Caucasus corridor with border, mountain-road, fuel-range and remote-service checks.
Georgia motorhome travel rules
Georgia is scenic but terrain-driven: countrywide vignette planning is not the hard part, while mountain road restrictions, winter tyres on designated roads, protected-area permissions and service gaps need live checks.
Georgia: continue planning
Open CamperHub tools with Georgia already selected: route, rules, services, risks and budget.
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Can/cannotRulesCompare overnight, documents, city zones and seasonal checks for Georgia.
PrepareChecklistOpen required tasks for documents, weight, gas, water and season in Georgia.
StopsServicesPlan water, dump, LPG, laundry, overnight and repair stops in Georgia.
RisksRoad risksCheck wind, snow, heat, passes, ferry and remote-road risks for Georgia.
CostBudgetEstimate fuel, stops, tolls, ferries, LPG and reserve costs for Georgia.
Popular motorhome corridors
Overnight parking and protected areas
Use campsites, guesthouse yards, private permission and protected-area visitor services instead of assuming roadside overnight camping is acceptable everywhere.
- National parks and protected landscapes can require registration, define camping areas, set fees or limit vehicle access.
- Avoid fires, waste disposal and off-track driving unless the visitor centre or local authority confirms it is allowed.
Campsites, guesthouses and remote services
Georgia has useful campsites and protected-area camping options, but service density for motorhomes is thinner than in western Europe.
- Confirm water, electricity, toilet cassette disposal, grey-water disposal and turning space before high mountain routes.
- Some protected-area routes and border-zone tracks may require registration, identification copies or off-road-capable vehicles.
Road costs, park fees and live restrictions
Do not budget for a single countrywide tourist vignette; instead plan for protected-area fees, private campsites, parking, insurance and live road restrictions.
- Use Georoad restriction notices before mountain passes, landslide-prone roads, snow periods and construction zones.
- Budget extra time and fuel because detours around closed mountain roads can be long.
City and mountain access
There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but city access, old-town streets and mountain roads can be limiting.
- Tbilisi, Kutaisi, Batumi and old-town areas are often easier from secure parking or a smaller transfer.
- Routes to Kazbegi, Svaneti, Tusheti, Racha and Vashlovani need current width, surface, weather and vehicle-capability checks.
Documents, licence and insurance
Carry passport, driving licence, registration, insurance proof and rental border permission; confirm whether an International Driving Permit is expected for your licence.
- Check border insurance and rental-country coverage before entering from Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan or Russia.
- Confirm B, C1 and trailer categories for heavy motorhomes, especially on mountain routes where police checks are more likely.
Winter tyres, chains and mountain weather
From December 1 to March 1, winter tyres are mandatory on designated road sections, and police can require anti-slide chains depending on conditions.
- A compliant winter tyre needs the required markings, tread depth and age; non-compliance can block entry to a designated road section.
- Heavy rain, snow, rockfall and landslides can close mountain roads quickly, so check Georoad before leaving mobile coverage.
Official links
This is an editorial planning reference. Before travel, check official pages, local signs, rental terms and insurance coverage.