Destinations
Cities, monuments and landscapes of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan
Discover the best destinations in the Caucasus, one of the most fascinating regions in the world, where three ancient countries meet: Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. From the cobbled alleys of Tbilisi to the medieval monasteries of Armenia and the futuristic skyscrapers of Baku, every place treasures thousands of years of history, culture, and unique traditions at the natural crossroads between Europe and Asia, much of it listed as UNESCO World Heritage.
Use the interactive map to locate each place geographically or browse the list to explore historic cities, religious monuments, wine regions such as Kakheti —the cradle of world viticulture with over 8,000 years of history— natural landscapes of the Greater Caucasus and archaeological sites. Each entry includes its history, what to see, and the best guided tours to visit it with expert local guides.
222 Destinations
Tsakhats Kar Monastery
Medieval monastic complex in the heights of <strong>Vayots Dzor</strong>, among pink tufa and near-total silence above the <strong>Arpa valley</strong>.
View DetailsChronicle of Georgia
Sixteen concrete pillars 35 m tall beside the Tbilisi reservoir, covered in reliefs narrating Georgia's history from its origins to the 20th century.
View DetailsMotsameta Monastery
Medieval Georgian monastery perched above the Tskhaltsitela river canyon, 6 km from Kutaisi, housing the relics of martyrs David and Constantine.
View DetailsSanahin Monastery
10th-century Armenian monastic complex, UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Alaverdi, with churches, a medieval library, and khachkares.
View DetailsBodbe Monastery
Active convent in Kakheti with the tomb of Saint Nino, rose gardens and views over the vineyards of the Alazani valley.
View DetailsAreni-1 Cave
Archaeological cave in southern Armenia where the world's oldest winery (6,000 BC) and the oldest known leather shoe were found.
View DetailsAkhaltsikhe
City in southern Georgia dominated by the medieval Rabati Fortress and base for the cave monastery of Vardzia.
View DetailsSvetitskhoveli Cathedral
Georgia's largest medieval cathedral, in Mtskheta, houses the relic of Christ's tunic and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1994.
View DetailsTrchkan Waterfall
Armenia's highest waterfall: a 23-metre free drop over the Chichkhan River, in the gorge between the provinces of Shirak and Lori.
View DetailsTsaghkadzor
Armenian mountain resort at 1,900 m with cable car, ski slopes and the medieval Kecharis monastery, less than an hour from Yerevan.
View DetailsSelim Caravanserai
14th-century Armenian caravanserai at 2,410 m on the Selim Pass: one of the best-preserved Silk Road stops in the Caucasus.
View DetailsGudauri
Georgia's best-known ski resort at 2,200 m, with 50 km of runs, affordable lift passes and direct access from Tbilisi.
View DetailsDilijan National Park
Armenia's densest forest: oaks, beeches, medieval monasteries and marked trails in the Tavush region.
View DetailsDavid Gareja Monastery
Rock-hewn monastic complex in the Kakheti steppe, carved into limestone cliffs near the Azerbaijan border, with 6th-century medieval frescoes.
View DetailsSevan
Armenian town on the shores of Lake Sevan at 1,900 m, with Sevanavank monastery, pebble beaches and trout restaurants.
View DetailsSyunik Province
Armenia's southernmost province: Tatev Monastery, Wings of Tatev cable car, Shikahogh Reserve and basalt gorges.
View DetailsTbilisi
Georgia's capital nestled between hills and the Mtkvari River: carved wooden balconies, sulphur baths and centuries of overlapping cultures.
View DetailsZvartnots
Circular ruins of a 7th-century Armenian cathedral, UNESCO World Heritage, with Mount Ararat in the background a few kilometres from Yerevan airport.
View DetailsEchmiadzin
Spiritual seat of the Armenian Apostolic Church, with the oldest continuously used Christian cathedral in the world and three 7th-century churches listed as UNESCO World Heritage.
View DetailsYerevan Cascade
Monumental stairway in central Yerevan with gardens, Botero sculptures and views of Mount Ararat on clear days.
View DetailsGergeti Trinity Church
Medieval Georgian church at 2,170 m above Stepantsminda, with Mount Kazbek as a permanent backdrop.
View DetailsMakaravank Monastery
13th-century monastic complex amid the forests of Tavush, with a gavit covered in animal reliefs and an almost constant silence.
View DetailsTsitsernakaberd Genocide Memorial
Memorial in Yerevan with an eternal flame, twelve basalt pillars, and an underground museum dedicated to the victims of the 1915 Armenian Genocide.
View DetailsDilijan
Mountain town in northeastern Armenia, set within a forested national park, with craftspeople, medieval monasteries and trails two hours from Yerevan.
View DetailsOdzun Church
5th-century Armenian basilica on the Lori plateau, with black basalt stelae in the atrium and views over the Debed River valley.
View DetailsShaki Waterfall
18-metre waterfall over black basalt in southern Armenia, accessible from the road between Goris and Kapan in the Syunik region.
View DetailsGori
Georgian city in the Mtkvari valley, famous as Stalin's birthplace, its Soviet museum and the medieval Gorijvari fortress.
View DetailsLake Sevan
The largest lake in Armenia, at 1,900 m altitude, with the medieval Sevanavank monastery and endemic trout on its shores.
View DetailsKhndzoresk
Abandoned cave village in the Syunik canyon, with hundreds of caves carved into the rock and a 160 m swinging bridge over the gorge.
View DetailsAlaverdi Monastery
11th-century cathedral on the Kakheti plain: 55 m nave, medieval frescoes and a monastic winery making wine in kvevri.
View DetailsEchmiadzin Cathedral
Seat of the Armenian Apostolic Church and UNESCO World Heritage site in Vagharshapat, considered the oldest functioning Christian cathedral.
View DetailsVardzia
12th-century cave monastery carved into the cliffs above the Mtkvari river, with over 500 chambers hewn from the rock and medieval frescoes.
View DetailsShengavit Settlement
Archaeological site from the 3rd millennium BC in Yerevan with remains of the Kura-Araxes culture and an on-site museum.
View DetailsNoravank Monastery
13th-century monastic complex set in a red-rock canyon in Vayots Dzor, with the church of Surb Astvatsatsin as its centrepiece.
View DetailsGremi Royal Citadel
Former medieval capital of Kakheti: 16th-century church with frescoes, tower with views over the Alazani valley vineyards.
View DetailsBaku
Capital of Azerbaijan on the Caspian: medieval old city, modern skyscrapers, Soviet architecture and one of the richest cuisines of the Caucasus.
View DetailsSvaneti
Region in northwestern Georgia above 2,000 m, with Svan medieval towers, Great Caucasus glaciers and villages inhabited since the Middle Ages.
View DetailsVernissage Market
Weekend market in central Yerevan with Soviet antiques, Armenian garnet jewellery, khachkars and Caucasian carpets.
View DetailsGarni Temple
First-century Hellenistic temple on a basalt promontory above the Azat River gorge — the only Greco-Roman structure in Armenia.
View DetailsTelavi
Wine capital of Kakheti, among vineyards and royal fortresses in the Alazani valley, where wine has been made in clay jars for centuries.
View DetailsAreni Church
A 14th-century Armenian church beside the Arpa river, in the heart of the Vayots Dzor wine region, with partial frescoes and easy access.
View DetailsLake Arpi National Park
High-plateau lake in northwest Armenia, refuge for migrating cranes and volcanic peatlands, far from mass tourism.
View DetailsHovhannavank Monastery
Armenian 12th-century monastery on the edge of the Qasagh river canyon in Aragatsotn: three-nave church, medieval gavit and unlabelled khachkars.
View DetailsJermuk Waterfall
72-metre waterfall of the Arpa River in the heart of the thermal spa town of Jermuk, Armenia. Free access year-round.
View DetailsVayots Dzor Province
Red rock canyons in southern Armenia: Noravank monastery, the world's oldest winery, and Areni red wine.
View DetailsUplistsikhe Cave Town
City carved into sandstone rock beside the Mtkvari River, with 3,000 years of history 80 km from Tbilisi.
View DetailsCarahunge
Over 200 basalt megaliths with perforations on the Syunik plateau: Armenia's most enigmatic prehistoric site.
View DetailsGoris
Small city in southern Armenia wedged among volcanic rock spires, base for Tatev Monastery and the cave dwellings of Syunik.
View DetailsYerevan
Armenia's capital in pink volcanic tuff, with Ararat in the background and urban life revolving around Republic Square.
View DetailsAmberd Fortress
Medieval Armenian fortress from the 10th century on the slopes of Mount Aragats at 2,300 m, with a well-preserved church and views of Ararat.
View DetailsAlaverdi
Industrial city in northern Armenia wedged into the Debed River canyon, gateway to the UNESCO monasteries of Sanahin and Haghpat.
View DetailsTatev Monastery
9th-century Armenian monastic complex above the Vorotan gorge, reachable by the world's longest ropeway, with medieval churches and canyon views.
View DetailsWings of Tatev Cable Car
5.7 km cable car in southern Armenia crossing the Vorotan Canyon to Tatev Monastery, with views of the cliffs and the river 320 m below.
View DetailsBatumi
Georgian Black Sea port among palms, art nouveau and skyscrapers: seven kilometres of promenade lively until the early hours.
View DetailsKecharis Monastery
11th-century Armenian monastic complex in Tsaghkadzor: red-tuff churches, medieval gavits and khachkars amid fir forests and ski slopes.
View DetailsVanadzor
Armenia's third-largest city, in the Lori region, with Soviet architecture and direct access to the monasteries of Haghpat and Sanahin.
View DetailsSapara Monastery
9th-century monastic complex among beeches above Akhaltsikhe, with medieval frescoes and forest track access that keeps crowds away.
View DetailsKapan
The second city of Syunik in southern Armenia, surrounded by dense forests and gorges, with a mining history and the Baghaberd fortress nearby.
View DetailsNekresi Monastery
Fourth-century monastic complex perched above the Alazan Valley in Kakheti, with views over the vineyards and the Greater Caucasus.
View DetailsHarichavank Monastery
7th-century Armenian monastery on the Shirak plain, near Gyumri, home to one of the oldest churches in Armenia.
View DetailsBorjomi
Georgian spa town nestled among pine forests, famous for its mineral water and the gateway to Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park.
View DetailsYerevan Brandy Factory
Historic 1887 distillery in Yerevan where Ararat brandy is produced, with guided tours of underground cellars and tastings.
View DetailsLake Kari
Glacial lake at 3,200 m on the slopes of <strong>Mount Aragats</strong>, accessible by car in summer and starting point for the highest peak in Armenia.
View DetailsHistory Museum of Armenia
The great archaeological museum of Yerevan, on Republic Square, with pieces from the Urartu kingdom and collections spanning from the Palaeolithic.
View DetailsMtatsminda Park
Leisure park on top of <strong>Mount Mtatsminda</strong>, 770 metres above <strong>Tbilisi</strong>, with a cable car from <strong>Rike Park</strong>, panoramic Ferris wheel and Georgian writers' pantheon.
View DetailsJermuk
Armenian mountain spa town at 2,080 m in Vayots Dzor: medicinal thermal waters, a 72-metre waterfall and Soviet-era architecture still in use.
View DetailsMount Aragats
Armenia's highest mountain: four volcanic peaks, Lake Kari at 3,200 m and the medieval fortress of Amberd within a single massif.
View DetailsUshguli
Four Svan villages at 2,200 m, with medieval stone towers and the Shkhara glacier as backdrop. UNESCO World Heritage since 1996.
View DetailsErebuni Fortress
Urartian citadel from 782 BC in southern Yerevan, with views of Ararat and an archaeological museum at the foot of the hill.
View DetailsHaghpat Monastery
10th-century Armenian monastery in Lori, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with one of the finest collections of medieval khachkars.
View DetailsNij
A Caucasian Albanian village in Azerbaijan where the Udis, one of the oldest peoples of the Caucasus, preserve their language and Christian church.
View DetailsBagrati Cathedral
An 11th-century cathedral crowning Kutaisi, UNESCO World Heritage site whose restoration divided experts and international bodies.
View DetailsMarmashen Monastery
Three 10th-century pink tuff churches by the Akhurian river, in a quiet gorge 10 km from Gyumri, with very few visitors.
View DetailsSighnaghi
Small walled town in the wine-growing region of Kakheti, with views of the Alazani valley and the snows of the Caucasus, known for its houses with carved wooden balconies and its wineries.
View DetailsAnanuri
A 17th-century fortress-church complex on the shore of Jinvali Lake, on the Georgian Military Highway, one hour from Tbilisi.
View DetailsKazbegi
A Greater Caucasus village at 1,700 metres, with the snow-capped Mount Kazbek and the Gergeti church on its ridge, three hours from Tbilisi.
View DetailsAshtarak
Armenian town 20 km from Yerevan, known for its medieval churches, stone bridges over the Kasagh and the traditional sweet gata.
View DetailsRepublic Square
The civic heart of Yerevan: Soviet-Armenian pink tuff, nocturnal dancing fountains and the best starting point for exploring the centre.
View DetailsMatenadaran
The great repository of Armenian manuscripts in Yerevan: over 23,000 medieval codices with illuminations that have remained intact for centuries.
View DetailsKhosrov Forest State Reserve
One of the oldest protected natural reserves in the world: volcanic gorges, wildlife and almost no tourists south of Yerevan.
View DetailsGyumri
Armenia's second city with a historic centre of black volcanic stone, a living craft tradition and the still-visible scars of the 1988 earthquake.
View DetailsMeghri
Armenian city at the southernmost tip of the country, bordering Iran, with a subtropical climate, pomegranate terraces and medieval churches with frescoes.
View DetailsMestia
Capital of Upper Svaneti at 1,500 m altitude, with inhabited medieval towers, nearby glaciers and access to the most remote valleys of the Caucasus.
View DetailsKutaisi
Georgia's second city, on the banks of the <strong>Rioni</strong>, with the medieval <strong>Bagrati</strong> Cathedral declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a base for exploring the west of the country.
View DetailsHaghartsin Monastery
10th-century monastery in the Tavush forest with three medieval churches, a vaulted refectory and free admission. Easy access from Dilijan.
View DetailsNoratus Khachkar Cemetery
Armenia's largest khachkar field: over nine hundred basalt crosses carved between the 10th and 17th centuries on the shores of Lake Sevan.
View DetailsIjevan
Armenian city among the forests of Tavush: <em>Ijevan</em> brewery, Lake <strong>Parz</strong> and a natural base for the green north of Armenia.
View DetailsSpitakavor Monastery
13th-century Armenian monastery among the forests of Vayots Dzor, with well-preserved khachkars and virtually no visitors.
View DetailsSaghmosavank Monastery
13th-century Armenian monastery on the edge of the Kasakh river canyon, in Aragatsotn, with views of Mount Aragats and no tourist infrastructure.
View DetailsGeghard Monastery
13th-century Armenian monastery partially carved into the rock of a gorge, a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2000.
View DetailsUbisa Monastery
Medieval monastery in Imereti with 14th-century frescoes painted by Damiane, among the most refined in Georgian religious art.
View DetailsZugdidi
Capital of <strong>Samegrelo</strong> and gateway to <strong>Svaneti</strong>: the <strong>Dadiani Palace</strong> with its death mask of Napoleon, subtropical botanical garden and overnight train from <strong>Tbilisi</strong>.
View DetailsBjni Fortress
Medieval black basalt ruins above the <strong>Hrazdan river</strong> gorge, 35 km from <strong>Yerevan</strong>, with no ticket booth or organised tourism.
View DetailsMtskheta
Ancient capital of Georgia 20 km from Tbilisi: Sveti Tskhoveli Cathedral, Jvari Monastery and the confluence of the Mtkvari and Aragvi rivers, UNESCO World Heritage.
View DetailsStepanavan
Northern Armenian city among beech forests, with the country's largest dendropark and the basalt gorge of the Dzoraghet river.
View DetailsSmbataberd Fortress
Medieval Armenian fortress on a ridge above the <strong>Arpa valley</strong>, in <strong>Vayots Dzor</strong>, with views of <strong>Noravank Monastery</strong>.
View DetailsKhor Virap
Armenian monastery on the Ararat plain, metres from the Turkish border, with snowy Mount Ararat as a backdrop.
View DetailsGelati Monastery
12th-century monastic complex in Imereti with golden Byzantine mosaics, the tomb of David the Builder, and an oak forest.
View DetailsDvin Ruins
Ancient Armenian capital on the Ararat plain: walls, palaces and cathedral excavated 35 km south of Yerevan.
View DetailsSardarapat Memorial
Monumental complex on the Ararat plain commemorating the 1918 battle in which Armenia survived as a nation.
View DetailsSergei Parajanov Museum
The art Parajanov made when he could not film: collages, dolls and objects in a small, dense museum in Yerevan.
View DetailsSevanavank Monastery
9th-century monastery perched on a rocky peninsula of Lake Sevan with water views, cutting winds, and a stone staircase from the village.
View DetailsGoshavank Monastery
12th-century monastic complex in the Tavush forest, with intricately carved stone khachkars and free entry. Near-guaranteed silence on weekdays.
View DetailsHayravank Monastery
9th-century Armenian monastery on black basalt on the southwest shore of Lake Sevan, with no ticket booths or tourist buses.
View DetailsShikahogh State Reserve
A relict humid forest in southern Armenia, refuge of the Caucasian leopard and century-old beeches near the border with Iran.
View DetailsJvari Monastery
6th-century Georgian church on a rocky promontory above <strong>Mtskheta</strong>, UNESCO Heritage, with views of the confluence of the <strong>Aragvi</strong> and <strong>Mtkvari</strong>.
View DetailsOrdubad
Ancient city of Nakhchivan on the Aras River, with adobe neighbourhoods, pomegranate orchards and a border with Iran.
View DetailsAltiagach National Park
National park near Quba in northern Azerbaijan, with oak and beech forests and trails visited mainly by Azerbaijani families.
View DetailsSataplia Nature Reserve
Nature reserve 9 km from Kutaisi with fossilised dinosaur footprints, a limestone cave and a glass viewing platform over subtropical forest.
View DetailsKish Albanian Church
One of the earliest Christian temples in the Caucasus, in a quiet village 5 km from Sheki, with an on-site archaeological museum.
View DetailsOld City of Baku
Medieval walled core of Baku, UNESCO World Heritage, with the Maiden Tower, the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and limestone alleyways.
View DetailsKakheti
Georgia's wine region: vineyard valleys, kvevris buried in every courtyard, and the monasteries of the Alazani Valley.
View DetailsPrometheus Cave
Limestone caves in Imereti with stalactites, underground lakes and a navigable river by boat, 20 km from Kutaisi.
View DetailsShirvan National Park
Semi-arid steppe along the Caspian Sea, home to the largest gazelle herds in the Caucasus, pink flamingos and Dalmatian pelicans.
View DetailsGanja
Azerbaijan's second city: a red-brick bazaar, 17th-century mosques and a slower pace of life than Baku.
View DetailsHeydar Aliyev Center
Zaha Hadid's masterpiece in Baku: white curves with no sharp angles, exhibitions on Azerbaijani history and the world's best design award in 2014.
View DetailsAgsu
Town on the Shirvan plain in Azerbaijan, with ruins of the medieval Akhsu settlement and a natural stop on the Baku–Sheki route.
View DetailsKarabakh
A historic region of Azerbaijan under reconstruction: Shusha, medieval monasteries and Caucasus mountains with coordinated access.
View DetailsShamkir
Wine-producing town in western Azerbaijan, with a medieval castle, active wineries and the Kura reservoir three hours from Baku.
View DetailsYeddi Gumbaz
Seven 18th-century white stone mausoleums in Şamaxı where the last khans of the Shirvan Khanate are buried.
View DetailsImereti
Central Georgian region with Kutaisi as capital: UNESCO monasteries, Prometheus Caves, amber wine and green rolling valleys.
View DetailsMingrelia
Subtropical region of western Georgia with humid forests, a cuisine spicier than anywhere else in the country, and the Inguri river border with Abkhazia.
View DetailsKolkheti National Park
Coastal wetlands on the Black Sea in western Georgia, UNESCO World Heritage, with lagoons, peat bogs and migratory birds of the Caucasus.
View DetailsTetnuldi
Ski resort in Upper Svaneti with runs at 3,165 m, Great Caucasus glaciers and medieval Svan towers visible from the slopes.
View DetailsMaralgol Lake
Alpine lake among beech forests in the Ganja mountains, at 1,800 m, with no infrastructure and almost deserted outside the Azerbaijani summer.
View DetailsPoti
Black Sea port city with Lake Paliastomi, humid subtropical forest and Georgia's busiest commercial harbour.
View DetailsChiatura
Georgian mining town in the Kvirila river gorge, famous for its rusting Soviet cable cars that still carry residents over the void.
View DetailsCandy Cane Mountains
Red and white striped sandstone hills in the Khizi district of Azerbaijan: a sedimentary landscape with no infrastructure and plenty of light.
View DetailsYevlakh
Azerbaijani railway junction on the <strong>Kura</strong> plain, a transit point between <strong>Baku</strong>, <strong>Ganja</strong> and <strong>Sheki</strong> and gateway to the Karabakh corridor.
View DetailsNaftalan
The Azerbaijani city where sanatoriums offer baths in naphthenic crude oil to treat rheumatic and skin diseases.
View DetailsBatabat Lake
Glacial lake at 2,400 m in the high pastures of Nakhchivan, with no organised tourism and a high-altitude silence that is hard to find elsewhere.
View DetailsDashbashi Canyon
Basalt canyon with waterfalls and a glass bridge in southern Georgia, two hours from Tbilisi on the route to Armenia.
View DetailsQakh
Foothill town of the Greater Caucasus with Albanian monasteries in the forest, honey markets and silence 45 minutes from Sheki.
View DetailsLankaran
Coastal city in southern Azerbaijan, between the Caspian Sea and the Talysh mountains: tea, citrus, local cuisine and a 19th-century lighthouse.
View DetailsShahdag Mountain Resort
Ski resort in northern Azerbaijan with slopes on the Greater Caucasus, modern lifts and access from Baku in under three hours.
View DetailsKhevsureti
Region of the Georgian Greater Caucasus with medieval towers, semi-abandoned villages and high-mountain trekking routes.
View DetailsChirag Qala
Medieval dark basalt fortress on a cliff in northern Azerbaijan, with valley views and free access.
View DetailsNizami Street
Baku's main promenade: two kilometres of 19th-century facades, café terraces and urban life between the walled city and the modern centre.
View DetailsNokalakevi (Archaeopolis)
Ancient capital of the Egrisi kingdom in Samegrelo: Cyclopean walls from the 6th century, a river tunnel and ruins above the Tekhuri River.
View DetailsMasalli
Azerbaijani city in the Talysh region, with tea plantations on the hills, Hyrcanian subtropical forest and the culture of the Talysh people.
View DetailsGadabay
Mountain district in western Azerbaijan with ruins of a 19th-century Swedish smelter, pine forests and Lake Göygöl nearby.
View DetailsMartyrs' Lane and Highland Park
Black January memorial cemetery and viewpoint over the Caspian and the Flame Towers, on the highest hill in Baku.
View DetailsYanar Dag
A hillside that never stops burning on the Absheron Peninsula: natural gas seeping through the rock and blazing for decades, 25 km from Baku.
View DetailsAzerbaijan Mud Volcanoes
Azerbaijan concentrates almost half the world's mud volcanoes: craters bubbling cold mud in a lunar landscape near Baku.
View DetailsKhachmaz
City in northern Azerbaijan between the Greater Caucasus and the Caspian Sea, gateway to Quba and the fine sand beaches of Nabran.
View DetailsShahdag National Park
Azerbaijan's largest national park: glaciers, alpine meadows, Lezgian villages and the Caucasian leopard in the Greater Caucasus.
View DetailsNakhchivan
Capital of the Azerbaijani exclave surrounded by Armenia, Iran and Turkey: medieval funerary towers by Ajami and a pace of life all its own.
View DetailsRacha
Mountainous region in northwestern Georgia, famous for Khvanchkara wine, medieval churches and barely visited valleys.
View DetailsGobustan
Archaeological reserve with over 6,000 petroglyphs declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site, 65 km from Baku, next to active mud volcanoes.
View DetailsLahij
Craft village in a canyon in northern Azerbaijan, famous for its hammered copper workshops and cobblestone street with a water channel.
View DetailsMakhuntseti Waterfall
30-metre waterfall amid the humid forests of Adjara, combinable with the medieval King's Bridge, 40 km from Batumi.
View DetailsJuma Mosque of Shaki
18th-century mosque in <strong>Shaki</strong> with twin minarets and <em>shebeke</em> windows, the glue-free glass technique declared UNESCO Heritage.
View DetailsKhinalug
Caucasian village at 2,350 m in Azerbaijan, UNESCO World Heritage Site, where 2,000 people speak a language with no known relation to any other in the world.
View DetailsBaku City Circuit
The Formula 1 circuit running through the streets of Baku, including the passage by the historic old city. Visible year-round on the walls of Icheri Sheher.
View DetailsStalin Museum (Gori)
The most visited museum in Georgia outside Tbilisi: Stalin's birthplace, his armoured railway carriage and the Soviet personality cult almost intact.
View DetailsGoychay
Azerbaijani city on the Kura plain, famous for its pomegranates and the Nar Bayrami festival every October.
View DetailsMingachevir
Soviet-built city on the shores of Azerbaijan's largest reservoir, with archaeological finds from Caucasian Albania.
View DetailsAdjara
Subtropical coast on the Black Sea, mountains of dense forest and the city of Batumi: Georgia's most humid and green region.
View DetailsShio-Mgvime Monastery
6th-century Georgian monastic complex in a limestone gorge near <strong>Mtskheta</strong>, with cave cells hewn from the rock and an active community.
View DetailsZaqatala
Azerbaijani town at the foot of the <strong>Greater Caucasus</strong> with a 19th-century Russian fortress, beech forests and a walnut market in September.
View DetailsTufandag
Azerbaijani mountain ski resort near Qabala, in the Greater Caucasus: slopes, cable car and high-altitude hiking.
View DetailsAlinja Fortress
Medieval fortress in Nakhchivan perched on a volcanic crag at 1,800 m, with ruined towers and views over the Arax valley.
View DetailsKrasnaya Sloboda
Mountain Jewish quarter next to Quba, in northern Azerbaijan: active synagogues, Judeo-Tat and a community with centuries of history in the Caucasus.
View DetailsAbsheron National Park
Nature reserve on the Caspian coast where gazelles, flamingos and wild horses inhabit an arid landscape less than an hour from Baku.
View DetailsBorjomi-Kharagauli National Park
One of Europe's largest parks: Lesser Caucasus forests, multi-day routes and mountain huts in Georgia.
View DetailsYanar Bulag
Spring in southern Azerbaijan where carbonated water emerges with methane gas and burns with a continuous flame on the surface.
View DetailsMaiden Tower
The oldest cylindrical tower in Baku, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the Old City, with centuries of mystery surrounding its original purpose.
View DetailsMachakhela National Park
Virgin subtropical forests, wooden villages and the Turkish border in the interior of Adjara, one of Georgia's least visited parks.
View DetailsShamakhi
Ancient capital of the Shirvan kingdom, among vineyards and hills 120 km from Baku: medieval mosque, Madrasa wines and an astronomical observatory.
View DetailsNabran
Beach resort in northern Azerbaijan: fine sand, a pine forest on the Caspian shore and a family-friendly atmosphere 220 km from Baku.
View DetailsYukhari Govhar Agha Mosque
19th-century mosque in <strong>Shusha</strong>, <strong>Karabakh</strong>, with two restored brick minarets after 2020 and views over the <strong>Dashalti</strong> canyon.
View DetailsGuria
Green region of western Georgia between the Black Sea and Meskheti: choral polyphony, hazelnuts and the black-sand beach of Ureki.
View DetailsMartvili Canyon
Limestone canyon with turquoise water in Samegrelo: a walk and boat ride through the narrowest walls of the Abasha river.
View DetailsAstara
Coastal city in southern Azerbaijan, on the border with Iran, with tea, fresh fish and the Hyrcanian forests nearby.
View DetailsTusheti Protected Areas
More than 80,000 hectares of mountains and stone villages in northeast Georgia, accessible only in summer.
View DetailsBasqal
Historic village in Azerbaijan famous for its silk fabrics: stone streets, 18th and 19th-century houses and traditional weavers still active.
View DetailsKhertvisi Fortress
Medieval Georgian fortress on the cliff where the Paravani River meets the Mtkvari, on the way to Vardzia, no entrance fee and no crowds.
View DetailsShusha
Azerbaijani city at 1,400 m in the Karabakh mountains, cultural capital of the country, with restored mosques and a past marked by conflict.
View DetailsBakuriani
Family-friendly ski resort in Georgia at 1,700 m, with cheap lift passes, snow from December to March and a scenic train from Borjomi.
View DetailsOkatse Canyon
Metal walkway suspended over the Okatse River in Imereti, 20 km from Kutaisi, combinable with the Martvili caves.
View DetailsTsinandali Estate
19th-century manor estate in wine country Kakheti: botanical garden, historic wine cellar and museum of poet Alexander Chavchavadze.
View DetailsRamana Castle
14th-century medieval tower on the Absheron Peninsula, 25 km from Baku, with views of the Caspian Sea and almost no tourists.
View DetailsIlisu
Azerbaijani village perched on a cliff above a canyon with a waterfall, in the Greater Caucasus mountains of northern Azerbaijan.
View DetailsFountain Square
The social hub of Baku: 19th-century facades, terraces with Azerbaijani tea and illuminated fountains at the crossroads of the historic centre.
View DetailsBaku Fire Temple
A 17th-century Zoroastrian and Hindu temple in Surakhani, built over natural gas seeps that fed eternal flames.
View DetailsMtirala National Park
Subtropical forest in <strong>Adjara</strong> with waterfalls and moss-lined trails: Georgia's rainiest corner, 15 km from <strong>Batumi</strong>.
View DetailsPalace of the Shaki Khans
18th-century palace in Shaki with nail-free coloured glass panels, hunting frescoes and a throne room: UNESCO World Heritage Site.
View DetailsAzerbaijan National Carpet Museum
Baku's museum dedicated to Azerbaijani carpets, housed in a scroll-shaped building on the Caspian waterfront, with pieces from the 16th to 20th century.
View DetailsIkalto Monastery
6th-century monastic complex in Kakheti with a medieval academy where the poet Shota Rustaveli studied, set among vineyards and oak forests.
View DetailsPalace of the Shirvanshahs
15th-century palace complex in the old city of Baku, UNESCO Heritage: mausoleum, mosque and Divankhane in limestone.
View DetailsFlame Towers
Three LED-clad skyscrapers dominating Baku's night skyline with flame-like animations, a symbol of oil-era Azerbaijan.
View DetailsVashlovani National Park
Georgia's most remote park: clay badlands, pistachio forests and steppe wildlife in the southeast of Kakheti.
View DetailsLerik
Mountain town in southern Azerbaijan, amid Talysh forests and mist, known for the longevity of its inhabitants and its remote villages.
View DetailsRabati Castle
Medieval fortress in Akhaltsikhe with an Ottoman mosque, an Orthodox church and restored walls that divide historians.
View DetailsGonio-Apsaros Fortress
First-century Roman fort on the Black Sea coast, one of the best-preserved Roman military outposts in the Caucasus.
View DetailsBalakan
Border town in the far northwest of Azerbaijan, gateway to the Zaqatala forests and the culture of Lezgi and Avar communities.
View DetailsMardakan
Two 14th-century medieval towers watch over the Absheron Peninsula 30 km from Baku, amid summer villas and pomegranate gardens.
View DetailsQuba
Town in northern Azerbaijan, gateway to the mountain villages of the Caucasus and famous for its apples and handwoven carpets.
View DetailsMomine Khatun Mausoleum
12th-century decagonal funerary tower in Nakhchivan, the masterpiece of architect Ajami Nakhchivani and Seljuk architecture in the Caucasus.
View DetailsDmanisi Archaeological Site
The site outside Africa where the oldest known hominids were found, on a volcanic promontory with medieval ruins in southern Georgia.
View DetailsQusar
A Lezghin town in northern Azerbaijan and gateway to the Shahdag mountain resort in the Greater Caucasus.
View DetailsKobuleti
Adjaran coastal resort with a black pebble beach, palm trees and a seafront promenade on the Georgian Black Sea coast.
View DetailsNardaran
Conservative Shia enclave on the Absheron Peninsula with a 14th-century medieval fortress and active pilgrimage mosque, 25 km from Baku.
View DetailsShamakhi Juma Mosque
The oldest mosque in Azerbaijan: a thousand years of Islamic history in the heart of Shamakhi, two hours from Baku.
View DetailsBaku Funicular
The cable car that climbs from the Caspian Boulevard to Baku Park, with the best views over the bay and the skyscrapers of Azerbaijan's capital.
View DetailsLagodekhi Protected Areas
Century-old reserve in the far east of Kakheti: beech forests, alpine lakes and uncrowded trails in the Greater Caucasus.
View DetailsBaku Boulevard
A 3.5 km seafront promenade along the Caspian Sea, Baku's green heart with views of the Flame Towers.
View DetailsSheki
Historic city in the Azerbaijani Caucasus, famous for the Khan's Palace, shebeke stained glass windows and its silk-making tradition.
View DetailsGoygol Lake
Mountain lake in Azerbaijan formed by a medieval earthquake, at 1,556 m among Caucasian firs, 40 min from Ganja.
View DetailsNarikala Fortress
Medieval fortress above the old town of Tbilisi: ruined walls, a restored church and the best views of the city.
View DetailsGoderdzi
Ski resort at the Goderdzi Pass, Adjara, at 2,025 m and less than two hours from Batumi, with snow until April.
View DetailsGoygol National Park
Caucasian forests, Lake Goygol at 1,556 m and mountain wildlife in the Lesser Caucasus of Azerbaijan.
View DetailsTaza Pir Mosque
The most important Shia mosque in Baku, built in 1914 with 45-metre minarets and a golden dome in the heart of the city.
View DetailsIsmayilli
Foothills city of the Greater Caucasus in Azerbaijan, base for the craft village of Lahij and mountain forests 170 km from Baku.
View DetailsLake Paravani
Georgia's largest lake, at 2,100 m on the volcanic Javakheti plateau: grey-blue water, constant wind and a treeless horizon.
View DetailsAbanotubani Sulfur Baths
Thermal district in the old town of Tbilisi with brick domes, sulfurous springs and traditional Georgian massage in private rooms.
View DetailsMount Kazbek
5,047 m volcano in the Georgian Caucasus, with the medieval Gergeti church perched above the void and the village of Stepantsminda at its foot.
View DetailsKatskhi Pillar
40-metre limestone monolith in Imereti with a medieval church on top, viewable from a free lookout point in the valley.
View DetailsGabala
Azerbaijani city set among beech forests and the Greater Caucasus, with a cable car, Albanian ruins and mountain air three hours from Baku.
View DetailsHirkan National Park
A Tertiary-era relic forest in southern Azerbaijan, UNESCO World Heritage Site, with trees that have been growing near the Caspian for millions of years.
View DetailsBibi-Heybat Mosque
Shia mosque on the Caspian shore south of Baku, rebuilt in the nineties and visible from the road to Gobustan.
View DetailsTusheti
Mountainous region in northeast Georgia: medieval stone-tower villages, alpine trekking and a mountain road that only opens in summer.
View Details