
There’s a quiet kind of happiness in being a guest. When someone else handles the schedules, the tickets, and the routes, and you simply show up.
Traveling this way feels different. It’s lighter, calmer, and somehow more real. Because when you’re not busy organizing, you start noticing: the colors, the sounds, the people. You start living the trip instead of managing it. And maybe that’s what true travel should feel like: being present, not prepared.
It’s the case if you plan an Armenia tour 2026 with Levon Travel. The word plan means you just have to contact our team and do nothing. Let’s see what an eight-day schedule for June 2026 will offer travelers.
Day-by-Day Journey Through Armenia
From June 20 to 27, 2026, travelers will spend eight days and seven nights discovering Armenia’s beauty. The journey includes comfortable stays at Ramada by Wyndham Yerevan, guided by an English-speaking expert, with daily breakfasts, two local lunches, and air-conditioned transport for a small group of 4–8 guests.
Yerevan and Its Landmarks

Every journey needs a gentle beginning, a place where you can slowly tune in to the rhythm of a new country. In Armenia, that beginning is always Yerevan. Morning light touches the pink tuff buildings, coffee aromas spill from small cafés, and somewhere in the distance, Mount Ararat appears. This is an ideal morning before you start exploring the capital city’s landmarks.
Yerevan is old, yet young in spirit. It’s one of the world’s oldest cities, yet it feels alive and modern: full of laughter, street music, and color. As you wander through Republic Square or climb Cascade to see the city from above.
Your day begins with breakfast at the hotel, followed by a guided tour through the city’s main landmarks. From the Matenadaran, home to ancient manuscripts and centuries of human thought, to the Genocide Memorial, where silence carries more meaning than words. The Opera House, Victory Bridge, and Mayr Hayastan are on the agenda of our tour.
By evening, you’re free to explore on your own. Maybe a glass of Armenian wine on a Yerevan terrace, or maybe just a quiet walk under the city lights. Either way, the capital makes sure your first full day feels exactly as calm and exciting as travel should.
From Yerevan to Dilijan and Lake Sevan

The road north from Yerevan feels like slipping quietly into another Armenia. After an hour’s drive, you pass a tunnel leading to Dilijan, and just the moment it ends, the forested mountains appear. The air changes first; it grows cooler, scented with pine and damp earth.
Dilijan’s views and calmness make you fall in love with this region of Armenia. There are many interesting landmarks beyond beautiful nature. Not far from here, hidden among trees and mountain paths, are monasteries and lakes, one of which is Goshavank Monastery, a 12th-century masterpiece built by the scholar Mkhitar Gosh.
From there, the road leads toward Lake Sevan. Here, tourists usually stop near the Sevanavank Monastery to have a perfect view of the entire lake.
Khor Virap, Echmiadzin, and a Taste of Armenian Wine

This day´s route will take you south, as close as possible to Mount Ararat. The first stop is Khor Virap Monastery, one of the country’s most iconic sites, where the story of Christian Armenia begins. Long ago, Saint Gregory the Illuminator was held here in a deep underground cell for years before converting King Trdat and the nation to Christianity. Standing on the monastery’s terrace, you can see Ararat so close it feels almost within reach.
From there, the journey continues to Etchmiadzin, the spiritual center of the Armenian and the headquarters of the Armenian Apostolic Church, one of the oldest Christian cathedrals in the world.
Later, the day continues with a winery visit. You’ll tour the cellars, learn a bit about Armenian winemaking, and enjoy lunch with local flavors and a glass (or two) of wine.
A Day in Gyumri

They say Gyumri is Armenia´s soul. Therefore, there is no tour without heading to the second-largest city.
The drive itself is scenic, with open valleys and Mount Aragats on the way. Once you arrive, Gyumri welcomes you with cobblestone streets and houses built from dark volcanic stone. In the Kumayri Historic District, every balcony, window, and doorway feels like a photograph waiting to happen.
Beyond its beauty, Gyumri has a personality. Locals are known for their quick humor and hospitality, and a short conversation can easily turn into coffee, laughter, and stories.
On the way back to Yerevan, the route passes through Aparan and the famous Armenian letters, a monument celebrating the unique Armenian alphabet.
Geghard and Garni: Stones and History

This day feels like a step back in time, not centuries, but millennia. Tourists will leave Yerevan and head east, where the road curves toward two of Armenia’s most remarkable sites: Geghard Monastery and Garni Temple.
The first stop is Geghard, a UNESCO World Heritage site unlike any other. Partly carved into the mountain itself, this medieval monastery has a rich history. Cool, echoing chambers where monks used to live. Geghard is both a place of faith and of incredible craftsmanship.
A short drive away lies something completely different, the pagan Temple of Garni. Built in the 1st century AD, it’s the only Greco-Roman colonnaded temple left in the region, devoted to the sun god Mithra. The view from the temple terrace stretches across the Azat River canyon.
Easy Rhythm of Armenia Tour 2026
Eight days are never enough to truly see a country, and not Armenia. Yet, this journey manages to travel through different directions and moods. Each day brings a new landscape, a new taste, and another story that quietly expands your idea of what travel can be.
A country can’t be fully known in a week, but it can be deeply felt when it’s revealed by those who know it best. Levon Travel will give you the space to enjoy, not to worry, and to experience Armenia tour 2026 as a guest, not a guide.