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Sustainable Travel · Georgia

Eco-Friendly Hotels in Georgia — Sustainable Stays 2026

Updated May 2026 · Carbon-neutral booking via IMPT · 10% cheaper than Booking.com

Georgia sits at the crossroads of Europe and Asia — a country of dramatic mountain passes, ancient wine valleys, and cities where medieval churches share streets with avant-garde architecture. From the cobblestone lanes of Tbilisi's Old Town to the Black Sea promenades of Batumi, Georgia offers extraordinary travel value with a carbon footprint far lighter than Western European destinations. Book through IMPT and every night removes 1 tonne of verified CO₂ from the atmosphere.

🌿 Every Georgia hotel booking on IMPT removes 1 tonne of CO₂. Same price — 10% cheaper than Booking.com. New members get €5 free credit.
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Explore Georgia's Eco-Friendly Destinations

🏛️ Tbilisi — The Capital

Georgia's vibrant capital blends UNESCO-listed old town charm with a booming food and wine scene. Ancient sulfur baths, hillside neighborhoods clinging to the Mtkvari River gorge, and a walkable city centre make Tbilisi one of the Caucasus's most rewarding destinations. Excellent value — boutique hotels from €25/night.

→ Eco-Friendly Hotels in Tbilisi

🌊 Batumi — The Black Sea Coast

Georgia's premier seaside city pairs a subtropical botanical garden — one of the oldest in Europe — with a striking modern skyline and a 7-kilometre pebble beach boulevard. Batumi's warm, humid climate supports lush vegetation year-round, and the compact city centre is entirely walkable.

→ Eco-Friendly Hotels in Batumi

Why Georgia for Sustainable Travel

Georgia's tourism infrastructure is compact and efficient. Both Tbilisi and Batumi are walkable cities with affordable public transport. The country's 8,000-year winemaking tradition — the oldest in the world — relies on qvevri clay-vessel fermentation, a low-energy, zero-additive process recognised by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage. Georgian cuisine is heavily plant-based by tradition: khinkali dumplings, pkhali walnut-herb spreads, and lobiani bean bread feature on every table.

The country's Caucasus mountain ecosystems — including Tusheti, Svaneti, and Kazbegi national parks — remain remarkably intact, and community-based tourism initiatives provide direct income to rural villages. Georgia's small scale means you can travel the entire country by train and marshrutka minibus without ever needing a flight.

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