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Cheap local food at Yerevan market — lavash, vegetables and spices, Armenia

Armenia Travel Costs 2026 — Real Budget Guide

Armenia

CaucasusExpert · Updated March 2026

Armenia Travel Costs 2026 — Real Budget Guide

What Armenia actually costs. Real prices in AMD and USD, no rounding up.

Armenia is one of the most affordable countries in the region for Western travellers. Yerevan has a restaurant scene that would cost three times as much in London or New York, guesthouses throughout the country that charge $20–35 per night and include breakfast, and public transport that costs pennies. The catch is that some things — international flights, organised tours, and accommodation in peak season — cost much the same as anywhere else. This guide gives you real numbers, not aspirational ones.

Budget

$35–55 per day · hostel or guesthouse, local food, public transport, free sites

Mid-range

$70–120 per day · hotel, restaurant meals, occasional taxi, 1 tour

Comfortable

$150–250 per day · good hotel, all meals out, private tours, car rental

Quick Answer — How Much Does Armenia Cost?

A realistic budget for comfortable independent travel in Armenia is $70–120 per person per day — this covers a decent hotel, three meals, local transport and the occasional organised day trip. Budget travellers staying in guesthouses, eating at local canteens and using public transport can manage $35–55 per day. The main expenses that catch people out are international flights (often $400–800 return from Western Europe or the US) and car rental for getting around outside Yerevan ($38–55/day).

AMD 390 Per $1 USD (2026)
AMD 800 Coffee in Yerevan (~$2)
AMD 2,500 Restaurant meal (~$6.40)
AMD 100 Metro ride (~$0.26)
AMD 7,000 Mid hotel/night (~$18)
Free Most monasteries

Quick Answer — Is Armenia cheap to visit?

Yes, compared to Western Europe or North America. Food, local transport and accommodation are all significantly cheaper than in Western countries — a good restaurant meal costs $5–12, a mid-range guesthouse with breakfast $20–40 per night, and a cross-city taxi $1.50–3. The expenses that match Western prices are international flights and organised tours. Armenia rewards travellers who eat where locals eat and use public transport — the savings are substantial.

Accommodation Costs in Armenia

Armenia has a wide range of accommodation from $8 hostel dorms to $200+ resort rooms. The sweet spot for independent travellers — a private room in a well-run guesthouse with breakfast included — sits at AMD 8,000–15,000 ($20–38) per night throughout the country. Yerevan has a broader range including international chain hotels.

TypeBudgetMid-rangeComfortable
Hostel dorm AMD 3,000–5,000
($7.70–12.80)
Guesthouse (private room) AMD 7,000–12,000
($18–31)
AMD 12,000–20,000
($31–51)
Mid-range hotel AMD 20,000–40,000
($51–102)
AMD 40,000–80,000
($102–205)
Luxury / resort AMD 80,000+
($205+)
The best value accommodation in Armenia is almost always a family guesthouse. For AMD 10,000–14,000 ($26–36) you get a clean private room, a substantial breakfast — lavash, cheese, honey, eggs, fruit, strong coffee — and a host who knows everything about the area, can arrange taxis, and will tell you where the tour buses do not go. I have stayed in guesthouses across the country and they consistently outperform hotels three times their price on everything except the bathroom. — Ani, CaucasusExpert

Accommodation by destination

Yerevan — all budgets

Yerevan Hotels

Widest range in the country. Budget hostels from AMD 3,000 ($7.70); good mid-range hotels from AMD 20,000 ($51); international chains from AMD 60,000 ($154). Book ahead in May–June and September–October.

Gyumri — budget friendly

Gyumri Hotels

Armenia’s second city is noticeably cheaper than Yerevan. Good guesthouses from AMD 7,000 ($18); mid-range from AMD 15,000 ($38). Worth an overnight if you are travelling north.

Goris / Tatev region

Goris Guesthouses

The right base for Tatev. Family guesthouses AMD 8,000–14,000 ($20–36) with breakfast. Aida B&B and Ana-Maria BnB are the best options — both book out fast in autumn.

Lake Sevan

Sevan Lakeside

Resort-style accommodation AMD 25,000–70,000 ($64–179). Budget cottages and guesthouses from AMD 10,000 ($26). Summer prices are 30–50% higher than spring/autumn.

Money-saving tip

Guesthouses outside Yerevan almost always include breakfast. Factor this into your comparison — a AMD 12,000 ($31) guesthouse with a full Armenian breakfast is better value than a AMD 9,000 ($23) hotel without food, particularly in areas where good breakfast options are limited.

Food & Drink Costs in Armenia

Food in Armenia is one of the genuine pleasures of travelling here, and it is remarkably affordable. The gap between eating like a local and eating at a tourist restaurant is significant — both in quality and price — and closing it requires only a slight willingness to walk away from the obvious.

ItemLocal / budgetMid-range restaurantTourist / upscale
Coffee (espresso)AMD 500–700 ($1.30–1.80)AMD 800–1,200 ($2.05–3.10)AMD 1,200–1,800 ($3.10–4.60)
Lavash + dipAMD 300–500 ($0.77–1.28)AMD 800–1,200 ($2.05–3.10)AMD 1,500+ ($3.85+)
Lunch (main + drink)AMD 1,500–2,500 ($3.85–6.40)AMD 3,000–5,000 ($7.70–12.80)AMD 6,000–10,000 ($15.40–25.60)
Dinner for two with wineAMD 6,000–9,000 ($15.40–23)AMD 12,000–20,000 ($31–51)AMD 25,000–40,000 ($64–102)
Beer (local, 0.5l)AMD 500–700 ($1.28–1.80)AMD 700–1,200 ($1.80–3.10)AMD 1,200–1,800 ($3.10–4.60)
Armenian brandy (glass)AMD 1,000–1,500 ($2.56–3.85)AMD 1,500–3,000 ($3.85–7.70)AMD 3,000–6,000 ($7.70–15.40)
Dolma (portion)AMD 1,500–2,000 ($3.85–5.13)AMD 2,500–3,500 ($6.40–8.97)AMD 4,000+ ($10.25+)
Ishkhan trout (at Sevan)AMD 4,000–5,000 ($10.25–12.80)AMD 6,000–8,000 ($15.40–20.50)AMD 9,000–12,000 ($23–30.80)
There is a stolovaya — Soviet-style canteen — near the Yerevan opera house that I have been going to for years. You collect a tray, point at what you want from the hot counter, pay at the end. Soup, a main, bread and a glass of kompot comes to AMD 1,800–2,500 ($4.60–6.40). The food is genuinely good — the way that unpretentious cooking made from fresh ingredients always is. No menu, no English, no problem. Every Armenian city has several of these. — Ani, CaucasusExpert

Saving money on food

The markets are where locals shop and where prices are lowest. Yerevan’s GUM market and the Pak Shuka covered market have fresh produce, cheese, dried fruit, churchkhela and lavash at a fraction of what supermarkets charge. For a budget picnic lunch — lavash, cheese, tomatoes, fruit — expect AMD 1,200–1,800 ($3.10–4.60) for two people. The Sunday Vernissage market near Republic Square is excellent for breakfast coffee and pastries from the surrounding cafes before it gets busy.

Transport Costs in Armenia

Getting around Armenia is cheap by almost any standard — the problem is not cost but frequency and comfort. Public transport within Yerevan is excellent value; inter-city marshrutka are affordable but slow and infrequent; car rental is the right choice for serious exploring.

Route / TypeCostDurationNotes
Yerevan metroAMD 100 ($0.26)5–15 min10 stations, covers main centre
City bus / minibusAMD 100 ($0.26)VariesExtensive network, crowded in rush hour
App taxi (Yandex/GG) — cross cityAMD 700–1,200 ($1.80–3.10)10–20 minAlways use app — fixed price before departure
Airport → Yerevan centre (app)AMD 3,000–4,500 ($7.70–11.50)25–35 minFixed transfer is more reliable
Marshrutka Yerevan → SevanAMD 600–800 ($1.54–2.05)1.5 hrsFrom Kilikia station
Marshrutka Yerevan → GorisAMD 2,500–3,000 ($6.40–7.70)4 hrsDaily departures from Kilikia
Marshrutka Yerevan → GyumriAMD 1,200–1,500 ($3.08–3.85)2.5 hrsFrequent departures
Train Yerevan → GyumriAMD 1,500–2,000 ($3.85–5.13)2.5 hrsScenic, comfortable, infrequent
Car rental (basic, per day)AMD 15,000–20,000 ($38–51)Full flexibilityBest option outside Yerevan
Wings of Tatev cable car (return)AMD 6,000 ($15.40)12 min each wayClosed Tuesdays and strong wind

Transport money-saver

For a group of 3–4 people, a shared private taxi to destinations like Sevan or Garni/Geghard often costs less per person than an organised tour — and gives you control of the schedule. Negotiate the evening before through your guesthouse. Expect AMD 8,000–12,000 ($20.50–30.80) total for a car to Sevan and back, split four ways that is AMD 2,000–3,000 ($5.13–7.70) per person.

Activities & Tours Costs

Most of Armenia’s historic and natural sites are free to enter — the monasteries (Geghard, Tatev, Haghpat, Sanahin, Noravank) charge nothing. The main paid attractions are Garni Temple (AMD 1,500/$3.85), the Tatev cable car (AMD 6,000/$15.40 return), and organised tours from Yerevan.

ActivityCost per personNotes
Garni Temple entryAMD 1,500 ($3.85)Includes bathhouse mosaic
Geghard MonasteryFreeModest dress required
Sevanavank MonasteryFree
Tatev MonasteryFreeCable car extra
Wings of Tatev cable carAMD 6,000 ($15.40) returnOne-way AMD 4,000 ($10.25)
Tsitsernakaberd Genocide MemorialFreeMuseum AMD 1,000 ($2.56)
Ararat Cognac distillery tourAMD 5,000–8,000 ($12.80–20.50)Includes tasting
Half-day group tour from Yerevan$20–35Garni/Geghard, Sevan etc.
Full-day private tour from Yerevan$45–80Tatev, Debed Canyon etc.
Wine tasting at Areni wineryAMD 3,000–5,000 ($7.70–12.80)Varies by winery
Stargazing at Lake Sevan$30–45Campfire + telescope

Sample Daily Budgets — Real Examples

Budget traveller — $42/day

Hostel dorm in Yerevan (AMD 4,000/$10.25) + breakfast at a canteen (AMD 800/$2.05) + metro and one bus trip (AMD 200/$0.51) + lunch at stolovaya (AMD 2,000/$5.13) + entry to Garni Temple (AMD 1,500/$3.85) + taxi from Garni marshrutka stop (AMD 1,500/$3.85) + dinner at a local restaurant with a beer (AMD 3,500/$8.97) + coffee (AMD 600/$1.54) = approx AMD 14,100/$36.15 + incidentals = ~$42.

Mid-range traveller — $95/day

Mid-range hotel in Yerevan (AMD 22,000/$56.40) + breakfast included + app taxi to Garni (AMD 4,000/$10.25 split) + lunch at lakeside restaurant with ishkhan (AMD 6,000/$15.40) + private driver for Garni-Geghard circuit (AMD 8,000/$20.50 split two ways = AMD 4,000/$10.25) + dinner at a good Yerevan restaurant with wine (AMD 10,000/$25.64) = ~$118, call it $95–100 with some walking and free sites.

Comfortable traveller — $190/day

4-star hotel (AMD 45,000/$115.40) + full breakfast + private Tatev day tour (AMD 23,000/$59) + dinner at Yerevan’s best restaurant with wine and brandy (AMD 18,000/$46.15) + taxis throughout (AMD 3,000/$7.70) = ~$228 gross, coming down to ~$190 with efficient planning and some free monastery visits.

Money, ATMs & Payments in Armenia

The Armenian dram (AMD) is the currency. As of early 2026, $1 ≈ AMD 390 — but this fluctuates. Always check the current rate before converting large amounts.

ATMs: Widely available in Yerevan; less so in rural areas and small towns. ACBA Bank, Ameriabank and Ardshinbank ATMs have the lowest fees and best rates. Avoid airport exchange booths — the rate is significantly worse. Withdraw AMD from ATMs rather than converting at exchange offices wherever possible.

Cards: Visa and Mastercard are accepted at most Yerevan restaurants, hotels and shops. Outside Yerevan — particularly at guesthouses, rural restaurants and local markets — cash is expected. Always carry AMD cash when travelling outside the capital.

Exchange offices: Available throughout Yerevan. Rates are generally competitive but vary; compare two or three before converting. Never exchange on the street.

Dram fluctuation

The Armenian dram has been volatile since 2022. The prices in this guide use $1 ≈ AMD 390 (early 2026). Check the current rate at xe.com before converting significant amounts — a 10% rate shift can meaningfully affect your budget calculations.

eSIM — data costs

A local Armenian SIM with data costs AMD 2,000–3,500 ($5.13–8.97) for 7–14 days of data at the airport or in Yerevan phone shops. An eSIM activated before you land is more convenient and similarly priced.

Hidden Costs & What Surprises People

International flights

The biggest single expense for most visitors. There are no direct flights from North America to Yerevan; connections go via Istanbul, Moscow, Vienna, Frankfurt or Dubai. Typical return flight costs by departure city:

Departure cityLow season (Nov–Mar)High season (Jun–Sep)Best connection
London$350–550$500–800Turkish via Istanbul, Austrian via Vienna
Paris$380–580$520–850Turkish via Istanbul, Air France via Paris
Berlin / Frankfurt$320–500$480–750Turkish via Istanbul, Lufthansa via Frankfurt
New York$700–950$900–1,300Turkish via Istanbul (~14 hrs total)
Los Angeles$750–1,000$950–1,400Turkish via Istanbul (~18 hrs total)
Sydney / Melbourne$900–1,200$1,100–1,600Emirates via Dubai or Turkish via Istanbul
Toronto$750–1,000$950–1,300Turkish via Istanbul or Air Canada to Frankfurt

Travel insurance

Not optional for Armenia — see Is Armenia Safe? for the full reasoning. Budget AMD 5,850–15,600 ($15–40) per week for comprehensive cover including medical evacuation. This should be in every budget calculation from day one.

Budget for this

Travel insurance for Armenia: approximately $15–40 per week depending on your age, coverage level and provider. Non-negotiable given limited rural medical facilities and geopolitical complexity.

Tipping

Tipping is not obligatory in Armenia but is appreciated. In restaurants, AMD 500–1,000 ($1.28–2.56) for a casual meal is generous; 10% for a proper restaurant dinner. Taxi drivers do not typically expect tips but rounding up is common. Tour guides: AMD 3,000–5,000 ($7.70–12.80) per day for good service is appropriate.

Seasonal price variation

Accommodation at Lake Sevan is 30–50% more expensive in July–August than in May–June or September. Yerevan hotels during major events (Vardavar in July, Yerevan Wine Days in late May) can also spike. Book ahead for peak dates; prices are more stable if you avoid these windows.

Luggage storage

If you have a long layover between checkout and your flight, luggage storage in central Yerevan saves you dragging bags around. Budget AMD 1,500–2,500 ($3.85–6.40) per item per day.

Armenia vs Georgia vs Turkey — Cost Comparison

Armenia sits comfortably in the affordable end of the regional spectrum. For travellers deciding between Caucasus destinations, or combining countries, here is how the daily costs compare:

CategoryArmeniaGeorgiaTurkey
Budget daily (hostel, local food, public transport) $35–55 $40–60 $45–70
Mid-range daily (hotel, restaurants, taxi) $70–120 $80–130 $90–150
Mid-range hotel per night $30–70 $35–80 $50–110
Restaurant meal (mid-range) $7–15 $8–16 $10–22
City taxi (cross-town) $1.80–3.10 $2–3.50 $3–6
Local beer / wine (restaurant) $1.80–3 $1.50–2.50 $3–6
Car rental per day $38–55 $35–55 $40–70
Visa required (US/UK/EU) No — 180 days No — 1 year No — 90 days

The verdict: Armenia and Georgia are broadly similar in cost, with Armenia slightly cheaper for accommodation outside the capital and Georgia notably cheaper for wine (a bottle of good Kakhetian wine costs $4–8 at source). Turkey is noticeably more expensive, particularly for accommodation in tourist areas. All three are significantly cheaper than Western Europe. See our Georgia Travel Costs guide and Georgia vs Armenia comparison for more detail.

Frequently Asked Questions — Armenia Travel Costs

How much does a trip to Armenia cost?

For a 7-day trip from Western Europe including flights, accommodation, food, transport and activities, budget $800–1,400 per person for comfortable independent travel. Budget travellers can do it for $600–800. The biggest variable is flights — search early and consider flying via Istanbul for the best prices. Once in Armenia, daily costs are low: $40–120 per person per day depending on your style.

Is Armenia cheap to travel?

Yes, compared to Western Europe or North America. Food, accommodation and local transport are all significantly cheaper. A good restaurant meal costs $5–12; a mid-range guesthouse with breakfast costs $20–40 per night; a cross-city taxi costs $1.50–3. Flights and car rental match Western prices; everything else is substantially cheaper.

What currency does Armenia use?

The Armenian dram (AMD). As of early 2026, $1 ≈ AMD 390. Withdraw AMD from ACBA Bank, Ameriabank or Ardshinbank ATMs for the best rates. Cards are accepted in Yerevan restaurants and hotels; carry cash for rural areas, markets and guesthouses outside the capital.

How much does food cost in Armenia?

Eating at local canteens and markets: $3–7 per meal. Mid-range restaurants: $7–15 per person. A good dinner for two with wine: $20–40. Street food and market produce is very cheap — a lavash with dip and a coffee costs under $2. The biggest food cost is ishkhan trout at Lake Sevan ($10–20 for a whole fish) — worth every dram.

How much does transport cost in Armenia?

Yerevan metro and buses: AMD 100 ($0.26) per journey. App taxis across the city: AMD 700–1,200 ($1.80–3.10). Inter-city marshrutka: AMD 600–3,000 ($1.54–7.70) depending on distance. Car rental: AMD 15,000–20,000 ($38–51) per day — the right choice for visiting Tatev, Debed Canyon and rural areas.

How much do tours cost in Armenia?

Half-day group tours from Yerevan (Garni/Geghard, Sevan): $20–35 per person. Full-day private tours to Tatev or Debed Canyon: $45–80 per person. A 7-day private highlights tour with meals: $150–200 per day. Most monasteries are free to enter — you mainly pay for transport and guide fees.

Is Armenia cheaper than Georgia?

Broadly similar, with Armenia slightly cheaper for accommodation outside the capital and food, while Georgia has lower alcohol costs (wine is extremely affordable in Kakheti). Flights to Tbilisi are sometimes cheaper than to Yerevan depending on your origin. See our Georgia Travel Costs guide for a full comparison.

Ready to Plan Your Armenia Trip?

Lock in flights and accommodation early — spring and autumn dates fill quickly.

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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