The Zemo Krikhi church of the Archangel (Georgian: ზემო კრიხის მთავარანგელოზის ეკლესია, romanized: zemo k'rikhis mtavarangelozis ek'lesia) is a 10th–11th-century church in western Georgia, in the highland Ambrolauri Municipality, part of the historical and cultural region of Racha.
It is a hall church with a projecting apse, adorned with stone carvings, frescoes, and medieval Georgian inscriptions.
Its first recorded mention occurs in the travel notes of the Russian envoys Tolochanov and Yevlyev, touring western Georgia in the 1650s, and Georgian donation charters of the 17th–18th century.
On the south and west, the church has annexes, apparently special areas for women (sakalebo), built later in the 11th century.
The façades bear a dozen of inscriptions in the medieval Georgian asomtavruli and nuskhuri scripts, paleographically dated to the 11th century.