Best Co-Working Spaces in Kazbegi for Remote Workers and Freelancers

Photo by  Yolk CoWorking - Krakow

11 min read · Kazbegi, Georgia · co working spaces ·

Best Co-Working Spaces in Kazbegi for Remote Workers and Freelancers

MG

Words by

Mariam Gelashvili

Share

Advertisement

Best co-working spaces in Kazbegi are a rare breed. This is a mountain village at 1,740 meters elevation where the main street runs about a square and the weather can shut everything down by noon. If you are a remote worker trying to squeeze out some hours between those Tbilisi winding roads and glacier days, this guide is built from my time logging hours in nearly every shared office Kazbegi has to offer.

1. Hotel & Cowork Kazbegi on Kazbegi Avenue

Where to set up
Tucked just metres from the main crossroads where Kazbegi Avenue meets the military highway, this spot is the one locals recommend first. The lobby area seats about fifteen laptops comfortably. I spent three winter weeks here when snow blocked Stepantsminda Cross Pass just outside.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: Black Georgian tea from the small local blend she sources from a farm in Khevsureti. The view from the window seats is the church of the Holy Trinity framed by the Caucasus.

Best Time: 9:00 to 12:00 before the tour buses arrive and the lobby fills with day-trippers heading up to Gergeti.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Quiet and functional. The Wi-Fi drops out near the back tables when the router overheats, which happens more often than the staff admits.

Local Tip: Ask the front desk for the password to the second-floor lounge. It is technically for hotel guests but they rarely enforce it and the signal is stronger up there.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: This place was one of the first to offer a hot desk Kazbegi option back in 2019, when the town was still mostly guesthouses and Soviet-era hotels. It helped seed the idea that you could work from the mountains.

2. Rooms Hotel Kazbegi – Lobby Work Zone

Where to set up
On Tamar Mephe Street, just off the main square. The lobby has a long communal table and a few armchairs near the fireplace. I have seen more than a few freelancers camp out here for entire afternoons.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: The house-made lemonade with mint. It is not on the menu but the bar staff will make it if you ask nicely.

Best Time: 14:00 to 17:00 when the lunch crowd clears and the fire is lit in winter.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Upscale but relaxed. The only real drawback is that the power outlets are sparse, bring a multi-plug adapter.

Local Tip: The hotel sometimes hosts small cultural evenings with local musicians. These are not advertised online, ask at reception on a Monday what is coming that week.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Rooms Hotel helped put Kazbegi on the international travel map. Their presence drew a different kind of visitor, one who might stay a week instead of a night, and that shift created demand for coworking membership Kazbegi options.

3. Hotel Porta Kazbegi – Terrace Workspace

Where to set up
On the road toward Gergeti, about a ten-minute walk from the centre. The covered terrace has a few tables with views straight up the valley. I used this spot for a video call once and the background impressed my client more than my presentation.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: Khinkali, the local dumplings. They are hand-rolled each morning and the filling changes with the season.

Best Time: 10:00 to 13:00 before the afternoon clouds roll in and the terrace gets cold.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Peaceful and scenic. The trade-off is that the Wi-Fi signal weakens significantly on the terrace compared to the indoor dining area.

Local Tip: The owner knows every trail in the area. If you finish work by 15:00, ask him which path is clearest that day. He will draw you a hand map on a napkin.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Places like Porta represent the new wave of Kazbegi hospitality, small, family-run, and deeply connected to the land. They are the reason the town is slowly becoming more than a one-night stop.

4. Cafe Lanchvali – The Quiet Corner

Where to set up
On the main street, just past the central square. There is a back corner with two tables near a power outlet. I have written entire articles from that spot.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: The homemade adjika with fresh bread. It is spicy enough to keep you alert through a long afternoon.

Best Time: 8:00 to 11:00 on weekdays. Weekends get crowded with hikers grabbing breakfast before heading up the trails.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Cozy and local. The music playlist is a mix of Georgian folk and 90s Russian pop, which is either charming or distracting depending on your taste.

Local Tip: The owner's mother runs a small shop next door selling local honey and churchkhela. Stock up before a long work session, the sugar helps.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Lanchvali is one of the few places that has been here through every phase of Kazbegi's tourism boom. It survived the 2015 flood and the 2020 lockdowns. That kind of resilience is the backbone of this town.

5. Stepantsminda Public Library – The Unexpected Desk

Where to set up
Near the centre, a short walk from the main square. The reading room has a few desks and surprisingly decent natural light. I discovered this place by accident when the power went out at my guesthouse.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: Nothing to order, this is a library. But the collection includes a small section of English-language books about Georgian history that are worth browsing.

Best Time: 10:00 to 16:00, Monday through Friday. It closes early on weekends.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Silent and serious. The Wi-Fi is basic and sometimes cuts out during peak afternoon hours when everyone in the building is online.

Local Tip: The librarian knows the full history of the town, including the Soviet-era stories that never make it into guidebooks. Ask her about the old mountaineering club that used to meet here.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: The library is a reminder that Kazbegi is a real town, not just a tourist stop. The people who work here live here year-round, through winters when the road to Tbilisi closes for days.

6. Quadra Hotel Kazbegi – The Business Corner

Where to set up
On the road toward the Georgian Military Highway, about a fifteen-minute walk from the centre. The lobby has a dedicated corner with a desk, lamp, and power strip. I used this for a full week when I needed to focus without distractions.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: The espresso is pulled properly here, which is not a given in Kazbegi. Pair it with a slice of the house-made cake.

Best Time: 9:00 to 12:00 or 15:00 to 18:00. Midday gets busy with hotel guests checking in and out.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Professional and calm. The only issue is that the air conditioning in summer can be overly aggressive, bring a light jacket even in July.

Local Tip: The hotel manager can arrange a shared office Kazbegi setup in a private meeting room if you need to take calls without background noise. It is not listed as a service but he has done it for regulars.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Quadra represents the newer investment in the area, the kind of infrastructure that makes it possible for people to actually work here rather than just visit.

7. Cafe Panorama – The View Desk

Where to set up
On the hill above the town, near the road to Gergeti. The upper-floor balcony has two tables with a direct view of Mount Kazbek. I once sat here for four hours without moving because the light was perfect for editing photos.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: The local cheese bread, shotis puri, fresh from the tone oven. It arrives warm and slightly charred.

Best Time: 11:00 to 14:00 when the sun hits the mountain face and the light is clearest.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Open and inspiring. The wind can be a problem on certain days, secure your papers or they will end up in the valley.

Local Tip: The owner keeps a pair of binoculars behind the counter. If you ask, he will let you use them to spot the climbers on Gergeti Glacier. It is a nice mental break between tasks.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Panorama is the kind of place that reminds you why you came to the mountains in the first place. The work gets done, but the landscape does something to your brain that no city office can replicate.

8. Guesthouse Edelweiss – The Home Office

Where to set up
On a quiet side street off the main road, about a five-minute walk from the square. The common room has a large table, good light, and a heater that actually works. I stayed here for a month and treated it as my primary office.

Advertisement

What to Order / See / Do: The homemade compote made from local fruit. It changes daily depending on what the family picks from their garden.

Best Time: 8:00 to 12:00. The family is out in the mornings so the house is quietest then.

Advertisement

The Vibe: Warm and familial. The drawback is that the Wi-Fi is shared with the whole house and slows down in the evening when guests stream movies.

Local Tip: The grandmother makes a traditional Khevsurian dish on Thursdays if you ask in advance. It is not on any menu and it is one of the best meals I have had in Georgia.

Advertisement

Why it matters to Kazbegi: Edelweiss is the old model of Kazbegi hospitality, a family opening their home. These guesthouses are the reason the town has any tourism economy at all. Supporting them is how you give back.

When to Go / What to Know

Kazbegi's internet infrastructure has improved significantly since 2020, but it is still mountain internet. Expect speeds between 15 and 40 Mbps in most places, with occasional drops during storms. Power outages happen, usually lasting 30 minutes to two hours, most often in winter when the lines ice over. Every serious worker here carries a power bank and a mobile hotspot as backup.

Advertisement

The best months for combining work and exploration are May, June, September, and early October. July and August bring the most tourists and the highest prices. November through March is quiet but the road to Tbilisi can close for days at a time due to snow and landslide risk on the Cross Pass.

A coworking membership Kazbegi style does not really exist in the formal sense. Most places operate on a pay-per-day or buy-a-drink-and-stay model. Budget between 15 and 30 GEL per day for a workspace including coffee and snacks. Some hotels will negotiate weekly rates if you ask directly.

Advertisement

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Kazbegi's central cafes and workspaces?

Most central locations report download speeds between 15 and 40 Mbps and upload speeds between 5 and 15 Mbps. Speeds drop noticeably during evening hours and during heavy rain or snow when the lines are under strain. A mobile hotspot on a Georgian carrier network is a reliable backup.

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Kazbegi?

No. Kazbegi does not have a dedicated 24/7 co-working space. Hotel lobbies are the latest-running options, generally accessible until 22:00 or 23:00. After that, your best bet is working from your guesthouse or hotel room.

Advertisement

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Kazbegi for digital nomads and remote workers?

The central area within a five-minute walk of the main square has the highest concentration of cafes, hotels with lobby work zones, and the most consistent internet. The side streets toward Gergeti have quieter options but fewer places to choose from if one loses power.

Is Kazbegi expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier daily budget runs about 80 to 120 GEL. That covers a guesthouse or budget hotel room (40-60 GEL), two meals at local cafes (25-35 GEL), coffee and snacks (10-15 GEL), and local transport or a marshrutka day trip (5-10 GEL). Prices rise 20 to 30 percent in July and August.

Advertisement

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Kazbegi?

Charging sockets are available but not abundant. Most cafes have two to four outlets and they fill up quickly during peak hours. Power backups are rare outside of hotels. Carrying a multi-plug adapter and a portable charger is strongly recommended for anyone planning to work a full day.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Share this guide

Enjoyed this guide? Support the work

Filed under: best co-working spaces in Kazbegi

More from this city

More from Kazbegi

Where to Get Authentic Pizza in Kazbegi (No Tourist Traps)

Up next

Where to Get Authentic Pizza in Kazbegi (No Tourist Traps)

arrow_forward