Always pay rent in USD — landlords prefer it
May 7, 2026Saburtalo · Experience date Feb 6, 2026
My landlord quoted rent in USD and prefers payment via Wise or bank transfer. GEL rent sometimes happens but USD is standard for expat housing. Get a written contract even if informal — take photos of everything on move-in.
Facebook group Tbilisi Expats Flat Rental is the best source
May 7, 2026Vera · Experience date Dec 26, 2025
Found my apartment in Vera through the Tbilisi Expats Flat Rental Facebook group. 2-bed furnished for $500/month, landlord was flexible and used Wise. Much better than local real estate websites which are outdated.
Parking in Tbilisi — a genuine challenge in central areas
May 6, 2026Vera · Experience date Dec 15, 2025
Central Tbilisi parking is extremely limited and chaotic. Old Town: virtually no legal parking. Rustaveli and Vera: paid street parking, 0.50–1 GEL/hour. Vake and Saburtalo: easier street parking, mostly free in residential streets. Underground parking: limited, expensive (30–60 GEL/day in Old Town). If you plan to drive or rent a car in Tbilisi: choose accommodation in Saburtalo or outer Vake where residential street parking is available. Most central Tbilisi expats don't own cars — Bolt and Yandex Taxi are so cheap ($2–4 for most city trips) that car ownership is rarely worth the hassle.
Contributor: Sophie Martin Saburtalo — practical, residential, good infrastructure
Apr 10, 2026Vera · Experience date Mar 23, 2026
Saburtalo is Tbilisi's main residential district west of the centre. Wide Soviet-era boulevards, good supermarkets (Carrefour, Goodwill), Metro access (Gotsiridze, Varketili line), affordable rents. 1-bedroom furnished: $350–550/month — best value for a comfortable apartment. Less characterful than Vera or Vake but significantly more practical. Large Carrefour hypermarket makes grocery shopping easy. Popular with Georgian families and longer-term expats who prioritise value. The main hospital district is here too — useful if you need healthcare access.
Contributor: Amira Hassan Furnished apartments for digital nomads — what to expect
Apr 2, 2026Chugureti · Experience date Jan 1, 2026
Most Tbilisi apartments marketed to expats come furnished with basics: bed, sofa, kitchen appliances (fridge, washing machine, sometimes dishwasher), and often air conditioning. Quality varies widely — from basic Soviet-era furniture to modern renovations. What to check at viewing: WiFi speed (ask for speedtest on your phone — should be 50+ Mbps for remote work), hot water reliability (sulfur springs mean mineral deposits in pipes — regular heater maintenance matters), and heating (Tbilisi winters are cold — 0 to 8°C in January — ensure the apartment has working heating).
Deposit and contract norms in Tbilisi
Mar 30, 2026Chugureti · Experience date Apr 21, 2026
Standard Tbilisi rental deposit: 1–2 months rent. Lease terms: flexible — many landlords accept month-to-month with 30-day notice. Formal written lease contracts: common for apartments above $500/month, less common for budget apartments. Always insist on a written contract — it protects both parties and is required if you apply for a Georgian residence permit. Landlord disputes: Georgian courts are slow but tenant protections exist. The main practical risk: landlords increasing rent with short notice — put a minimum 6-month notice period in the contract if staying long-term.
Contributor: David Okonkwo Vake — Tbilisi's most popular expat neighbourhood
Mar 17, 2026Old Town · Experience date Dec 12, 2025
Vake is consistently the top choice for expats in Tbilisi. Tree-lined streets, excellent cafés (Fabrika area nearby), international community, safe. 1-bedroom furnished apartment: $500–800/month. Good public transport connections (Metro Delisi on the red line). Vake Park: large green space for running and relaxing — rare in Tbilisi. The Vake neighbourhood feels distinctly different from the crowded Old Town — quieter, more residential, easier to live in long-term. Best for: digital nomads, professionals, and expat families who want comfort and community.
Contributor: Carlos Rivera