Fountain Show in Tbilisi ᐉ Events Schedule | YOLO | Yolo
Fountain Show

Fountain Show

Fountain Show
1 Heroes' Square
Ticket price
from15
18.10.2025 - 19.10.2025
Select a date
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English, Georgian, Russian

Schedule

18.10.2025
Saturday
17:00
15 ₾ - 70
15 ₾ - 70
more
18.10.2025
Saturday
17:00
15 ₾ - 70
15 ₾ - 70
more
19.10.2025
Sunday
13:00
15 ₾ - 70
15 ₾ - 70
more
19.10.2025
Sunday
17:00
15 ₾ - 70
15 ₾ - 70
more

Description

Language: Georgian
Duration: 150 minutes

Starting October 18, Tbilisi Circus presents the “Fountain Show” — an unforgettable spectacle where water, light, music, and circus art unite into one magical world.

The traditional circus arena will transform into a vast water stage: an 11,000-liter pool with moving platforms; 700 fountain jets shooting water up to 18 meters high; and breathtaking effects created by a synthesis of lights and reflections.

Audiences can expect:

  • thrilling acrobatic performances

  • jugglers against the backdrop of colorful fountains

  • cheerful clowns

  • trained dogs and monkeys

The “Fountain Show” is a grand event that brings joy, wonder, and unforgettable emotions to all visitors.

Age restriction: 1+

Children up to 5 years old are admitted free of charge (if seated on a parent’s lap). From 5 years and older, a ticket is required.

Tickets can be refunded or exchanged no later than 48 hours before the show.

Photos and videos

Fountain Show

Location

Tbilisi Circus

The Tbilisi Circus is the main circus in Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia. It is housed in a Soviet-era Neoclassical rotunda building built in 1939 on a hilltop overlooking Heroes' Square. Its original big top building was destroyed in a fire in 1911 and the circus was moved to a former wine factory, before settling down, in 1939, in its present Neoclassical, Joseph Stalin-era building designed by Nikolay Neprintsev, Vladimer Urushadze, and Stepan Satunts. With its 2,000-seat capacity, the Tbilisi Circus was ranked among the largest circuses in the Soviet Union, alongside those of Moscow, Kiev, and Baku. A civil unrest and economic collapse in post-Soviet Georgia terminated the circus's heyday in the 1990s. In 2003, the Georgian tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili bought the circus and began an extensive reconstruction, but his involvement in the 2007 political crisis and death shortly thereafter stalled the renovations. His sister, Mzia Tortladze, was able to reopen the circus only in 2011. Since then, the circus has been playing to sellout crowds, bringing together troupes and performers from various parts of the world.

All events at this location