
Packing Guide
What to Pack for a BJJ Camp in Georgia
Pack for BJJ Camp Georgia with a practical list for gi, no-gi, rashguards, belt, recovery items, toiletries, travel insurance, and Tbilisi downtime.
Quick answer
Bring your usual BJJ gear, including gi, belt, No-Gi kit, rashguards, and any protective gear you personally use.
Also bring a water bottle, towel, toiletries, travel insurance, passport, and comfortable clothes for Tbilisi downtime between sessions.
Confirm any date-specific gear needs before flying, especially if judo, wrestling, or extra conditioning is important to your camp plan.
Core gear
Gi, belt, rashguards, No-Gi kit
Personal items
Mouthguard, tape, braces if used
Travel basics
Passport and travel insurance
Recovery basics
Water bottle, towel, hygiene items
Essential BJJ camp gear
Start with the gear you already use in normal training: gi, belt, No-Gi shorts or spats, rashguards, and underwear that works under grappling gear.
If you train both gi and No-Gi at home, pack for both because the camp can include BJJ, No-Gi, judo, wrestling, and conditioning.
Do not rely on buying your favorite size, brand, or fit after arrival unless the team has confirmed what is available locally.
Gi and No-Gi kit
For gi work, bring at least one gi you trust and your belt. Two gis are better if your luggage allows it and you expect frequent washing.
For No-Gi, bring enough rashguards and shorts or spats to avoid reusing wet gear.
A lightweight laundry plan is part of packing well because repeated sessions can make gear management a real training issue.

Protective gear and personal preferences
Bring the protective items you personally use: mouthguard, athletic tape, knee sleeves, finger tape, ear guard, or braces.
Camp is not the ideal place to discover that a new mouthguard, brace, or rashguard does not fit.
If you have an injury history, pack what helps you manage it and tell the team before training starts.
Recovery and hygiene items
Bring a reusable water bottle, towel, shower items, deodorant, nail clippers, basic medication you are allowed to travel with, and any recovery tool you actually use.
Keep hygiene simple and strict: clean gear, trimmed nails, and showering after training help the whole room.
Full-board support can simplify food and accommodation, but your personal recovery habits still travel with you.
Travel documents and Tbilisi clothes
Bring your passport, travel insurance details, bank cards, phone charger, adapters if needed, and copies of important documents.
Visa and entry rules can change, so verify requirements for your nationality before buying flights.
Pack comfortable clothes and shoes for Tbilisi downtime, meals, walking, and rest days around the training schedule.
What to confirm before arrival
Before you fly, ask whether your dates have any specific gear expectations, whether laundry is easy from your room, and whether you need extra items for judo, wrestling, or conditioning.
Training-only athletes should also confirm where they are staying and how they will get to the facility each day.
The goal is to arrive ready to train, not to spend the first two days solving avoidable logistics.
Related Guides
Ready to train BJJ in Georgia?
Choose a 7-day or 14-day module in Tbilisi, then tell us your level, room preference, and preferred dates. We will confirm availability before you book flights.
BJJ Camp FAQ
How many gis should I bring?
Bring at least one reliable gi. Two are better if luggage space allows and you expect frequent gi training.
Do I need No-Gi gear?
Yes, pack No-Gi gear unless the team confirms your dates are gi-only. The camp can include No-Gi and cross-training.
Should I bring travel insurance?
Yes. Travel insurance is separate from the camp package and should be arranged before you travel.