
Batumi
Georgia's Glittering Black Sea Resort and Casino Capital
Batumi hits different than the rest of Georgia. Here's a city that swapped wine cellars for casino floors, ancient churches for gleaming skyscrapers, and mountain hiking for beach lounging. This Black Sea resort town pulses with neon lights, churns out world-class Georgian fusion cuisine, and somehow makes palm trees feel at home next to Soviet-era architecture. But don't mistake Batumi for some Vegas knockoff. The city keeps one foot firmly planted in Georgian tradition while the other steps boldly into a cosmopolitan future. You'll find families building sandcastles at Batumi Beach in the morning, couples sipping cocktails at rooftop bars by evening, and night owls testing their luck at the Sheraton's casino until dawn.
Best Months
MAY – SEP
~26°C · high crowds
Culture & Context
VEGAS MEETS OTTOMAN HERITAGE
Batumi is the capital of the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, sitting right on Georgia's Black Sea coast with the Turkish border just 15km south. It's a city of genuine contradictions: Soviet-era seaside boulevards rubbing up against futuristic skyscrapers, casino towers, and a growing digital nomad scene. Historically it was a major 19th-century port under the Russian Empire, which is why the Old Town has that faded Ottoman-Italian charm.
The Adjarian people have their own dialect and local identity distinct from the rest of Georgia. Summers bring floods of regional tourists from Turkey, Armenia, and Russia. The rest of the year it's pleasantly uncrowded.
The city is subtropical — expect lush greenery, regular rain showers even in July, and humidity that makes Tbilisi look like a desert. Food here is its own thing too: Adjarian khachapuri (the egg-and-butter boat version) originated here, and the seafood is genuinely fresh off Black Sea boats. Georgia introduced mandatory travel health and accident insurance for all visitors as of January 1, 2026 — this is strictly enforced at border crossings and airports.
Pack proof of coverage before you land.
Local Customs
TOASTS & MODEST DRESS
Dress modestly when entering any Orthodox church or mosque — cover shoulders and knees. Women should have a headscarf handy. This applies to the Batumi Mosque in Old Town too..
Tipping is expected and appreciated: 10–15% in restaurants is standard. Round up for taxis.. Say 'Gamarjoba' when you walk into any shop, café, or guesthouse.
Georgians notice and genuinely appreciate it. You will get better service instantly.. At any Georgian feast (supra), there is a toastmaster called the Tamada who leads toasts.
Don't just clink glasses randomly — wait for the Tamada's signal and say 'Gaumarjos' when toasting.. Georgia introduced mandatory travel insurance in 2026. Locals are aware of this new rule — don't be surprised if accommodation or tour operators ask about your coverage..
Watch for the well-documented bar scam: someone you just met (often via a dating app) invites you for drinks at a specific venue, then pressures you to pay an outrageously inflated bill. Stick to places you chose yourself.. Road traffic is chaotic by Western standards.
Being a pedestrian requires genuine attention — don't assume cars will yield at crossings.. Georgia is conservative outside of central tourist areas. LGBTQ+ travelers should exercise discretion, particularly outside Tbilisi.
Public same-sex displays of affection can attract unwanted attention.. Credit cards are widely accepted in hotels, restaurants, and larger shops, but carry some GEL cash for markets, marshrutkas, and smaller local spots.
Safety
VERY SAFE, WATCH TAXIS
Batumi is genuinely one of the safer cities in the region. The US State Department rates Georgia at Level 1 — Exercise Normal Caution — as of March 2026, the lowest risk category. Georgia ranks 4th globally for low crime rates.
Violent crime against tourists is rare. The main actual risks: ROAD TRAFFIC is the leading cause of tourist injuries — Georgian driving is aggressive and pedestrian crossings are not reliably respected. Pay attention.
BAR BILL SCAM is well-documented in both Tbilisi and Batumi — a new acquaintance lures you to a specific bar and you're hit with a wildly inflated bill. Avoid this by picking your own venues. TAXI OVERCHARGING happens — use Bolt or Yandex apps always.
PICKPOCKETING is low-level risk, mostly opportunistic in crowded summer areas. Hotel theft is very rare (under 0.3% of guests annually per tourism police data).
POLITICAL PROTESTS: Ongoing protests since the October 2024 elections are concentrated in central Tbilisi (Rustaveli Avenue, Freedom Square). Batumi is unaffected — normal operations throughout. MANDATORY INSURANCE: As of January 1, 2026, travel health and accident insurance is legally required for all international visitors and is strictly enforced at borders and airports.
The US Embassy in Tbilisi has specifically flagged this. Travelers without valid coverage may be denied entry. AVOID: Abkhazia and South Ossetia — these are Russian-occupied territories and completely off-limits to international visitors.
Do not approach within 5km of occupied territory boundaries.
Getting Around
WALKABLE, USE BOLT
GETTING TO BATUMI: The train from Tbilisi is the go-to option. Modern Stadler express trains take about 5 hours and cost 35–125 GEL depending on class. The overnight sleeper is popular — saves a hotel night, you wake up at the Black Sea.
Budget option is the marshrutka minibus from Didube station in Tbilisi (~30–35 GEL, 5.5–6 hrs). Batumi International Airport (BUS) has direct flights from Istanbul, Vienna, Warsaw, and other European cities — worth checking for international arrivals.
GETTING AROUND BATUMI: The city is compact and walkable in the center. City buses cost just 0.30 GEL with the Batumi Card (a contactless card available for ~2 GEL at transport centers — buy one, it's worth it).
Key routes: Bus #1 connects the airport to Old Boulevard; Bus #10 links city center to Makhinjauri and the Botanical Garden. Buses run 6am–11pm. Marshrutkas (mini-vans) cost 0.
50 GEL within city limits and run on semi-fixed routes. They're faster but more chaotic. Bolt and Yandex apps work well here — typical city ride costs $1–3.
Use apps rather than hailing taxis on the street to avoid overcharging. The Boulevard promenade has a BatumiVelo bike rental system — pick up a card at the Tourist Information Center near the fountains. Free public WiFi covers the entire Boulevard.
SIM cards cost 1–2 GEL at any mobile operator office (Magti, Geocell, Cellfie) — bring your passport. Monthly mobile plans run $10–15. Road safety note: Official statistics show road accidents increased 20% in 2025.
Drive defensively, avoid mountain roads at night, and be very alert as a pedestrian.
Useful Phrases
Where to Stay in Batumi
1 recommended properties
Itineraries coming soon
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Money-Saving Tips
- 1.Book accommodations in Old Town for half the price of beachfront hotels – you're only a 15-minute walk from the coast
- 2.Use city buses for 50 tetri instead of taxis – download the Batumi Transport app to navigate routes easily
- 3.Eat lunch at local spots like Chacha Time where khachapuri costs 8-12 lari versus 25+ lari at tourist restaurants
- 4.Buy wine directly from Adjarian vineyards during day trips – bottles cost 15-20 lari compared to 40+ lari in hotel bars
- 5.Visit in May or September for 40-50% lower hotel rates while still enjoying good weather and warm sea temperatures
Travel Tips
- •Download offline maps before exploring – WiFi can be spotty in Old Town's narrow streets
- •Pack light rain gear even in summer – Batumi gets sudden afternoon showers from May through September
- •Learn basic Georgian phrases – English isn't as widespread as in Tbilisi, especially outside tourist areas
- •Carry cash in Georgian lari – many local restaurants and transport don't accept cards
- •Book casino hotel rooms in advance during summer – they fill up with regional tourists from Turkey and Armenia
- •Respect local dress codes at Orthodox churches – cover shoulders and knees, women should bring a head scarf
- •Try Adjarian wine varieties like Chkhaveri – they're unique to this region and rarely found elsewhere in Georgia
