Tsinandali: Chavchavadze Estate and How to Drive There
Tsinandali estate in Kakheti: Chavchavadze family history, what to see, ticket prices, and driving from Tbilisi.


Tsinandali is a village in Kakheti, about 100 km from Tbilisi, built around a 19th-century estate that gave its name to one of Georgia's best-known white wines. By car the drive takes 1.5 to 2 hours, which makes it the most practical way to get there outside of a taxi or an organized day tour. Here's the history behind the estate, what's on site today, and how to plan the drive.
Why People Go to Tsinandali
The village sits in the Telavi municipality, 10 km from Telavi itself, and the estate is the reason anyone stops here. In 1835, Prince Alexander Chavchavadze built an Italianate mansion on land he inherited from his father and laid out an English-style park around it, bringing in gardeners from Britain to do it. On the same grounds, his winery became the first in Georgia to bottle wine using European methods rather than the traditional qvevri process alone.
Chavchavadze was a poet, a Russian army general, and a veteran of the campaigns against Napoleon. He turned the estate into a gathering point for writers and diplomats. Pushkin, Lermontov, and Alexandre Dumas all visited. Alexander Griboyedov married Chavchavadze's daughter, Nino, in the small chapel next to the main house, which is still part of the visitor route today.
A History That Includes a Raid and a Rebuild
In 1854, during the Caucasian War, forces led by Imam Shamil attacked Tsinandali. The estate was looted and partly burned, and several family members, including Anna Chavchavadze, were taken captive and held for ransom. Alexander's son David rebuilt the house afterward, but the cost put him deep in debt, and he eventually sold the estate to the Russian state.
By 1886 Tsinandali had become a residence of the imperial family, and the house was rebuilt again under architect Alexander Ozerov. The state opened it as a museum in 1947. Since 2008, the Silk Road Group has managed the complex privately, putting more than $12 million into restoration, repairing over 100 existing exhibits and adding another 500 to the collection.
What's on Site Today
Plan on 2 to 3 hours to cover the grounds properly.
- The house museum — 19th-century interiors, including the drawing room with its piano, Chavchavadze's study, personal belongings, a weapons collection, and portraits, one of them painted by Anna Chavchavadze herself.
- The English park — roughly 18 hectares, with ponds, tree-lined paths, and species brought in from Europe and Asia. The chapel where Griboyedov and Nino married stands at one edge of it.
- The wine cellar — holds more than 15,000 bottles, with the oldest dated to 1814. Tastings run here, usually including the Tsinandali white itself.
- Hotel and restaurants — a Radisson Collection property operates on the grounds, so an overnight stay is an option rather than just a stop on the way through.

Since 2019, the estate has hosted the Tsinandali Festival in early September, an international classical music event that draws performers from multiple countries and features the Pan-Caucasian Youth Orchestra. An open-air amphitheater and a chamber hall were built into the restored buildings specifically for it. If your trip lands during those dates, book concert tickets ahead. They sell out fast.

Tickets and Hours
Rough prices, worth double-checking before you go since they do shift:
- Museum and park entry: around 10 GEL
- Guided wine tasting: starting at 35 GEL
- Children under 6: free
The complex is generally open daily, no closed days, with longer hours in summer and shorter ones in winter. Weekends and festival dates bring more tour groups, so mornings are the calmer option if you want the park to yourself.
Driving from Tbilisi
Tsinandali is 100 km from Tbilisi and 10 km from Telavi, reached via the Kakheti highway through Gurjaani. The drive runs 1.5 to 2 hours depending on traffic and stops.
There's no direct public transport to the estate. The usual route by bus or marshrutka is to Telavi, followed by a 15-minute taxi ride the rest of the way. Day tours from Tbilisi cover Kakheti in a single fixed loop, with set time allotted at each stop.
With a rental car, the route is easier to build around your own priorities: pair Tsinandali with Sighnaghi, Alaverdi Monastery, or a winery visit on the way, and head back to Tbilisi on your own schedule instead of a group's. The road is paved the whole way, so a standard sedan or crossover handles it fine, no need for anything larger.
Before You Go
Tsinandali packs a specific history, the Chavchavadze family, a war, a rebuild, an imperial residence, a Soviet-era museum, into a stop that takes half a day to see properly. Combine it with Sighnaghi or Bodbe Monastery rather than treating it as a single destination. If you're driving yourself, plan the whole day around the region and not just the estate.



















