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Armenia 10-Day Itinerary 2026 — Complete Day-by-Day Guide

Armenia — Itinerary

CaucasusExpert · Updated June 2026

Armenia 10-Day Itinerary 2026 — Complete Day-by-Day Guide

Ten days is enough time to see the essential Armenia and a good part of what makes it genuinely worth the journey — Yerevan, the Ararat plain, the south with Tatev and Noravank, Lake Sevan and Dilijan in the north, the Debed Canyon with its two UNESCO monasteries, and Gyumri. This itinerary is designed as a loop from Yerevan, works with or without a rental car, and includes honest timing so you know what is actually achievable each day.

Quick answer — 10 days in Armenia

The best 10-day Armenia itinerary: Days 1–2 Yerevan, Day 3 Khor Virap + Noravank + Areni wine region, Day 4 drive south to Goris via scenic route, Day 5 Tatev cable car + Khndzoresk cave village, Day 6 drive north via Sevan, Day 7 Lake Sevan + Dilijan, Day 8 Debed Canyon (Haghpat + Sanahin), Day 9 Gyumri, Day 10 Garni + Geghard + return to Yerevan. Best done with a rental car — though every day is achievable by organised tour or taxi if you prefer not to drive.

10-Day Armenia Itinerary — At a Glance

DayRouteSleepDrive
1Arrive Yerevan — city orientation, Republic Square, CascadeYerevan
2Yerevan — Tsitsernakaberd, Vernissage, Saryan Street, Ararat DistilleryYerevan
3Khor Virap → Areni wine → Noravank canyonYerevan~140 km loop
4Drive south: Shaki waterfall → Karahunj → GorisGoris~250 km
5Tatev cable car → Khndzoresk cave village → northSevan or Dilijan~200 km
6Lake Sevan + Noraduz khachkars + Dilijan forestDilijan~80 km
7Haghartsin monastery → drive north → Debed CanyonAlaverdi~100 km
8Haghpat + Sanahin UNESCO monasteries → drive west → GyumriGyumri~120 km
9Gyumri Kumayri historic district → Harichavank monasteryGyumri or Yerevan~20 km
10Garni Temple + Symphony of Stones + Geghard Monastery → YerevanYerevan~80 km loop
Day 1

Arrive Yerevan — The Pink City

MorningArrive at Zvartnots Airport (EVN). Transfer to Yerevan hotel (~25–35 min). Check in, rest.
AfternoonWalk Republic Square — the pink tuff stone centrepiece of the city. Explore Northern Avenue. Visit the Cascade complex for the view over Yerevan toward Ararat.
EveningDinner on Saryan Street — Yerevan’s natural wine and restaurant corridor. Try tolma, khorovats (Armenian barbecue) or ghapama. Budget AMD 5,000–12,000 ($13–31) per person with wine.
Sleep: Yerevan (Kentron district) · Hotels in Yerevan — Booking.com →
Day 2

Yerevan — History, Markets & Brandy

MorningTsitsernakaberd — the Armenian Genocide Memorial and Museum on the hill above the Hrazdan gorge. Allow 2–3 hours. This is the most important cultural site in Armenia for understanding the country’s modern identity.
MiddayVernissage open-air market (weekends) or GUM Market — handmade crafts, Armenian carpets, obsidian jewellery, dried fruits and lavash. Lunch in the market area.
AfternoonArarat Brandy Distillery tour and tasting — the distillery has operated since 1887. Pre-book for the extended tasting with 10- and 20-year aged brandies. 1.5–2 hours.
EveningKond neighbourhood — the oldest surviving quarter of Yerevan, cobblestone lanes, old stone houses. Walk through before sunset. Dinner at one of the restaurants on Abovyan Street.

→ See Full Yerevan Travel Guide for complete listings

Sleep: Yerevan
Day 3

Khor Virap · Areni Wine · Noravank Canyon

The classic south day loop — 140 km from Yerevan covering three completely different experiences. Start very early to catch Khor Virap with Ararat clear.

7:00 AMDepart Yerevan. Drive south on M2 highway toward the Ararat plain.
7:45 AMKhor Virap Monastery — 30 km south of Yerevan. The monastery where Armenia became Christian in 301 AD, with Mount Ararat (5,137 m) filling the skyline behind it. The best view in Armenia is at dawn before summer haze builds. Descend into the underground pit where Gregory the Illuminator was imprisoned for 13 years. 1–1.5 hours.
10:00 AMAreni village — home of the world’s oldest known winery (4,100 BC). Stop at a family winery for a cellar tasting of Areni Noir. The Bird’s Cave (Hnaberd) nearby is where the winery was discovered — accessible by guided tour.
12:30 PMNoravank Canyon — 120 km from Yerevan. The approach road cuts through vertical red limestone walls before the 13th-century monastery appears at the end. The Surb Astvatsatsin church has a narrow external staircase you descend backwards. Afternoon light hits the canyon walls from the west — arrive by 1pm for best colour. 1.5–2 hours.
3:30 PMDrive back to Yerevan (~120 km, 1.5 hrs). Evening at leisure.
The Khor Virap dawn is one of those moments that makes you stop talking. The plain is flat, Ararat is impossibly large, and the monastery is small against it. It takes a few minutes to recalibrate your sense of scale.— Ani, CaucasusExpert
Sleep: Yerevan
Day 4

Drive South — Shaki Waterfall · Karahunj · Goris

A long but rewarding drive day — 250 km south through Vayots Dzor and Syunik, the most dramatically scenic regions of Armenia. Arrival in Goris by evening.

8:00 AMDepart Yerevan south on M2. Drive through the Ararat plain, past Khor Virap, into the Vayots Dzor highlands.
11:00 AMShaki Waterfall — a 20-metre waterfall in a gorge just outside Shaki village, 190 km from Yerevan. 30-minute walk from the road. Free. One of Armenia’s prettiest waterfalls, rarely crowded.
1:00 PMKarahunj (Armenian Stonehenge) — a prehistoric stone circle of 223 standing stones near Sisian, estimated 3,500+ years old. The site is free, peaceful and almost always empty. 1 hour.
3:30 PMContinue south to Goris — a small city in a rocky gorge, the gateway to Tatev. Check into your guesthouse, walk the old quarter carved into soft rock.
EveningDinner in Goris — budget AMD 3,000–6,000 ($7.70–15.40) at a local restaurant. Try Armenian mountain trout if available.

Book Goris accommodation well ahead

Good guesthouses in Goris fill up in July–August. Book at least 2 weeks ahead in summer. The Aida and Ana-Maria guesthouses are both excellent and locally owned.

Sleep: Goris
Day 5

Tatev Cable Car · Khndzoresk Cave Village

The most dramatic day of the itinerary — and the longest. The Wings of Tatev cable car over the Vorotan gorge, then the hidden cave village of Khndzoresk before heading north. Plan for a full day on the road — this is the most demanding day of the 10.

8:30 AMDrive from Goris to Tatev cable car station (30 km, 35 min).
9:00 AMWings of Tatev cable car — 5.7 km, 320-metre descent into the Vorotan gorge. AMD 6,000 ($15.40) return. Cable car closed Tuesdays.
10:00 AMTatev Monastery — 9th-century monastery at the end of the cable car. Main church, gavit, and the Gavazan Column. 1.5 hours. Free entry.
12:30 PMReturn cable car. Lunch in Goris or at a roadside cafe. AMD 2,000–4,000 ($5–10).
2:00 PMKhndzoresk cave village — 8 km from Goris. Hundreds of cave dwellings carved into a red sandstone gorge, inhabited until the 1950s. A suspension bridge crosses the gorge; a steep path descends to the caves. Free entry. 1.5–2 hours.
4:30 PMBegin drive north (~200 km to Dilijan or Sevan). Stop at Selim Caravanserai en route — a perfectly preserved 14th-century caravanserai on the Selim Pass at 2,400 m.
Sleep: Lake Sevan · Best Western Sevan →
Day 6

Lake Sevan · Noraduz Khachkars · Dilijan Forest

MorningLake Sevan — the largest high-altitude lake in the former Soviet Union at 1,900 m. Sevanavank monastery on the peninsula (9th century, 200 steps, views in every direction). The ishkhan trout grilled over charcoal at a lakeside restaurant is a defining meal of Armenia. Allow 2 hours at the lake.
MiddayNoraduz Khachkar Cemetery — on the northern shore of Lake Sevan, 20 minutes from the main town. Hundreds of medieval Armenian carved stone crosses (khachkars) standing in rows — different ages, different styles, different states of weathering. Free. One of the most atmospheric and undervisited sites near Sevan. 45 minutes.
AfternoonDilijan — 35 km north of Sevan. The forest city: ancient beech and oak national park, craft workshops, old town Sharambeyan Street with restored 19th-century houses. Walk through the old town and into the forest edge. 2–3 hours.
EveningStay overnight in Dilijan — either in town or one of the forest guesthouses. Dinner with Dilijan mineral water (famous throughout Armenia).
Sleep: Dilijan
Day 7

Haghartsin Monastery · Drive to Debed Canyon

8:30 AMHaghartsin Monastery — 9 km into the forest above Dilijan. 10th–13th century, surrounded by ancient beech forest that turns gold and copper in October. One of the most atmospheric medieval sites in Armenia. Free entry. 1.5 hours.
11:00 AMDrive north through Tavush region — the greenest, most forested part of Armenia. Road follows river valleys with occasional village stops. ~80 km to Alaverdi in the Debed Canyon.
1:30 PMArrive Debed Canyon. Check into accommodation in Alaverdi or Haghpat village. Lunch.
3:00 PMHaghpat Monastery — UNESCO World Heritage, founded 976 AD on a ridge above the canyon. The main hall, gavit, and bell tower. Chestnut forest around the monastery. Free. 1.5 hours.
5:00 PMEvening in Alaverdi or Haghpat. The canyon town has a Soviet-era copper smelter backdrop that makes for an unusual setting.
Sleep: Alaverdi / Haghpat area
Day 8

Sanahin UNESCO Monastery · Drive to Gyumri

9:00 AMSanahin Monastery — the second UNESCO monastery in the Debed Canyon, 7 km from Haghpat. Founded 10th century, exceptional carved stone khachkars and an attached scriptorium. Free. 1.5 hours. The two monasteries together (Haghpat + Sanahin) form a complete picture of medieval Armenian monastic architecture.
11:00 AMDrive west from Debed Canyon toward Vanadzor and then south to Gyumri — approximately 120 km, 1.5–2 hours through varied mountain landscape.
1:30 PMArrive Gyumri. Check into hotel. Lunch in the city.
3:00 PMFirst walk in Gyumri: Kumayri historic district — the 19th-century black tuff stone neighbourhood, a completely different architectural vocabulary from Yerevan’s pink stone. Vardanantz Square, Sev Berd fortress ruins, Surb Nshan church.
EveningDinner in Gyumri — the city has good local restaurants and a rougher, less polished character than Yerevan that many visitors find more genuine.
Sleep: Gyumri
Day 9

Gyumri · Harichavank Monastery · Drive to Yerevan

MorningGyumri city walk — Dzitoghtsyan Museum of Social Life and National Architecture, Surb Amenaprkich (Holy Saviour) church partially destroyed in the 1988 earthquake and now restored, the outdoor sculpture park on Gorky Street. Gyumri has an active craft tradition — ceramic and carpet workshops are open to visitors.
MiddayLunch in Gyumri. The local gata pastry — a sweet bread with a walnut or flour filling — is specific to Gyumri and worth finding.
2:00 PMHarichavank Monastery — 20 km east of Gyumri. 13th-century monastery with exceptional carved relief stonework and a view of Mount Aragats (4,090 m) on clear days. Free. Almost never crowded. 1 hour.
4:00 PMDrive back to Yerevan — 128 km, approximately 1.5–2 hours on the M1 highway. Check into Yerevan hotel.
EveningFinal Yerevan evening — return to Saryan Street or try Mashtots Avenue for wine bars and restaurants. This is the night to buy things you haven’t bought yet: Armenian cognac, dried apricots, ceramic work.
Sleep: Yerevan · Hotels in Yerevan →
Day 10

Garni Temple · Symphony of Stones · Geghard Monastery

The best half-day trip from Yerevan saved for last — close enough to return in time for an evening flight.

9:00 AMDrive east from Yerevan into the Azat gorge. 28 km to Garni.
9:40 AMGarni Temple — the only surviving Hellenistic temple in the former Soviet Union, 1st century AD on a cliff above the gorge. AMD 1,500 ($3.85) entry. 45 minutes.
10:30 AMSymphony of Stones — a 50-metre wall of perfectly hexagonal basalt columns in the Azat gorge, 1.5 km from Garni. Formed by volcanic lava cooling in geometric patterns — the visual effect is of a natural pipe organ. 15-minute walk from the temple. Free. Almost always skipped by visitors going only to Garni — which means you may have it to yourself.
11:30 AMGeghard Monastery — 8 km further into the gorge. UNESCO World Heritage. Two main churches carved directly into the cliff face. Free entry. 1.5 hours.
1:30 PMDrive back to Yerevan (40 km, ~50 min). Lunch in Yerevan. Last-minute shopping at GUM Market or Vernissage.
EveningTransfer to Zvartnots Airport for departure. Or stay one more night for an early morning flight.
Depart or final night in Yerevan

10-Day Armenia — Estimated Costs

ItemBudgetMid-rangeNotes
Accommodation (10 nights)$200–350$500–900Yerevan 2–3 nights, Goris 2, Dilijan/Sevan 1, Alaverdi 1, Gyumri 1–2, Yerevan 1–2
Car rental (10 days)$380$500–700Compact from ~$38/day. SUV recommended for mountain roads
Fuel$60–80$80–100~800 km total driving, AMD ~250/litre
Food (10 days)$150–250$300–500AMD 2,000–5,000/meal local restaurants; higher in Yerevan
Entry fees$15–25$15–25Garni AMD 1,500, Tatev cable car AMD 6,000; most monasteries free
Tours (optional)$0$100–200With car you need no tours; wine tasting AMD 2,000–5,000
Total (excluding flights)$800–1,100$1,500–2,400Per person, solo travel

Doing This Itinerary Without a Car

Every day of this itinerary is achievable without a rental car — but the logistics are more complex and some flexibility is lost. The most practical approach is a mix of organised tours for the longer days and app taxis for shorter ones.

DayWithout a car
Days 1–2Walking city — no car needed
Day 3GYG Khor Virap + Noravank tour — full day from Yerevan
Days 4–5GYG Tatev tour from Yerevan (long day, early start) or overnight transfer
Day 6Marshrutka Yerevan–Sevan (AMD 500), Sevan–Dilijan (AMD 300). Sevanavank walkable from bus stop
Days 7–8GYG Debed Canyon tour from Yerevan or Dilijan
Day 9Marshrutka Yerevan–Gyumri (AMD 1,000, 1.5 hrs). GYG walking tour of Gyumri
Day 10Viator Garni + Geghard tour from Yerevan

Why 10 Days Is the Perfect Length for Armenia

Armenia is a small country — 300 km end to end — but the density of things worth seeing is exceptional. Ten days hits the sweet spot: enough time to cover every major region without rushing, with buffer days for slower mornings or spontaneous detours.

5 days covers the unmissable highlights — Yerevan, south loop, Garni/Geghard — but misses the north entirely.

7 days adds Sevan, Dilijan and either Tatev or Debed Canyon, but not both.

10 days covers everything: south, north, Debed Canyon, Gyumri, and still gives 2 full days in Yerevan.

14+ days allows slower pacing, hiking in Dilijan national park, a side trip to Jermuk spa resort, and overnight in the Debed Canyon rather than passing through.

If you are choosing between 7 days and 10 days, the decisive question is whether you want to include both Tatev (south) and the Debed Canyon (north). Ten days is the minimum to do both comfortably.

Best Time for This 10-Day Armenia Itinerary

SeasonProsConsVerdict
Spring (Apr–Jun) Apricot blossom at Khor Virap (April), wildflowers, comfortable temperatures (18–26°C), green landscapes Selim Pass may be snowbound until late May Excellent
Summer (Jul–Aug) All sites open, Sevan swimming (18–22°C water), long days Yerevan and south reach 35–38°C; peak crowds at Tatev; book accommodation 4+ weeks ahead Good — go early to southern sites
Autumn (Sep–Oct) ★ Best overall: Debed Canyon and Dilijan in gold/copper colour, comfortable temperatures (12–22°C), all roads open, lower crowds than August Book Dilijan and Debed accommodation early — October fills fast Best month overall
Winter (Nov–Mar) Ararat clearest in winter air, lowest prices, Yerevan lively, Gyumri snow scenes Selim Pass and some mountain roads closed; Tatev cable car may suspend in heavy snow Good for Yerevan + south only

→ Full seasonal breakdown: Best Time to Visit Armenia

How to Get Around Armenia in 10 Days

Rental car (recommended)

A rental car gives complete freedom for this itinerary — especially for Day 4 (Shaki waterfall and Karahunj are not on public transport routes) and Day 5 (Khndzoresk after Tatev). From $38/day for a compact. An SUV is recommended if driving the Selim Pass or any unpaved routes. International Driving Permit required alongside your home licence.

Marshrutkas (shared minibuses)

Cover the main corridors cheaply: Yerevan–Sevan (AMD 500, 1 hr), Yerevan–Dilijan (AMD 700, 1.5 hrs), Yerevan–Gyumri (AMD 1,000, 1.5 hrs). Timetables are irregular — confirm locally. Not suitable for Karahunj, Khndzoresk or the Debed Canyon villages.

App taxis (GG / Yandex Go)

Excellent within Yerevan and for short hops. Less reliable for longer inter-city routes — drivers may be reluctant or price high. Best used for Day 1–2 Yerevan movement and any evening travel within the capital.

Organised tours

Every day of this itinerary is available as an organised tour from Yerevan. GYG and Viator both have reliable operators. Best option for visitors who want guidance, don’t want to drive, or are travelling solo. See the “Without a Car” table above for day-by-day alternatives.

7 Days vs 10 Days vs 2 Weeks in Armenia

LengthWhat you coverWhat you missBest for
5 days Yerevan, Khor Virap, Noravank, Garni/Geghard Tatev, Sevan, Dilijan, Debed, Gyumri Short breaks, first visit highlights only
7 days + Tatev or Debed Canyon + Sevan Gyumri, Khndzoresk, Dilijan proper Most popular length — balanced
10 days ★ Everything: south + north + Debed + Gyumri Jermuk, Lastiver gorge, slow hiking days Complete first visit — ideal length
14 days + Jermuk, Lastiver, slower pacing, Georgia combo start Nothing significant in Armenia Returning visitors or Armenia + Georgia combo

Combining Armenia with Georgia? Ten days Armenia + 7 days Georgia makes an excellent 17-day Caucasus trip — the Debed Canyon on Day 7–8 of this itinerary is already on the Yerevan–Tbilisi road. See our Georgia Travel Guide and Tbilisi to Yerevan route guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 10 days enough for Armenia?

Yes — 10 days covers the essential Armenia comfortably: Yerevan, the south (Khor Virap, Noravank, Tatev), the north (Sevan, Dilijan, Debed Canyon), Gyumri and Garni/Geghard. This is the ideal length for a first visit that goes beyond the highlights. Five days covers the unmissables; seven days adds the north loop; ten days allows a complete picture including Gyumri.

Do I need a car for a 10-day Armenia itinerary?

A car gives complete freedom and is recommended for this itinerary — especially for Day 4 (the scenic south drive via Shaki and Karahunj) and Day 5 (Tatev to Khndzoresk). Without a car, every destination is still reachable by organised tour or marshrutka, but flexibility is reduced. See the “Without a Car” section above for the no-drive version of each day.

What is the best time of year for a 10-day Armenia itinerary?

May–June and September–October are the best months. October is the single best month overall — the Debed Canyon and Dilijan forests are in autumn colour, temperatures are comfortable throughout (12–22°C), all mountain roads are open, and crowds are lower than summer. April is excellent for Khor Virap (apricot blossom on the Ararat plain). July–August is hot in the south — go early to Khor Virap and plan midday at Sevan or Dilijan.

How much does a 10-day trip to Armenia cost?

Excluding flights: $800–1,100 on a budget (hostel/guesthouse, local food, rental car), $1,500–2,400 mid-range (boutique hotels, restaurant meals). Armenia is significantly cheaper than Western Europe — a mid-range ten days in Armenia costs approximately what three nights in a mid-range European city hotel costs. See the full costs table above.

Can I combine a 10-day Armenia trip with Georgia?

Yes — the most common combination is 10 days Armenia + 7 days Georgia (or vice versa) for a 17-day Caucasus trip. Yerevan to Tbilisi is 4 hours by road through the Debed Canyon; this itinerary’s Day 7 already passes through the Debed Canyon area, making it easy to continue into Georgia on Day 10 rather than returning to Yerevan. See our Tbilisi to Yerevan guide and Georgia Travel Guide.

Ready to Plan Your 10 Days in Armenia?

Book your car rental and Goris accommodation first — both fill fast in summer. Sort flights and insurance before anything else.

This article contains affiliate links. If you book through them, CaucasusExpert.com earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. All recommendations are based on personal experience and honest assessment. Full disclosure policy.

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