Cheap Flights to Tbilisi
Updated 2026-03-13
From
$349
one-way
Current One-Way Deals to Tbilisi
No deals to Tbilisi right now.
Get alerts when deals dropPrices are for one-way flights. Links may earn us a commission at no cost to you.
Average One-Way Prices to Tbilisi
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $370 | $360 | $380 | $400 | $420 | $480 | $500 | $490 | $420 | $380 | $360 | $430 |
Cheapest month: Feb (avg $360). Prices are average one-way fares based on historical data.
How to Find Cheap Flights to Tbilisi
There are no nonstop flights from the US to Tbilisi (TBS), so you'll always be connecting. The best options: Turkish Airlines via Istanbul (IST) is the most popular and often cheapest route — one-ways from $349 during sales. LOT Polish Airlines via Warsaw is solid from East Coast cities. Qatar Airways via Doha is comfortable but pricier. Wizz Air flies to Tbilisi from several European cities (Budapest, Vienna, Berlin) for €30-80 one-way — so the cheapest overall strategy is often a budget flight to a European hub, then Wizz Air to TBS. FlyDubai and Air Arabia also run cheap Middle East connections. Georgian Airways operates direct from several European cities but limited schedule. Booking tip: the Istanbul connection on Turkish Airlines gives you the most flight options and shortest layovers. Use Google Flights to compare connection times — some routings have 12+ hour layovers that aren't worth the savings. January through March is cheapest. Summer gets pricier as Georgia has become a trendy destination. Book 6-8 weeks ahead for the best prices on connecting itineraries.
Tbilisi for Digital Nomads
Tbilisi is one of the best-value nomad destinations on the planet. Budget $600-1,000/month for a comfortable life — that's rent, food, coworking, and going out. A furnished apartment in the center runs $300-500/month. Here's the killer feature: Americans get 365 days visa-free in Georgia. One full year, no visa, no questions. This is the most generous visa policy for US citizens anywhere in the nomad world. Vake and Vera are the upscale neighborhoods with good cafes and restaurants. Saburtalo is more residential and cheaper. The Old Town (Abanotubani area) is beautiful but better for tourists than long-term stays. Coworking spaces include Terminal, Impact Hub Tbilisi, and Motley — all under $100/month. The food scene is incredible and cheap: khinkali dumplings for $2, khachapuri (cheese bread) for $3, and full restaurant meals for $8-12. Wine is practically free — Georgia has an 8,000-year winemaking tradition and a bottle of good local wine costs $3-5. Internet is solid (30-50 Mbps typical). The city is walkable and the metro costs $0.20 per ride. Downsides: limited direct flights, language barrier outside central areas, and winter gets cold.
Also Popular
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a one-way flight to Tbilisi?
What's the cheapest airline to fly to Tbilisi?
When is the cheapest time to fly to Tbilisi?
How long can Americans stay in Georgia?
Is Tbilisi good for digital nomads?
Never miss a deal to Tbilisi
We find the deals. You book cheap.
Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.