Toll Roads in Georgia (Country) — There Aren't Any

Georgia has no toll roads for passenger cars. We debunk the myths, explain what's being built, and why renting a car is the only way to truly explore the country.

Toll Roads in Georgia (Country) — There Aren't Any
Rikoti Tunnel on the Tbilisi–Batumi highway (E60) · Jelger Groeneveld

One of the most common questions from travellers planning a self-drive trip through Georgia: how much should I budget for toll roads? The answer is simple — nothing. All roads in Georgia are free for passenger cars. No toll booths, no vignettes, no transponders.

There's a fair amount of misinformation online about a supposed toll at the Rikoti Tunnel and other paid sections. None of it is backed by official Georgian sources. You won't pay a single lari to drive anywhere in the country.

Why This Actually Matters

No toll roads means your driving budget in Georgia is genuinely predictable: fuel and car rental, nothing else. And a rental car isn't just convenient here — it's essentially the only practical way to explore the country independently. Public transport covers the main cities but leaves most of Georgia's best destinations unreachable.

Without your own wheels, it's hard to reach Ushguli and Mestia, visit multiple Kakheti monasteries in a single day, make a day trip to Vardzia, or hike up to Gergeti Trinity Church on your own timeline.

Coming Changes: Tolls May Arrive Eventually

Georgia is investing heavily in road infrastructure. A Tbilisi bypass highway (TBTR) is in development and planned as the country's first proper toll road — aimed primarily at transit freight traffic, with no opening date announced.

The Kvesheti–Kobi road with a long tunnel beneath the Cross Pass will bypass the most avalanche-prone section of the Georgian Military Highway and cut driving time to Kazbegi by around 45 minutes. Expected completion is 2027–2028; whether it will be tolled hasn't been decided.

Until any of that opens, everything is free.

Practical Notes for Drivers

Mountain roads in winter. The Gudauri–Kobi section of the Georgian Military Highway closes periodically due to avalanche risk. Check current conditions at georoad.ge.

Fuel in remote areas. Petrol stations are easy to find on main highways. In Svaneti, fill up in Mestia — there's almost nothing between there and Ushguli. See our gas stations guide.

Rental car restrictions. Check with your rental company whether off-road routes are permitted. Tusheti (the Abano Pass road) requires a 4WD and specific approval.

Navigation. Google Maps works well. Download offline maps before mountain regions — signal drops.

Planning a road trip? Book a car in Tbilisi ahead of time — there are no toll surprises, because there simply aren't any toll roads.

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