Gergeti Trinity Church: How to Get There by Car
A practical guide to Tsminda Sameba — a 14th-century church at 2,170 m above Kazbegi. Drive from Tbilisi, free parking on top, and what to know in winter.


Tsminda Sameba is a 14th-century stone church perched at 2,170 metres above sea level, directly beneath the summit of Mount Kazbek. It's probably the most photographed spot in Georgia — and it's more accessible than it looks: from Tbilisi, you're looking at around 150 km and 3 to 3.5 hours of driving to reach the parking area right next to the church. Here's everything you need to know to make the trip straightforward.
A bit of history — the short version
The Holy Trinity Church of Gergeti was built in the 14th century. The exact date is unknown, and so is the name of the architect — not unusual for medieval mountain construction in Georgia. What survives is a cross-cupola stone church and a separate bell tower from the same period. It's the only cupola church in the entire Khevi province.
The location wasn't chosen at random. In the 18th century, when Persian forces threatened Tbilisi, precious religious relics were brought here from Mtskheta for safekeeping — a remote mountain stronghold was as secure as it got. During the Soviet era the church was closed; services only resumed in the 1990s. Today it's fully active: monks live here year-round, and the church draws pilgrims, tourists, and mountaineers acclimatising before attempts on Kazbek.
The Georgian name — გერგეტის წმინდა სამება (Gergetis Tsminda Sameba) — translates as "Holy Trinity of Gergeti." Most people just say Gergeti or Tsminda Sameba. The town below is officially called Stepantsminda, though you'll also see it written as Kazbegi, which was its name until 2007. Both refer to the same place, and locals understand either.
Getting there from Tbilisi: the Georgian Military Highway
There's one main road: the Georgian Military Highway (route E117). From Tbilisi head north through Mtskheta, then follow the Aragvi river valley through Ananuri, Pasanauri and Gudauri, before descending into Stepantsminda.
- Distance: approximately 150 km
- Driving time: 3–3.5 hours non-stop, realistically 4–5 hours if you make stops
- Road: paved the entire way, with switchbacks after Gudauri and an elevation gain of roughly 1,500 metres
The road itself is worth the trip. This is exactly where having a rental car makes sense — you stop where you want, turn around for a view, and come back on your own schedule, not a minibus timetable. You can book a car with free delivery in Tbilisi at mydrive.club.
The drive up to the church: road, parking, and your options
From Stepantsminda the church is clearly visible above the town, roughly 500 metres higher. You have two options.
By car. A paved switchback road to the church was completed in 2018. From spring through autumn, any standard car can handle it — no 4x4 required. There's a free parking area right at the church walls. The drive up takes around 15–20 minutes.
On foot. The trail from the village takes 60–90 minutes one way. It's steep and rocky in places, so proper footwear matters. The payoff: views of the Terek gorge and the surrounding ridges that you simply don't get from the car window.
Winter: possible but plan ahead
A winter visit to Kazbegi is quiet, snowy and genuinely beautiful. Two things to factor in before you go.
The Georgian Military Highway operates year-round but can close in winter. The stretch between Gudauri and Kobi — over the Jvari Pass at 2,379 m — is regularly shut due to avalanche risk. Closures usually last a few hours or a day, sometimes longer. Check the road status before leaving Tbilisi; conditions can change within hours.

The road to the church may not be cleared after heavy snowfall. On a steep switchback with no guardrails, a standard rental car in icy conditions is a bad idea. If the road is snow-covered, the practical solution is to hire a local driver with a 4x4 in Stepantsminda — expect to pay around 50–80 GEL (roughly $18–30) per vehicle return. Negotiate before you get in.
If you're renting a car for a winter trip, a crossover or SUV is the better choice — ground clearance and all-wheel drive aren't a luxury up here.
At the church: what to expect
The church is active — keep that in mind. The dress code is stricter than at most Georgian Orthodox churches:
- Men: long trousers required, hats off
- Women: head covered, shoulders covered, skirt or dress (knee-length minimum)
Sarongs and headscarves are usually available at the entrance if you haven't brought your own. Admission is free. Photography inside is not permitted — check with the monks if you're unsure.
Outside, in clear conditions, Mount Kazbek (5,047 m) dominates the skyline directly opposite — a snow-capped volcanic cone against open sky. The mountain is temperamental: it's hidden in cloud roughly half the time. If seeing Kazbek clearly matters to you, stay overnight in Stepantsminda. Morning visibility is significantly better than afternoon.
The small hill just beside the church is one of the best vantage points for photos. Some travellers camp here overnight — in summer that's entirely doable, though even in August temperatures at 2,170 m can drop below freezing after dark.

Practical checklist: when to go and what to bring
Best time to visit: May–June and September–October. July and August are peak season — busy, especially on weekends. Autumn brings cleaner air, better visibility and noticeably fewer people. Winter is for those comfortable with uncertainty.
What to pack:
- A jacket and windproof layer — it's always colder and windier at the top than in the village
- Solid footwear if you're hiking
- A headscarf or sarong (women)
- Cash — there are ATMs in Stepantsminda, nothing at the church
Food: several cafes and restaurants in Stepantsminda. Along the road, Pasanauri — roughly halfway from Tbilisi — is consistently good for khinkali and tends to be cheaper than the mountain town.
Bottom line
Gergeti Trinity Church is an active 14th-century monastery on a mountain with one of the most dramatic views in the Caucasus. In the warmer months, any car can get you there — paved road, free parking, straightforward drive. In winter, the pass and the church road can both close with little warning, so build flexibility into your plans. With an overnight stop in Stepantsminda, your chances of seeing Kazbek clear of cloud go up considerably — and the one-day rush from Tbilisi starts to feel like the wrong approach.










