Hotel in Tbilisi, Georgia
Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel
150ptsMetekhi Quarter Intimacy

About Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel
Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel sits on Viktor Jorbenadze Street in one of Tbilisi's most historically layered districts, within reach of the Metekhi cliff and the Kura riverbank. Selected by the Michelin Guide Hotels 2025, it occupies the compact, design-led tier of Old Tbilisi accommodation where neighbourhood character and architectural restraint carry more weight than room count.
Old Tbilisi's Boutique Hotel Tier, and Where Sandali Metekhi Sits Within It
Tbilisi's accommodation market has split cleanly over the past decade. On one side sit the international chain properties and large Soviet-era conversions; on the other, a growing cohort of small boutique hotels that treat neighbourhood positioning as the primary amenity. Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel at 23 Viktor Jorbenadze Street belongs firmly to that second group. The address places it in the Metekhi district, one of the oldest inhabited zones in the city, where the Kura River curves beneath the cliff-leading Metekhi Church and the density of medieval-era streetscape makes the immediate surroundings feel more like a fragment of the city's past than a tourist overlay. For hotels operating in this tier, the neighbourhood does much of the atmospheric work that lobbies and restaurants perform elsewhere.
Michelin's 2025 hotel selection programme, which operates separately from its restaurant stars and applies a distinct set of criteria around quality, character, and consistency, awarded Sandali Metekhi the MICHELIN Selected distinction. Within Tbilisi's boutique segment, this places it alongside a relatively small peer set. Properties in this category are assessed on the quality of welcome, comfort standards, and the degree to which the property reflects its local context rather than a generic international template. The selection functions as an external quality signal in a market where self-described boutique credentials vary considerably.
The Rhythm of a Stay in the Metekhi Quarter
Georgian hospitality has a particular cadence that the leading smaller properties in Tbilisi tend to reflect rather than override. The tradition of stumari, the guest as an almost sacred figure in Georgian culture, shapes the interaction style at independent properties in ways that chain hotels rarely replicate at scale. Arrivals in this part of the city tend to be unhurried: the streets off Viktor Jorbenadze are narrow enough that the city's ambient noise drops, and orientation happens through walking rather than maps. The Metekhi Church is a short distance uphill; Narikala Fortress and the sulphur bath district of Abanotubani are accessible on foot through the old town lanes.
For guests treating the hotel as a base for Old Tbilisi, the spatial logic works in their favour. The Rike Park waterfront, the Bridge of Peace, and the Sameba Cathedral approach roads are all within reasonable walking range. The covered Dry Bridge flea market, where Soviet-era objects, jewellery, and Georgian antiques trade in open-air stalls on weekends, is close enough for an early-morning circuit before the heat of the day. Tbilisi's dining concentration in the Sololaki and Abanotubani neighbourhoods means that dinner reservations, particularly for the more sought-after natural wine restaurants and supra-format dining rooms, are a short walk or taxi ride away. See our full Tbilisi restaurants guide for current recommendations across those neighbourhoods.
Georgian Dining Customs and the Hotel's Neighbourhood Context
The editorial angle of any serious stay in Tbilisi involves understanding how the supra tradition operates in practice. The supra is a formal Georgian feast governed by a tamada (toastmaster), with rounds of wine and food proceeding according to a ritual sequence of toasts. While the full ceremonial version is a hosted private event rather than a restaurant format, the structure of Georgian dining more broadly, long tables, shared dishes, and a pacing that treats the meal as an event rather than a transaction, shapes even informal restaurant experiences in the city. The Metekhi area sits within walking distance of several restaurants that operate closer to the traditional supra format, including family-run spaces in the old town where the table service rhythm reflects this longer tradition.
Tbilisi's natural wine scene, now globally recognised, is concentrated largely in the same neighbourhoods. Georgia is credited with developing the qvevri amber wine method over 8,000 years, making it the world's oldest continuous winemaking tradition by documented evidence. Hotels in the old town benefit from proximity to the bars and restaurants along Shardeni Street and in the Sololaki grid, where natural wine programmes drawn from Kakheti, Kartli, and Racha producers operate alongside contemporary Georgian cooking. For guests visiting from properties like Sandali Metekhi, this proximity is a practical advantage that the address delivers directly.
Tbilisi's Boutique Hotel Peer Set
Within Old Tbilisi, the boutique tier includes several properties that share Sandali Metekhi's approach to small scale and neighbourhood integration. Margot Old Tbilisi and Khedi Hotel Tbilisi operate in adjacent zones of the old town; both sit in the same independently owned, design-attentive category. Communal Sololaki Hotel and Communal Hotel Plekhanovi represent a slightly different approach, with a younger aesthetic and a more social format, while Artizan - Design Hotel leans further into the design-led positioning. Hotel Afisha operates in a comparable price tier with similar intimacy of scale. Fabrika Tbilisi and Golden Tulip Design Tbilisi occupy different points on the scale and format spectrum. The Michelin Selected status that Sandali Metekhi holds provides an independently verified quality reference in a tier where the range is wide.
For travellers extending into the rest of Georgia, the country's accommodation map has grown considerably. Tsinandali Estate, A Radisson Collection Hotel in the Alazani Valley anchors the Kakheti wine region, while Vazisubani Estate in Gurjaani Municipality offers a quieter estate format in the same wine country. The Black Sea coast is served by Orbi Beach Tower Hotel in Batumi and Paragraph Resort & Spa Shekvetili. Mountain options include Rooms Kazbegi in Stepantsminda and Bioli Wellness Resort in Kojori. Wine country accommodation is further covered by Communal Hotel Telavi in Kakheti and Lopota Lake Resort & Spa in Napareuli. For winter mountain travel, Orbi Palace Hotel in Bakuriani and Mtserlebi Mountain Resort By Graz cover the ski resort tier.
Planning a Stay: Practical Notes
Old Tbilisi hotels in the boutique category tend to have limited room counts, and the city's peak seasons (late spring and early autumn) compress availability quickly. Tbilisi draws a consistent flow of visitors from April through June and again from September through November, when temperatures sit in a comfortable range for walking the old town and day trips into Kakheti. Summer arrivals face heat in the city but find the wine regions productive for harvest visits in late August and September. Booking several weeks in advance for the shoulder season months is sensible; last-minute availability during peak weekends is limited across the boutique tier.
For context on how Tbilisi's hospitality tier compares internationally, the small luxury boutique format Sandali Metekhi represents has parallels at properties like Aman Venice or Cipriani, A Belmond Hotel, Venice in terms of neighbourhood-first positioning, though at a substantially different price point. Other European reference points in the independent boutique category include Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz and Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo at the grand end of the spectrum, and The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City for a transatlantic design-led comparison. The Burgess Hotel, Atlanta provides a further North American point of comparison in the design-boutique tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most popular room type at Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel?
Specific room-type breakdown data is not available in the public record for this property. What is confirmed is that the hotel holds MICHELIN Selected status for 2025, which assesses comfort and quality across the property. For boutique hotels in the Metekhi district, rooms with views toward the Kura River and the Metekhi Church cliff tend to be in highest demand. Direct enquiry to the property would confirm current availability and room configurations.
What makes Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel worth visiting?
The combination of address and external recognition provides a clear case. Viktor Jorbenadze Street sits in the oldest continuously inhabited zone of Tbilisi, giving guests immediate walking access to the Metekhi Church, Narikala Fortress, and the Abanotubani sulphur bath district. The MICHELIN Selected designation in the 2025 guide places it among the independently verified quality tier of Tbilisi's boutique hotels, in a market where self-described quality claims vary considerably. For travellers whose priority is immersion in the old town rather than distance from it, the location functions as a practical asset.
Should I book Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel in advance?
For Old Tbilisi boutique properties during the April-to-June and September-to-November peak windows, advance booking is the safer approach. Properties in this tier have limited room counts, and the city's growing profile among European and Middle Eastern travellers means desirable weekends fill ahead of schedule. If the MICHELIN Selected status is a factor in your selection, note that other properties at this recognition level in the city carry similar demand patterns. Booking four to six weeks ahead for shoulder-season travel is a reasonable baseline; for peak holiday weekends, further in advance is advisable.
Is Sandali Metekhi Boutique Hotel a good base for exploring Georgia's wine country?
As an Old Tbilisi property, it functions well as an urban starting point for Kakheti day trips. The main road east to the Alazani Valley wine region runs from Tbilisi, with the major wine towns of Telavi and Sighnaghi reachable in roughly two hours by car. For travellers who want to split time between city and wine country, pairing a stay at Sandali Metekhi with a night at a regional property such as Tsinandali Estate or Vazisubani Estate is a practical itinerary structure. The hotel's Michelin Selected credential provides a consistent quality reference at the Tbilisi end of that combination.
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