# Kutaisi Airport Transfer Guide (KUT) Practical guide to getting from Kutaisi International Airport to Kutaisi city, Tbilisi, and Batumi. Honest transport options and pricing. **Airport:** KUT **City:** Kutaisi **Country:** Georgia **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut **Last updated:** 2026-02-17 --- ## Main Guide ### Quick answer Kutaisi International Airport sits about 14 km west of Kutaisi city centre. It is Georgia's budget airline hub, primarily served by Wizz Air and a few other low-cost carriers. Many passengers arriving here are not actually staying in Kutaisi but heading to Tbilisi (230 km east, roughly 3.5-4 hours by road) or Batumi (150 km southwest, roughly 2.5-3 hours). A Georgian Railways bus connects the airport to Kutaisi train station, and from there you can connect to Tbilisi by train. Taxis and pre-booked transfers are the other main options. 👉 AirportTransferPortal offers fixed-price transfers on this route, which removes uncertainty on arrival. --- ### What actually happens after landing The terminal is modern but small. It was built to handle budget airline traffic and it shows in the efficient, no-frills design. Immigration for non-Georgian citizens is usually quick since flight volumes are modest. Baggage reclaim is straightforward with one or two carousels. Once you exit the arrivals area, you step into a clean, quiet terminal hall. There is a currency exchange counter, though the rate is not the best. Outside, the parking area has a row of taxis and usually the Georgian Railways shuttle bus if it is timed to your flight. The atmosphere is calm compared to larger airports, almost eerily so if you are used to the chaos of busier hubs. But the key challenge becomes apparent quickly: the airport is in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by flat agricultural land, and your onward options are limited. --- ### Transport options explained honestly **Georgian Railways bus** runs between the airport and Kutaisi train station, timed to coincide with flight arrivals and departures. From the train station, you can catch a train to Tbilisi (about 5.5 hours) or continue by marshrutka (minibus). The bus costs very little, around GEL 5-7. It is reliable when flights are on time, but if your flight is significantly delayed, the bus may not wait. **Taxis** wait outside the terminal. There are usually enough for the arriving passengers, but during peak times or when multiple flights land close together, the supply gets thin. Taxis are not metered. You negotiate the price before getting in. Drivers generally speak limited English, though younger drivers may have enough for basic communication. Expect to be quoted tourist prices initially. **Pre-booked private transfers** are arranged in advance and the driver meets you in the arrivals area or parking lot. The price is fixed. This is particularly useful if you are heading to Tbilisi or Batumi, as the longer journey makes a fixed price more valuable. **Bolt** (the rideshare app) works in Georgia and can be used at Kutaisi airport. Availability is not always immediate since the airport is outside the city, but drivers usually arrive within 10-20 minutes. Prices are typically lower than negotiated taxis. **Car rental** is available at the airport from a few companies. Georgian roads are generally adequate on main routes, and driving is a reasonable option if you plan to explore the country. --- ### Realistic pricing expectations Prices in Georgian Lari (GEL): - **Georgian Railways bus to Kutaisi station:** GEL 5-7 - **Taxi to Kutaisi centre:** GEL 20-35 - **Bolt to Kutaisi centre:** GEL 15-25 - **Pre-booked transfer to Kutaisi centre:** GEL 30-50 per vehicle - **Taxi to Tbilisi:** GEL 200-300 (negotiated) - **Pre-booked transfer to Tbilisi:** GEL 200-350 per vehicle - **Pre-booked transfer to Batumi:** GEL 180-300 per vehicle - **Train from Kutaisi to Tbilisi:** GEL 10-25 per person The train is by far the cheapest way to reach Tbilisi, but the total journey time (bus to station, wait, 5.5-hour train) is significant compared to a 3.5-4 hour direct transfer. --- ### Late night arrivals Budget airlines frequently arrive at awkward hours. Wizz Air flights often land late in the evening or even past midnight. The Georgian Railways bus adjusts its schedule to match flights, but it does not run if your flight arrives in the early hours without a scheduled bus connection. Taxis wait for late flights but in smaller numbers. Bolt availability decreases significantly after midnight. If you are heading to Kutaisi city, a pre-booked transfer or taxi will get you there at any hour. If you are heading to Tbilisi and arrive after midnight, you face a choice: find somewhere to sleep in Kutaisi and travel in the morning, or arrange a private transfer for the 3.5-4 hour overnight drive. Some travelers do the overnight drive to save a hotel night, which is viable if you have a reliable driver. --- ### Families and luggage The airport is easy to navigate with children. It is small, clean, and uncrowded. The difficulty for families is what comes next. The Georgian Railways bus has limited luggage space and is not practical for families with strollers and multiple bags. Taxis at the airport are mid-size sedans that handle two suitcases but struggle with more. Child car seats are not provided by taxis or the airport bus. Georgia has child car seat laws but enforcement is lax. If you need one, bring your own or request it when booking a transfer. For the long drive to Tbilisi or Batumi with children, a comfortable vehicle with enough space and a confirmed car seat is worth arranging in advance. --- ### Where you meet the driver Pre-booked transfer drivers wait in the arrivals hall or just outside the terminal exit. The airport is small enough that finding someone with a name board takes seconds. The Georgian Railways bus stops in the parking area directly outside the terminal, clearly visible. Taxis line up in the same area. Bolt drivers will meet you in the parking lot and communicate via the app. --- ### Decision helper **Take the Georgian Railways bus and train if** you are heading to Tbilisi on a budget, have time, travel light, and enjoy the journey. **Take a taxi or Bolt if** you are going to Kutaisi city, arrive during reasonable hours, and want a quick, inexpensive ride. **Book a private transfer if** you are heading to Tbilisi or Batumi directly, arriving late at night, traveling with family, have significant luggage, or value having the entire journey sorted before you land. **Rent a car if** you plan to travel around Georgia independently. The country is beautiful for road trips and distances are manageable. 👉 This is the lowest-friction option after a long flight. --- ### Summary Kutaisi Airport is modern, efficient, and easy to navigate. The challenge is not the airport but what comes after: getting from a rural location to wherever you are actually going. If Kutaisi is your destination, the journey is short and simple. If Tbilisi or Batumi is your goal, plan the onward connection before you fly. The savings from a budget airline ticket can evaporate quickly if you are stranded at the airport trying to arrange a 230 km journey at midnight. --- ## Frequently Asked Questions **Q: Is Kutaisi Airport the main airport in Georgia?** No, Tbilisi International Airport is the main hub. Kutaisi serves as the budget airline gateway. Many travelers using Kutaisi airport are actually heading to Tbilisi or Batumi. **Q: How do I get from Kutaisi Airport to Tbilisi?** The cheapest option is the airport bus to Kutaisi station, then a train to Tbilisi (combined journey about 7-8 hours total). A direct taxi or pre-booked transfer takes 3.5-4 hours by road and costs GEL 200-350. **Q: Does Bolt work at the airport?** Yes, but with longer wait times than in the city. The airport is 14 km from Kutaisi, so drivers need to come from town. Expect 10-20 minutes. Late at night, availability drops. **Q: Do I need a visa for Georgia?** Citizens of most European, North American, and many Asian countries can enter Georgia visa-free for up to one year. Check the current requirements for your nationality before travel. **Q: Is there an ATM at the airport?** There is typically at least one ATM and a currency exchange in the arrivals area. Georgian Lari (GEL) is the local currency. Cards are widely accepted in Kutaisi and Tbilisi, but having some cash is useful for taxis. **Q: How safe is it to take a taxi from the airport?** Georgia is generally very safe for tourists. Taxi drivers are not a safety concern. The main issue is agreeing on a fair price before the trip, as taxis are not metered. **Q: Is the road to Tbilisi good?** The main highway connecting Kutaisi to Tbilisi is a modern four-lane road for most of the route. The drive is straightforward and the road quality is good. It takes about 3.5-4 hours with normal driving. **Q: Can I get a SIM card at the airport?** Sometimes there is a small counter or vending option. Georgian SIM cards are cheap and easy to get. If none are available at the airport, you can pick one up at any Magti, Geocell, or Beeline shop in Kutaisi city. **Q: Is there anything to do in Kutaisi?** Yes. Kutaisi has the Bagrati Cathedral, Gelati Monastery (UNESCO World Heritage), Prometheus Cave, and Martvili Canyon nearby. Many travelers treat it as a transit point, but it is worth a day or two in its own right. **Q: What if my Wizz Air flight is delayed?** The Georgian Railways bus typically adjusts for flight delays if the delay is known in advance. Taxis wait for arriving flights regardless. Pre-booked transfers track your flight and adjust. If your flight is severely delayed and arrives in the early hours, transport options are limited to taxis and pre-booked transfers. --- ## Additional Guides ### Arriving at Kutaisi Airport late at night **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/late-night Budget airlines love awkward schedules. Wizz Air flights to Kutaisi frequently arrive at 23:00, midnight, or later. If you are on one of these flights, the transport calculation changes significantly from a daytime arrival. ## The airport at night The terminal handles late arrivals normally. Immigration, even for visa-required nationalities, moves quickly due to the modest passenger volumes. Baggage reclaim is fast. The building is modern and well-lit. You will be through the airport and outside within 20-40 minutes of landing in most cases. The currency exchange counter may be closed after midnight. Have some Georgian Lari or a card that works internationally. The ATM, if present, is your backup. ## Getting to Kutaisi city at night The Georgian Railways bus may or may not be running, depending on whether your flight time has a corresponding bus scheduled. Check the current timetable before your flight. If the bus is not running, you need a taxi, a Bolt ride, or a pre-booked transfer. Taxis wait for late flights but in reduced numbers. A few drivers will be in the parking lot, and the ride to central Kutaisi takes about 15-20 minutes. Negotiate the fare before getting in. GEL 25-40 is reasonable for a late-night trip to the city centre. Bolt may work but response times after midnight are slow. The airport is 14 km from town, and at 01:00 there may be very few active drivers. A pre-booked transfer removes all of this uncertainty. Your driver is there when you walk out, the price was agreed days ago, and you are in Kutaisi within 20 minutes. ## The Tbilisi problem This is where late arrivals get complicated. Tbilisi is 230 km away. If you arrive at midnight, you have two realistic options: **Sleep in Kutaisi and travel to Tbilisi in the morning.** Budget hotels in Kutaisi are inexpensive (GEL 40-80 for a decent room). The morning train or a daytime transfer to Tbilisi is straightforward. This is the sensible option for most travelers. **Drive through the night to Tbilisi.** Some travelers, particularly those with tight schedules, arrange a private transfer to Tbilisi directly from the airport. The drive takes about 3.5-4 hours on a good highway. Arriving at your Tbilisi hotel at 04:00 is not ideal, but it saves a night in Kutaisi and a travel day. Make sure your driver is experienced with the route and not fatigued. ## Getting to Batumi at night Batumi is 150 km southwest, about 2.5-3 hours by road. The same logic applies: sleep in Kutaisi and go in the morning, or drive through the night. The road to Batumi passes through some mountain sections that are darker and more winding than the Tbilisi highway. ## Safety Georgia is a safe country for travelers. The drive from the airport at night is uneventful on well-maintained roads. The concern is not safety but tiredness, both yours and potentially your driver's. If you opt for the overnight drive to Tbilisi, a professional transfer driver who does this regularly is preferable to a random taxi driver at the airport. ## Practical advice If your flight arrives after midnight and you are heading beyond Kutaisi, book a hotel in Kutaisi in advance. Walking into a hotel at 01:00 without a reservation in a small Georgian city is possible but not guaranteed. Have your plans sorted before you board the plane. --- ### Taxi vs pre-booked transfer from Kutaisi Airport **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/taxi-vs-transfer The right choice at Kutaisi Airport depends entirely on where you are going. For a short hop to Kutaisi city, a taxi or Bolt is perfectly fine. For the longer journey to Tbilisi or Batumi, the decision is more consequential. ## For trips to Kutaisi city (14 km) **Taxis** at the airport are standard Georgian sedans. Drivers wait in the parking lot and the supply is usually adequate for arriving flights. There are no meters, so agree on the price before you get in. GEL 20-35 is a fair range. Most drivers are honest, though tourist pricing applies. The ride takes 15-20 minutes. **Bolt** works at Kutaisi airport and typically quotes GEL 15-25 to the city centre. Wait times are longer than in town, usually 10-20 minutes, because drivers have to come from the city. The advantage is transparent pricing and a GPS-tracked ride. **Pre-booked transfers** to Kutaisi city cost GEL 30-50. For a short trip, this is harder to justify on price alone. The benefit is having someone waiting when you walk out, which matters more for late arrivals or if you have luggage that requires a specific vehicle. For Kutaisi trips, a Bolt ride is the best value. A taxi is fine if you do not want to wait for a Bolt driver. A transfer is best for late nights or specific needs. ## For trips to Tbilisi (230 km) This is where the comparison matters most, because you are committing to a 3.5-4 hour drive and a significant fare. **Negotiated taxi to Tbilisi:** GEL 200-300. The price depends on your bargaining and the driver's assessment of demand. You are in the car for nearly four hours, so the vehicle condition and the driver's competence matter. You cannot evaluate either very well in a parking lot. **Pre-booked transfer to Tbilisi:** GEL 200-350. The price is fixed, the vehicle is confirmed, and the driver is vetted by a company. For a nearly four-hour drive, knowing that the car is in good condition and the driver knows the route provides meaningful peace of mind. The price difference is small. For a journey this long, the certainty of a pre-booked transfer is worth it. ## For trips to Batumi (150 km) **Negotiated taxi:** GEL 150-250. The road to Batumi includes mountain sections and the journey takes 2.5-3 hours. **Pre-booked transfer:** GEL 180-300. Same advantages as the Tbilisi transfer: fixed price, confirmed vehicle, known driver. ## Comparison table | Factor | Taxi | Bolt | Pre-booked transfer | |--------|------|------|--------------------| | To Kutaisi | GEL 20-35 | GEL 15-25 | GEL 30-50 | | To Tbilisi | GEL 200-300 | Not practical | GEL 200-350 | | To Batumi | GEL 150-250 | Not practical | GEL 180-300 | | Price certainty | Low | High | High | | Vehicle choice | None | Limited | Full | | Late night | Available | Uncertain | Guaranteed | ## The long-distance verdict For short trips to Kutaisi, use Bolt or grab a taxi. For the long drive to Tbilisi or Batumi, a pre-booked transfer is the more sensible choice. You are spending nearly four hours in the vehicle. Knowing the price, the car, and the driver before you land is worth the small premium, if there even is one. --- ### Getting from Kutaisi Airport with kids and family **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/family-and-kids Kutaisi Airport is one of the easier airports to navigate with children. The terminal is small, modern, and uncrowded. The challenge for families is not the airport but the onward journey, particularly if your destination is Tbilisi or Batumi rather than Kutaisi itself. ## The terminal The building is compact and well-designed. The walk from the gate to baggage reclaim is short. There are clean toilet facilities. The arrivals process is quick. With children, you will be outside within 20-40 minutes of landing. There is nothing particularly stressful about this airport, which is a welcome change if you have been through larger, more chaotic hubs. ## Car seats Georgia has child car seat laws, but compliance in taxis is very low. Airport taxis do not carry child seats. The Georgian Railways bus does not have them either. If your child needs an appropriate restraint, you need to bring your own or arrange a transfer and request one specifically. For the short drive to Kutaisi city, some families accept the risk of a 15-minute ride without a car seat. For the 3.5-4 hour drive to Tbilisi, this is a different calculation entirely. Hours on a highway without a proper child restraint is something most parents would prefer to avoid. If booking a transfer for the long journey, confirm the car seat is included. Specify your child's age and weight. ## The long drive to Tbilisi with children If your actual destination is Tbilisi, you are looking at roughly 3.5-4 hours in a car. For young children, this is a significant journey. The highway is modern and well-maintained, but there are limited rest stops along the route. Plan accordingly: - Pack snacks and water in your carry-on, accessible for the car - Bring entertainment: tablets, books, games - Plan at least one stop, even if the driver does not suggest it - Leave the airport as quickly as possible to minimize total travel time The vehicle matters for this journey. A family of four with luggage needs more than a standard sedan if you want everyone to be comfortable for four hours. Request a minivan or larger SUV when booking. ## The Georgian Railways bus option The airport bus to Kutaisi station is cheap and functional, but with a family it becomes complicated. Luggage space is limited, there are no child seats, and you then need to manage a train transfer at the station. The train to Tbilisi takes about 5.5 hours. Combined, you are looking at 7-8 hours of travel with at least two transitions. With young children and luggage, this is exhausting. It works for budget-conscious adults but is hard to recommend for families. ## Kutaisi as a base If your final destination is elsewhere in Georgia, consider spending a night in Kutaisi rather than rushing onward. The city has affordable hotels, and starting fresh in the morning makes the onward journey easier for everyone, especially children. Kutaisi itself has things to see, including a cathedral and nearby caves, so a night there is not wasted time. ## Summary The airport is family-friendly. The transport from it requires thought, especially for long distances. For families heading to Tbilisi or Batumi, a pre-booked transfer with a suitable vehicle and car seat is the most practical option. For families staying in Kutaisi, even a basic taxi works for the short ride into town, though you will want to bring your own car seat if your child needs one. --- ### What it costs to get from Kutaisi Airport to your destination **URL:** https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/cost-to-city Kutaisi Airport serves three distinct groups of travelers: those staying in Kutaisi, those heading to Tbilisi, and those heading to Batumi. The cost structure is very different for each. ## To Kutaisi city centre (14 km) - **Georgian Railways bus:** GEL 5-7 per person (cheapest option, timed to flights) - **Bolt:** GEL 15-25 (transparent pricing, may require 10-20 min wait) - **Negotiated taxi:** GEL 20-35 per vehicle - **Pre-booked transfer:** GEL 30-50 per vehicle For Kutaisi, transport is cheap by any measure. Even the most expensive option, a pre-booked transfer at GEL 50, is roughly USD 18. ## To Tbilisi (230 km) This is where costs diverge significantly based on your choice. - **Bus + train combo:** GEL 15-30 per person. Airport bus to Kutaisi station (GEL 5-7), then train to Tbilisi (GEL 10-25 depending on class). Total travel time: 7-8 hours. This is the budget option. - **Negotiated taxi:** GEL 200-300 per vehicle. Price depends on negotiation. Journey time: 3.5-4 hours. - **Pre-booked transfer:** GEL 200-350 per vehicle. Fixed price. Same journey time. - **Shared transfer (if available):** GEL 30-60 per person. Some companies offer shared rides to Tbilisi when there are enough passengers. Not guaranteed. For a solo traveler, the train is cheapest at GEL 30 total but takes all day. A shared transfer at GEL 50 is better value for time. For couples or groups, a private transfer at GEL 250 split between passengers becomes very reasonable. ## To Batumi (150 km) - **Marshrutka (minibus) from Kutaisi:** GEL 10-15 per person, but you first need to get to Kutaisi bus station. - **Negotiated taxi from airport:** GEL 150-250 per vehicle. Journey time: 2.5-3 hours. - **Pre-booked transfer:** GEL 180-300 per vehicle. ## To other destinations - **Borjomi:** GEL 120-180 by transfer (about 2 hours) - **Mestia (Svaneti):** GEL 250-400 by transfer (about 5-6 hours, mountain roads) - **Gori:** GEL 150-220 by transfer (about 2.5 hours) ## What affects pricing **Distance** is the obvious factor for longer journeys. The Tbilisi trip involves real fuel costs and 7-8 hours of the driver's time (return trip included). **Season** has some effect. During peak tourist months (June-September), prices for transfers to Tbilisi and Batumi may be slightly higher due to demand. **Time of arrival** matters for taxis. Fewer drivers at night means less competition and potentially higher quotes. Pre-booked transfers are not affected by this. **Group size** is the biggest factor in per-person cost. A private transfer to Tbilisi at GEL 250 costs GEL 250 whether one person rides or four. For groups, this is excellent value. For solo travelers, the train or shared transfer makes more financial sense. ## Currency note All prices are in Georgian Lari (GEL). At current rates, GEL 1 is roughly USD 0.37 or EUR 0.34. Georgia is inexpensive by European standards. Even the most expensive transfer option from Kutaisi to Tbilisi costs roughly what a short taxi ride costs in Western Europe. Cards are accepted by most transfer companies and through the Bolt app. Taxis prefer cash. --- ## Related Pages - [Main arrival guide](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut) - [Late night arrivals](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/late-night) - [Taxi vs transfer](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/taxi-vs-transfer) - [Family & kids](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/family-and-kids) - [Cost to city](https://www.airporttransferportal.com/airport-guides/kut/cost-to-city) --- ## Check before you land 👉 This route is actively served by AirportTransferPortal with fixed-price booking available before arrival. Check real vehicles and prices before your flight. Booking takes a few minutes and ensures someone is waiting when you arrive. --- ## Operational Note This guide reflects real operational conditions, pricing ranges, and traveler experience at Kutaisi (KUT). Transfer availability is supported by AirportTransferPortal's verified supplier network. --- ## Attribution Published by AirportTransferPortal (airporttransferportal.com), a global airport transfer marketplace operated by Funny Tourism Ltd.