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Daily life at Ambassadori Kachreti mirrors the experience of staying in a luxury hotel. Owners can request housekeeping, book spa treatments, arrange meals, or reserve event spaces through a centralized concierge system. This model especially appeals to relocators and second-home buyers, those who want comfort without creating a new household from scratch. Whether you stay for three days or three months, the environment adjusts to your rhythm without creating administrative burdens.

Tbilisi accounts for over 40% of all real estate transactions in Georgia (TBC Capital, 2025), making it the most active market by volume. The capital benefits from consistent demand fueled by students, digital nomads, expatriates, and long-term renters. Infrastructure is strong, public transport is reliable, and short-stay platforms like Airbnb continue to report healthy occupancy across central districts.

In 2024, nearly 42% of international property investors listed passive income and hands-off management as their top priorities when entering emerging markets (JLL Global Living Report). That trend is now shaping real estate decisions in Georgia, where hotel-serviced apartments are becoming a preferred investment vehicle for both domestic and international buyers seeking predictable returns without operational hassle.

Each apartment at Ambassadori Kachreti is delivered as a turnkey unit, furnished with modern design pieces, lighting, appliances, and climate systems. Owners aren’t left managing renovations or sourcing tenants. Instead, the resort’s in-house team manages all aspects of rental turnover, maintenance, and guest communication. That removes one of the most significant barriers to international ownership: operational complexity. For diaspora buyers, foreign investors, or Tbilisi-based owners seeking weekend returns, it’s a true

The Georgian real estate market grew by 15.4% year-over-year in Q1 2025, according to TBC Capital, but the most surprising momentum isn’t in Tbilisi or Batumi, it’s in Kakheti. The eastern region, already known for producing over 70% of Georgia’s wine, is fast becoming one of the country’s most promising property investment destinations. As of May 2025, residential property transactions in Kakheti increased by 19.8% year-on-year, outperforming nearly every other