trip. Giorgi our guide was warm, funny and endlessly knowledgeable, and Gergeti church in the morning light was breathtaking. The WhatsApp booking took two minutes and they confirmed within the hour. Cannot recommend Traverse enough.”
Guides
Read before you go

georgia
Kazbegi vs Svaneti: Which Georgian Mountains Should You Choose?
Short on time or after a full adventure? We compare Georgia's two most famous mountain regions to help you pick the right one.
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georgia
The Best Time to Visit Georgia (Country): A Month-by-Month Guide
Green mountains, golden wine harvest, or cheap winter skiing? Here's exactly when to visit Georgia depending on what you want from your trip.
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