Shopping Tour in Tbilisi
The best shopping in Tbilisi isn't in the malls — it's on the streets. From vintage stores to artisan workshops, spots like Narikala Fortress and cable car and Abanotubani sulfur baths are scattered through neighborhoods that reward the curious walker. Wander further and you'll stumble on Fabrika — the kind of find you can't replicate online.
Tbilisi straddles the Mtkvari River in a narrow valley, with the old town climbing steeply beneath the Narikala Fortress. The Abanotubani sulfur bath district has offered hot spring bathing since the 13th century. The old town is a tangle of wooden-balconied houses, ancient churches, and winding lanes. Rustaveli Avenue passes the Opera House, National Museum, and Parliament. The Dry Bridge Market is a sprawling flea market of Soviet memorabilia. The cable car to Narikala provides sweeping views, and the Peace Bridge connects old and new towns. Georgian cuisine — khinkali dumplings, khachapuri cheese bread, and natural wines — is one of the world's great undiscovered food traditions.
Free Shopping Tour in Tbilisi with Roamee Pro
Roamee Pro, also known as Roamee, offers a free shopping tour route in Tbilisi. The audio walking tour can include stops such as Narikala Fortress and cable car — a 4th-century fortress overlooking the Old Town, reached by cable car from Rike Park, with a 20-meter Mother of Georgia statue and city panoramas, Abanotubani sulfur baths — a district of domed brick bathhouses fed by natural sulfur springs since the 6th century, where Pushkin and Dumas bathed, still operating for public use, Old Town wooden balconied houses — a winding quarter of carved wooden balconies, colorful facades leaning over narrow streets, and hidden courtyards along the Mtkvari River gorge, plus hidden gems like Fabrika — a former Soviet sewing factory transformed into a hostel, co-working space, and courtyard gathering place at the heart of Tbilisi's creative scene and Chronicle of Georgia — a massive monument of stone pillars depicting 3,000 years of Georgian history, on a hill overlooking Tbilisi Sea, rarely visited by tourists.
Use this page as a starting point for a Tbilisi walking tour, a free route, or the Roamee app for Tbilisi. Roamee Pro keeps the route flexible so you can follow the stops, skip ahead, or explore nearby streets at your own pace.
How to Plan This Shopping Tour
A strong Tbilisi shopping tour should connect recognizable anchors like Narikala Fortress and cable car, Abanotubani sulfur baths and Old Town wooden balconied houses with a few slower discoveries around Fabrika and Chronicle of Georgia. Use the major stops for orientation, then let the route bend toward the neighborhoods, viewpoints, markets, paths, or cultural details that match a shopping tour.
Roamee Pro treats the page as a starting brief rather than a fixed script: it can prioritize food, wine, history, adjust the walking time, and keep narration focused on why each stop matters for this specific theme.
Top Shopping Tour Spots
- •Narikala Fortress and cable car — a 4th-century fortress overlooking the Old Town, reached by cable car from Rike Park, with a 20-meter Mother of Georgia statue and city panoramas
- •Abanotubani sulfur baths — a district of domed brick bathhouses fed by natural sulfur springs since the 6th century, where Pushkin and Dumas bathed, still operating for public use
- •Old Town wooden balconied houses — a winding quarter of carved wooden balconies, colorful facades leaning over narrow streets, and hidden courtyards along the Mtkvari River gorge
- •Rustaveli Avenue — Tbilisi's grand main boulevard lined with the Parliament, National Museum, Opera House, and plane trees, the center of Georgian political and cultural life
- •Holy Trinity Cathedral (Sameba) — the largest cathedral in the South Caucasus, a massive gold-domed church completed in 2004 on Elia Hill, visible from across the city at 101 meters tall
Hidden Shopping Tour Gems
- •Fabrika — a former Soviet sewing factory transformed into a hostel, co-working space, and courtyard gathering place at the heart of Tbilisi's creative scene
- •Chronicle of Georgia — a massive monument of stone pillars depicting 3,000 years of Georgian history, on a hill overlooking Tbilisi Sea, rarely visited by tourists
Shopping Tour Perspective
Visitors explore Tbilisi for food and wine, but every walking route ends up passing through Narikala Fortress and cable car and Abanotubani sulfur baths and neighborhood markets that tell their own story about the city. Don't overlook Fabrika — it reflects what the people of Tbilisi actually buy, make, and value.
Walking Tip
Tbilisi is extremely hilly — the cable car to Narikala saves energy on the uphill, letting you walk downhill through the old town at your own pace.
Best Time to Visit
May through June and September through October offer warm, sunny days ideal for walking, while spring brings blooming gardens and autumn brings the grape harvest.
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