Cheap Car Rental in Kutaisi, Georgia – From $26/day | KUT Airport Pickup, No deposit
Best Car Rental Deals in Kutaisi

Cheap Car Rental in Kutaisi, Georgia – From $26/day | KUT Airport Pickup, No deposit

Travel Guide

Car Rental in Kutaisi, Georgia — A Practical Guide for Independent Travellers

Kutaisi sits 221 km west of Tbilisi and gives you direct road access to Prometheus Cave, Okatse Canyon, Svaneti, and the Racha wine valley — none of which are easy to reach without a car. This guide covers everything from picking up at KUT Airport to planning a full western Georgia road trip, with honest advice on deposits, vehicle choices, road conditions, and costs.

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Picking Up Your Car at Kutaisi Airport (KUT)

Kutaisi International Airport (IATA: KUT) sits 16 km east of the city centre, roughly a 20-minute drive on a clear road. Wizz Air operates the heaviest schedule — flights from Warsaw, Budapest, Vienna, Katowice, and several UK airports. Ryanair adds Rome Ciampino, Milan Bergamo, and Warsaw Modlin routes. Most arrivals land between 08:00 and midnight, though delays of 30–45 minutes are common on busy routes from Western Europe.

Airport CodeKUT — Kutaisi Intl.
Distance to Centre16 km (~20 min drive)
Taxi (no car)30–45 GEL (~$11–17)
Desk LocationArrivals hall, ground floor
Counter Wait10–45 min after landing
Operating Hours07:00–23:00 daily
Nearest Fuel4 km west on E60
Main AirlinesWizz Air, Ryanair

Rental desks at KUT are in the arrivals hall on the ground floor. Wait times at the counter are typically 10–20 minutes after a full Wizz Air A321 lands. If three or four aircraft arrive within the same 30-minute window, expect up to 45 minutes. Booking online in advance means your vehicle is pre-assigned — you sign the contract, collect the keys, and leave without queuing at a booking terminal.

The car park at KUT charges 1 GEL per hour for the first two hours, then 0.50 GEL/hour after that. If you’re picking up someone and waiting, the short-stay bay directly in front of arrivals is free for 15 minutes.

Fuel tip: The nearest petrol stations to KUT are on the E60 highway heading into Kutaisi, about 4 km from the terminal. Both Lukoil and Gulf stations are on the left side heading west. Rental cars come with a full tank — return them full to avoid the refuelling surcharge, which typically runs $1.80–2.20 per litre instead of the pump price of ~$1.08.

No Deposit vs Low Deposit — What Each Option Covers

Deposit policy is one of the most common concerns for car hire in Kutaisi, and for good reason. Standard international rental companies pre-authorise $200–$400 on your credit card. That hold can sit on your account for 10–21 days after return. If you’re travelling on a debit card, a prepaid card, or a tight daily budget, this creates real friction.

🔓

No Deposit

Zero pre-authorisation. Pay the daily rate only. Works with debit and prepaid cards. Available on economy and compact vehicles from $26/day. Daily rate is $3–$6 higher than the standard option.

💳

Low Deposit

A reduced hold of $50–$100 instead of the standard $200–$400. Compatible with most debit cards. Wider vehicle selection including compacts, sedans, and smaller SUVs up to Toyota RAV4 class.

🚗

City Delivery

Car delivered to your Kutaisi hotel, apartment, or a city-centre address. Useful if you arrive by overnight train from Tbilisi or by marshrutka from Batumi. Delivery fee is typically 25–40 GEL.

Full insurance is included across all vehicle categories on this platform — collision damage, third-party liability, and theft. Read the excess amount in your booking confirmation; it typically ranges from $0 to $150 depending on the vehicle class. Paying the slightly higher no-deposit rate often costs less over a 5-day hire than the credit card interest on a $300 hold.

Which Vehicle Class to Choose for Kutaisi and Western Georgia

The right car depends entirely on where you plan to drive. The E60 motorway and Imereti valley roads are smooth enough for any economy hatchback. Mountain routes above Zugdidi and the Racha valley lanes benefit from extra ground clearance. Here’s what each class costs and what it realistically covers.

Economy

Hyundai Accent / Kia Rio

$26–$34/day

Manual gearbox. Fuel economy ~6.5L/100 km. Handles E60, Prometheus Cave, and Okatse Canyon without any issue. Tight in Kutaisi’s narrow old-town streets — an asset, not a drawback.

Compact

Toyota Corolla / VW Golf

$34–$48/day

Automatic available. More boot space for longer trips. Comfortable on the 3-hour Kutaisi–Tbilisi run. Good choice for couples doing a mixed city-and-cave itinerary.

SUV

Toyota RAV4 / Mitsubishi Outlander

$55–$75/day

AWD or 4WD. Recommended for Svaneti above Mestia and Racha valley side roads in spring. 200 mm ground clearance handles the uneven sections without any modification.

Premium

Mercedes C-Class / BMW 5

$90–$150/day

For business travel or a comfortable long-distance drive. Tbilisi–Kutaisi in under 2.5 hours in genuine comfort. Automatic transmission only. Age minimum 25.

4×4 Off-Road

Toyota Land Cruiser 200

$110–$160/day

The serious mountain vehicle. If you plan to drive unpaved tracks in Upper Svaneti, pass through to Ushguli (2,200 m altitude), or explore Tusheti, this is the right tool.

Minivan

Toyota Alphard / Hyundai Starex

$70–$95/day

7–8 seats. Good for group travel of 5–7 people sharing costs. Fuel economy drops to ~10L/100 km on mountain roads. Book early — fewer available at KUT.

Budget Manual

Dacia Logan / Chevrolet Spark

$26–$30/day

Lowest daily rate on the platform. Manual only. Fine for city driving and day trips to caves and canyons. Not ideal for steep mountain gradients with a full load of luggage.

Crossover

Nissan Qashqai / Hyundai Tucson

$48–$65/day

The practical middle ground. Higher seating position than a sedan, better fuel economy than a full SUV. Handles the Kutaisi–Mestia route and most Racha roads with ease.

840+ Cars Available at Kutaisi Airport Right Now

Economy hatchbacks from $26/day, SUVs for Svaneti from $55/day. No deposit options on most categories. Full insurance included. City delivery to your Kutaisi hotel available.

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Self-Drive Routes from Kutaisi — Caves, Canyons, and Wine Roads

The strongest case for renting a car in Kutaisi is the concentration of natural sites within 50 km of the city. Tour operators charge $40–$80 per person for group day trips to the same places you can reach independently for the cost of a tank of fuel. These eight routes cover the main attractions — four within a half-day drive and four requiring an overnight stay.

Half day

Prometheus Cave

Georgia’s largest show cave, 22 km north-west near Tskhaltubo. Entry 23 GEL, boat ride inside 15 GEL extra. Arrive before 10:00 to beat coach groups. Smooth tarmac all the way.

22 km · 35 min drive
Half day

Sataplia Reserve

Dinosaur footprints and a smaller cave 9 km from Kutaisi centre. Entry 15 GEL. The glass-floor walkway over the canyon edge is a highlight. Takes 2–3 hours including the walk.

9 km · 18 min drive
Full day

Okatse Canyon

Suspended walkway over a 20 m wide canyon, 44 km west of Kutaisi. Combine with Kinchkha Waterfall (70 m drop) 8 km away. Plan 5–6 hours total. Standard road car handles the route fine.

44 km · 55 min drive
Full day

Gelati & Motsameta

Two UNESCO-listed monasteries 14 km from the city centre, both on the same loop road. Gelati’s interior mosaics date to the 12th century. Free entry; parking is free and supervised.

14 km · 22 min drive
Overnight

Racha Wine Valley

90 km north-east to Ambrolauri through walnut forests and river gorges. Home of Khvanchkara semi-sweet red wine. Zero foreign tourists. Wineries open for tastings, no booking needed. Stay overnight.

90 km · 2 hrs drive
Multi-day

Kutaisi → Mestia (Svaneti)

240 km north via Zugdidi into the Greater Caucasus. Allow 5–6 hours one-way on paved roads. AWD recommended above Mestia. Fill the tank in Zugdidi — no stations for 50 km after that.

240 km · 5–6 hrs
Day trip

Bagrati Cathedral

11th-century cathedral 2 km from Kutaisi centre on a hilltop with views over the Rioni river valley. Walk from the city or drive up in 8 minutes. Free entry. Good starting point for any morning before a longer drive.

2 km · 8 min drive
Full day

Martvili Canyon

Turquoise river canyon 60 km west of Kutaisi, with boat tours through the gorge. Entry 20 GEL, boat ride 15 GEL. Often combined with Okatse on the same day. Road surfaces are good throughout.

60 km · 1 hr 10 min
Honest road note: Roads around Kutaisi and towards Prometheus Cave are generally smooth. The mountain roads towards Svaneti have potholes and narrow sections after Zugdidi. Petrol stations thin out above Mestia — fill the tank in Zugdidi before the final climb. On the Racha route, the last 20 km before Ambrolauri has unsealed sections after heavy rain in spring.

One-Way Car Hire from Kutaisi — Routes and Drop-Off Fees

One-way car rental between Kutaisi and other Georgian cities is well-supported on this platform. The most searched routes, with honest journey time estimates based on actual road conditions:

Most popular

Kutaisi → Tbilisi

220 km on the E60 motorway. Around 3 hours with no stops in normal traffic. Common for Wizz Air arrivals who want western Georgia first, then the capital. Drop-off fee: 50–80 GEL.

220 km · ~3 hrs via E60
Coast route

Kutaisi → Batumi

190 km south-west along the E70, arriving at the Black Sea coast. Around 2.5 hours. Good road surface. One of the more scenic drives — Colchic lowland rice paddies give way to subtropical forest near Batumi.

190 km · ~2.5 hrs
Mountain loop

Kutaisi → Stepantsminda

Route via Tbilisi then north on the Georgian Military Highway to Kazbegi. Around 310 km total, 4.5 hours. Suits travellers doing a full Georgia loop without backtracking. Drop-off fee: 80–120 GEL.

310 km · ~4.5 hrs
Spa town

Kutaisi → Borjomi

115 km south-east through the Likhi Range. Around 2 hours on winding but paved road. Popular with travellers combining western Georgia with the famous mineral spa resort. Drop-off fee: 40–60 GEL.

115 km · ~2 hrs

One-way fees vary by supplier. Filter by “one-way allowed” when searching to avoid surprises at the counter. Most suppliers add GEL 50–150 for a cross-city drop-off — significantly cheaper than a return taxi or a marshrutka with luggage and full backpacks.

Driving in Kutaisi — Road Conditions, Traffic, and Parking

Kutaisi’s city centre has narrow one-way streets and limited parking near the central market on Tsentraluri Street. The White Bridge area and the market district get congested between 09:00–11:00 and again between 17:00–19:00. If your hotel is in the old town, plan to park one street back from the river.

The E60 dual carriageway connecting Kutaisi to Tbilisi is Georgia’s best road — well-lit, properly signed, and mostly four-lane between Kutaisi and Gori. Speed cameras are installed at regular intervals; the limit is 100 km/h on the open carriageway and 60 km/h through towns. Georgian traffic police run document checks, particularly near Zestafoni — carry your rental agreement, driving licence, and passport at all times.

Speed limits

100 km/h on E60, 60 km/h through towns, 40–50 km/h in mountain villages. Speed cameras are common between Kutaisi and Gori. Fines are collected on the spot or via bank transfer.

Parking in the city

On-street parking costs 0.30 GEL/hour via the PayBox app or coin machines. The car park at Gelati Monastery is free and supervised. Hotel car parks are rare in the old town — confirm before arrival.

Documents to carry

Rental agreement, driving licence, and passport at all times. Police conduct spot-checks near Zestafoni on the E60. EU and UK licences are accepted. Non-Latin script licences require an IDP.

Truck traffic on E60

Trucks to and from Poti port use the E60 in significant numbers. Give marshrutka minibuses space — they’re fast and sometimes unpredictable. Overtaking on single-carriageway sections requires patience.

Mountain roads

Roads to Svaneti are paved but narrow after Zugdidi. Passing places exist on the steep sections. Never drive the Mestia road in winter without snow chains or AWD. The road closes completely in heavy snow.

Mobile coverage

Magti and Geocell have solid 4G along the E60 and in Kutaisi city. Coverage drops significantly in the Racha valley and above Mestia. Download offline maps before leaving — Google Maps works without data.

Best Time to Rent a Car in Kutaisi — Season by Season

Western Georgia has a humid subtropical climate, so driving conditions vary substantially across the year. Kutaisi itself is drivable year-round. The mountain routes are the factor that changes.

🌿 Spring (Mar–May)

Excellent for the Racha valley — wildflowers, green gorges, almost no tourists. Some unpaved sections near villages are muddy after March rain. Caves and canyons are open. Svaneti road opens in April–May depending on snowmelt.

☀️ Summer (Jun–Aug)

Peak season. All roads open and dry. Prometheus Cave is busiest — arrive before 09:30. The E60 gets congested on weekends with Kutaisi residents heading to Batumi. Fuel stations are well-stocked. Book rental cars 1–2 weeks ahead.

🍂 Autumn (Sep–Nov)

The best overall driving season. Lighter traffic than summer, pleasant 16–22°C temperatures, and the Racha wine harvest in September–October. Svaneti road is open through October. November brings rain; mountain roads can get icy above 1,500 m.

❄️ Winter (Dec–Feb)

Kutaisi city and the Imereti valley remain accessible. Prometheus Cave and Martvili Canyon are open year-round. The Svaneti road frequently closes December–February. If your plan includes Mestia, check road status the morning of departure on Georgia’s road agency website.

Budget Car Hire vs Luxury Rental — What $26/day Gets You

At the $26/day entry price you’re typically looking at economy hatchbacks — Hyundai Accent, Kia Rio, or Dacia Logan — with manual transmission and air conditioning. Automatic adds $5–$12/day depending on availability.

Good reasons to stay economy
  • Kutaisi city parking is tight; a smaller car is practical
  • Prometheus Cave and Okatse Canyon roads are smooth — no 4×4 needed
  • Fuel economy on a Hyundai Accent: ~6.5L/100 km
  • Lower daily rate frees budget for cave entries and wine tastings
  • Manual gearbox is common in Georgia — automatics cost more
  • 5-day budget hire at $26 = $130 total, leaving headroom for Svaneti accommodation
When to upgrade your vehicle
  • Svaneti side roads above Mestia — AWD is genuinely useful
  • Travelling with 3–4 people and full backpacks or checked bags
  • Winter travel November–March in any mountain area
  • Racha valley in spring after heavy rain — some unsealed sections
  • Business travel combining Kutaisi meetings with Tbilisi visits
  • Tusheti (requires specific 4×4 — confirm with supplier)

Fuel prices in Georgia run around 2.90–3.10 GEL per litre for regular (AI-92), roughly $1.05–1.12. A full 40-litre tank costs about $43 at current exchange rates. Budget accordingly for multi-day mountain drives — the Kutaisi–Mestia–Kutaisi round trip uses roughly 35–40 litres in a compact car.

Planning a Svaneti Road Trip from Kutaisi?

AWD SUVs and 4x4s are available from $55/day at KUT Airport. Book 3–5 days in advance in summer — mountain-capable vehicles sell out quickly. One-way returns to Tbilisi also available.

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Arriving on Wizz Air or Ryanair — What to Know Before You Land

Kutaisi Airport is built for budget airline traffic. If you’re arriving from Warsaw Chopin, Budapest, Vienna, or any of the Ryanair European hubs, here’s what’s relevant specifically for you.

Most Wizz Air flights into KUT arrive in the evening — the Warsaw–Kutaisi service lands around 22:30, and the Budapest service around 21:15. If you arrive late and need to drive to Tbilisi or Batumi that night, budget for at least 3.5 hours and factor in fatigue after the flight. A better option is to stay one night near Kutaisi and drive in daylight.

The arrival hall at KUT is small — one conveyor belt for checked luggage, which starts moving within 20 minutes of landing. The rental counter queue forms quickly after a full Wizz Air A321 (186 passengers). If you and 30 other passengers all booked rental cars, you’ll be waiting. Pre-booking and choosing city delivery to a Kutaisi hotel avoids this entirely.

Budget traveller note: A 5-day economy car rental in Kutaisi at $26/day totals $130. A 5-day tour package covering the same Prometheus Cave, Okatse Canyon, and Svaneti highlights costs $350–$500 per person for a group tour. Self-drive is the cheaper option for two people sharing a car, and gives you the flexibility to stay longer at the places that matter.

Required Documents and Rental Rules in Georgia

Georgia’s rental requirements are straightforward compared to most European countries. Here’s what you need at the counter and what to be aware of before you drive.

Driving licence

EU licences valid without IDP for up to 1 year. UK licence holders do not need an IDP. Non-Latin script licences (Arabic, Chinese, Cyrillic) require an IDP from your home country. Georgian police accept both.

Minimum age

21 years old for economy and compact. Ages 21–24 pay a young driver surcharge of $5–$8/day. Luxury, premium SUV, and off-road categories require age 25+. Confirm in the vehicle listing before booking.

Rental agreement

Carry the printed or digital rental agreement at all times. Georgian traffic police at checkpoints on the E60 ask for this alongside your licence. A PDF on your phone is accepted — screenshot it in case of no signal.

Frequently Asked Questions About Car Rental in Kutaisi

Yes. No-deposit options are available on economy and compact vehicles. The daily rate is $3–$6/day higher than the standard rate, but no pre-authorisation is held on your card. Filter by “no deposit” on the Kutaisi search page. Works with debit and prepaid cards.
EU driving licences are accepted without an IDP for stays up to one year. UK licence holders do not require an IDP for Georgia. If your licence is not in the Latin or Georgian script — Arabic, Chinese, or Cyrillic — carry an IDP from your home country. Georgian police accept digital and printed rental agreements.
Cross-border permission must be requested at the time of booking — it is not automatic. Most suppliers allow Armenia and Turkey with written authorisation and a small fee. The Sarpi crossing (Georgia–Turkey) is smooth for rental cars with correct paperwork. Confirm at the counter before departing.
The standard minimum age is 21. Drivers aged 21–24 pay a young driver surcharge of $5–$8/day. Luxury and premium SUV categories require age 25. Off-road vehicles like the Land Cruiser 200 also require 25+. Check the specific listing for exact age restrictions before booking.
Allow 5–6 hours for the 240 km route via Zugdidi. The road is paved throughout, but the final 50 km from Zugdidi to Mestia has winding mountain sections with 40–50 km/h limits through villages. Do not start this drive after 15:00 if you want to arrive in daylight. Fill the tank in Zugdidi — no stations for 50 km after that.
Fuel costs around 2.90–3.10 GEL per litre (~$1.05–1.12), cheap by European standards. A full 40-litre compact tank costs roughly $43. Diesel runs slightly cheaper at 2.70–2.80 GEL/L. Petrol stations are plentiful on all main roads — Lukoil, Gulf, and Wissol are the main brands. Mountain roads above Mestia have no stations for 50+ km stretches.
Yes, one-way rentals between Kutaisi and Tbilisi are available and common. The drop-off fee is typically GEL 50–80 depending on the supplier. Filter by “one-way allowed” in the search results. The route is 220 km on the E60 motorway, around 3 hours with no major stops.
KUT is 16 km east of Kutaisi city centre, about 20 minutes by car on a clear road. A taxi without a rental car costs 30–45 GEL (around $11–17). There is no direct bus connection from the airport to the centre. The rental car makes more sense financially if you’re spending more than two days in the region.
You need your driving licence (original, not a photocopy), your passport, the booking confirmation number or voucher, and a payment card. For no-deposit options, a debit card works. For standard options, a credit card is required for the pre-authorisation. Some suppliers also accept Google Pay or Apple Pay for the deposit hold.
Most cars at KUT do not come with a built-in GPS. Use your phone with Google Maps or Maps.me (offline maps work well in rural Georgia). Download the offline maps for the Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti region and Racha before you leave Kutaisi — signal drops significantly above Zugdidi.
All rentals on this platform include roadside assistance contact details in the rental agreement. Save the number before leaving Kutaisi. Response times in cities are typically 30–60 minutes. In remote mountain areas, wait times can be 2–4 hours. Georgia’s road assistance network (patrol service) also covers the main highways — the number is 1505.
Tusheti requires explicit written permission from the supplier and a capable 4×4 — the access road is one of the most difficult in Georgia (unpaved, steep, no barriers on cliff sections). Kutaisi is not the usual base for Tusheti trips; the route starts from Telavi, 300 km away. Confirm with the supplier before booking if this is your plan.

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