When you arrive in Svaneti, you will find proper hotels — a handful in Mestia, mostly built in the last decade. They are clean, some have spas, and none of them will give you what a family guesthouse can. In Svaneti, the accommodation is part of the experience. The towers are medieval, the mountains are enormous, and the Svans have a saying: a guest brings luck to a house. They mean it.
A family guesthouse here means a home where someone’s grandmother is making kubdari in the kitchen, where the host will pull out an unlabelled bottle of homemade chacha before you have even asked, and where breakfast is still on the table when you come back from a morning hike. It is not polished. Showers vary. Wi-Fi is sometimes a negotiation. But you will eat better, learn more, and leave with something a hotel room cannot give you.
This guide covers the best guesthouses by village — Mestia, Ushguli, Adishi, and Mazeri — with honest notes on what each one is actually like, what to expect, and how to book.
Why Guesthouses Beat Hotels in Svaneti
The practical case first: guesthouses cost 30–80 GEL ($11–29 USD) per night. Most will offer half-board once you arrive — dinner and breakfast included — which at 20–30 GEL ($7–11 USD) per meal is excellent value compared to any restaurant. Hotels in Mestia run three to four times that price for a room alone.
The less obvious case: Svaneti’s isolation shaped its culture in ways that are visible at the dinner table. The food is not Georgian food — it is Svan food. Kubdari is a meat pie filled with seasoned lamb or pork, then sealed and baked, with every family making the spice blend differently. The base is Svan salt — a mix of garlic, coriander, fenugreek, dried marigold, and chilli ground together — and no two versions taste the same. Chvishtari is cornbread fried with aged cheese. Tashmijabi is a rich mash of potato and melted cheese that sounds simple and is addictive. You can order all of these in Mestia restaurants, but it is not the same as eating them at a table where the person who made them is sitting across from you.
Hosts also know things no guidebook has. Which trail is flooded this week. Which guesthouse in Adishi has a horse available. Whether the road to Ushguli is passable after last night’s rain. Book a hotel and you get a front desk. Book a family guesthouse and you get a person who has lived here their whole life.
Mestia: The Best Guesthouses for Your Base
Mestia is the main town in Upper Svaneti — a population of under 3,000, a small square, a museum, and a disproportionate number of medieval towers rising from the hillside. It is connected to Tbilisi by marshrutka and to Kutaisi by a short flight. Almost everyone starts here.
The guesthouse situation in Mestia is good — dozens of family-run places, ranging from basic rooms with shared bathrooms to more polished spots with private facilities and rooftop terraces. Three worth knowing:
Guesthouse Irma & Aleko
Irma works at the tourist information office in Mestia, which means she knows every trail, every seasonal closure, and most of the guesthouse owners in the region. Aleko is a woodcrafter who made most of the furniture in the house himself. The food is homemade and generous — dinner rarely ends before you are offered more. The guesthouse sits on the eastern side of the river, about ten minutes from the main square, which keeps it quiet. Irma’s email is irmakhergiani@ymail.com — contact her directly rather than booking through a platform.
| Guesthouse Irma & Aleko |
| Village: MestiaVibe: Local knowledge, handmade furniture, excellent foodPrice: ~40–50 GEL ($15–18 USD) per night, half-board availableBook: Email: irmakhergiani@ymail.com (direct booking recommended) |
Bapsha Guesthouse
Run by a German-Georgian couple, Bapsha sits on the hillside above the main road, five minutes from the square. The design is minimal and clean — a departure from the usual guesthouse decor — and the beds are genuinely comfortable, which is not something you can take for granted. Prices are slightly above budget guesthouses but well below any hotel. Contact via info@bapsha-guesthouse.com.
| Bapsha Guesthouse |
| Village: MestiaVibe: German-Georgian owners, clean minimalist rooms, quiet hillside locationPrice: ~60–70 GEL ($22–25 USD) per nightBook: booking.com/hotel/ge/bapsha-guesthouse. |
Svan House in Mestia
This one is built on the foundation of a 12th-century Svan tower — you can see the original stonework in the dining room. The family who runs it speaks English (the children in particular) and the balcony views over the valley are genuinely good. Ask David about his homemade wine. It is located up the hill off the main road, which can be tricky to find with luggage, but the views make up for it. Bookable on Booking.com and Airbnb.
| Svan House in Mestia |
| Village: MestiaVibe: 12th-century tower foundations, family-run, excellent views, homemade winePrice: ~50–65 GEL ($18–24 USD) per nightBook: Tripadviso.com/mestia-upper-svaneti/svan-house-mestia |
Ushguli: Staying at the End of the Road
Ushguli is four small villages clustered together at around 2,100–2,200 metres, beneath Mount Shkhara — Georgia’s highest peak at 5,193 metres. Until 2024, the road from Mestia was unpaved and rough enough to make the 45-kilometre drive a two-hour ordeal. The road is now fully paved, cutting travel to 60–90 minutes by shared jeep or marshrutka.
There are no proper hotels in Ushguli. There are guesthouses, and in some cases families who have been hosting trekkers for decades. Bring cash — there are no ATMs. The nearest are in Mestia.
| AMBER NOTE |
| Practical note: Bring enough cash for your entire Ushguli stay before leaving Mestia. Budget 200–300 GEL ($73–109 USD) per day for accommodation, meals, and any horse hire. |
Nizharadze’s Tower
Located in the second cluster of buildings as you enter from Mestia, Nizharadze’s Tower is surrounded by original Svan towers and sits at the end of narrow lanes that cattle also use. The hostesses are known for insisting guests remove their shoes at the door — a standard Georgian custom, but particularly sensible given some of the alleyways — and for meals that are plentiful and homemade. The guesthouse also has a sauna, which is welcome after a day on the trail.
| Nizharadze’s Tower |
| Village: UshguliVibe: Authentic tower-village setting, generous meals, sauna availablePrice: ~50–70 GEL ($18–25 USD) per night, half-board availableBook: booking.com/hotel/ge/nizharadze-39-s-tower.html |
Guesthouse Ushguli Maspindzeli
Family-owned, with food made by the grandmothers of the household. Reviews consistently mention the authentic feel of the place — the kind of guesthouse where the grandmother is still in the kitchen at dinner and the smile is genuine. Mountain views, a shared lounge, and a terrace. Bookable on Booking.com.
| Guesthouse Ushguli Maspindzeli |
| Village: UshguliVibe: Good location, private bathrooms, mountain views, restaurant on sitePrice: ~45–60 GEL ($16–22 USD) per nightBook: booking.com/hotel/ge/guesthouse-ushguli-maspindzeli.html |
Hotel Riho
Riho sits near the path to the Shkhara Glacier and is run by a family: Natella, Roland, and their son Simon. Roland organises horse treks to the glacier and acts as a local guide. Gulu, the cook, prepares traditional Svan food and will show guests how to milk the cows if they are interested. More a working farm guesthouse than a hotel, despite the name. One of the few options in Ushguli where the glacier experience is built into the stay.
| Hotel Riho |
| Village: Ushguli (Chazhashi district, near Shkhara path)Vibe: Horse treks, working farm, traditional Svan cooking, glacier accessPrice: ~55–70 GEL ($20–25 USD) per nightBook: tripadvisor.com/ushguli/hotel-riho |
Adishi: Where the Trek Spends the Night
Adishi is a small village at around 1,900 metres, sitting between Mestia and Ushguli on the classic four-day trekking route. About 15 families live here. Most visitors arrive on foot after crossing the river from Zhabeshi, and leave the next morning toward Iprali. If you are doing the Mestia–Ushguli trek, you will almost certainly sleep here.
The guesthouse options are limited — which is the point. Adishi is remote, quiet, and looks the same as it did a generation ago. The only real issue is the river crossing before the village, which can be impassable at high water in early summer. Check conditions with your Mestia guesthouse host before setting out.
Elisabeth’s Guest House
Elisabeth speaks good English and has been hosting trekkers for years. She has a wooden balcony with views of the valley, organises horse hire for guests who do not want to carry full packs over the Chkhutnieri Pass, and will help with onward travel logistics. The guesthouse is not luxury — expect basic rooms and shared bathrooms — but the food is good and the host makes the difference. Contact directly rather than via a booking platform where possible, as she is not always listed.
| Elisabeth’s Guest House |
| Village: AdishiVibe: English-speaking host, horse hire, views, classic trek stopoverPrice: ~40–55 GEL ($15–20 USD) per night, dinner and breakfast includedBook: No platform listing — ask your Mestia guesthouse host for Elisabeth’s number, or search ‘Elisabeth Adishi guesthouse’ on Tripadvisor |
Mazeri: Under Mount Ushba, Away from the Crowds
Mazeri is a small village in the Becho Valley, about 20 kilometres west of Mestia. It sits directly beneath Mount Ushba — a twin-peaked mountain with a difficult reputation among alpinists and one of the most striking silhouettes in the Caucasus. Almost no one stays here compared to Mestia or Ushguli, which means quiet trails, empty mornings, and hosts who are genuinely glad to see you.
The main hike from Mazeri goes to Ushba Glacier: a 20-kilometre round trip with 800 metres of elevation gain, taking seven to eight hours. The Shdugra Waterfall is a shorter, easier option — one of the most powerful waterfalls in Georgia, reachable in two to three hours.
Peak Mazeri Guest House
The main guesthouse in Mazeri, consistently described as a quieter, more remote alternative to Mestia. Rooms are basic, views of Ushba are constant, and the food is home-cooked. Suited to hikers who want to use Mazeri as a base rather than a single overnight stop. Bookable on Booking.com under ‘Mazeri guesthouses’ — the village listing is small.
| Peak Mazeri Guest House |
| Village: Mazeri, Becho ValleyVibe: Remote, quiet, views of Ushba, good base for glacier hikePrice: ~40–55 GEL ($15–20 USD) per nightBook: Search ‘Mazeri guesthouse’ on Booking.com or Airbnb — the village listing is small |
Practical Tips for Staying in Svaneti Guesthouses
A few things that apply everywhere:
- Most guesthouses do not advertise full prices on Booking.com — they list the bed only to minimize commission. Once you arrive, ask about half-board. It is almost always available and worth it.
- Book Mestia guesthouses via email or WhatsApp where possible. Many owners prefer direct contact and will offer better rates. In Ushguli and Adishi, booking platforms are your best option.
- Guesthouses along the Mestia–Ushguli trek fill up in July and August. Contact Adishi and Zhabeshi guesthouses at least a week ahead during peak season.
- Chacha will be offered. Refusing is considered impolite. One glass is fine.
- Bring a sleeping bag liner if you are sensitive to cold — mountain nights get cold even in summer, and not all guesthouses have sufficient heating in shoulder season.
- As of January 2026, all foreign visitors to Georgia are required to carry medical insurance.
| FOR EXPERIENCED TRAVELLERS |
| Lower Svaneti (Lentekhi area) has almost no tourists, more authentic villages, and very basic facilities. If you have already done Upper Svaneti and want somewhere quieter, it is worth researching — but expect no English, no booking platforms, and variable conditions. |
The Short Answer on Where to Stay
If this is your first time in Svaneti, base yourself in Mestia and stay at a family guesthouse — not a hotel. Spend at least one night in Ushguli if you can. If you are doing the four-day trek, plan your nights in Zhabeshi, Adishi, Iprali, and Ushguli in that order, and contact guesthouses ahead of time in summer.
The guesthouses listed here are not the only good ones — Svaneti has hundreds of families opening their doors to travellers, and many of the best are not on any booking platform. Ask your host in Mestia who they recommend in the next village. That referral will get you further than any list.
Sources
- caucasus-trekking.com/regions/svaneti/hotels-in-mestia
- happyfrogtravels.com/where-to-stay-in-svaneti
- ecovoyager.com/blog/ushguli-georgia-a-complete-travel-guide
- georgia-tours.eu/destination/svaneti
- tripadvisor.com — Upper Svaneti guesthouse reviews
- booking.com — Mestia and Ushguli guesthouse listings
- wander-lush.org/best-guesthouses-in-georgia-country
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