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Georgia Crypto Tax 2026

JULY 3, 2026
Georgia Crypto Tax 2026

Georgia has a genuinely favourable — and genuinely specific — set of rules for crypto. The short version: personal crypto gains are 0% taxed. Getting paid in crypto for your work is not. Mining is different again. Here is exactly which rule applies to which situation.

Legal source: This article is based on Public Ruling N201, issued by the Minister of Finance of Georgia on 28 June 2019 — the operative legal instrument governing crypto tax treatment in Georgia. It remains in force as of 2026.
The three situations — and their different tax treatments
1. You personally buy, sell, hold, or trade crypto: 0% tax on any profit, regardless of amount
2. You receive crypto as payment for services (as an IE): taxed as ordinary business turnover — 1% under Small Business Status if you qualify
3. You mine crypto: a different, more complex regime involving both VAT and income tax

Situation 1: Personal Crypto Trading — 0% Tax

This is Georgia's standout advantage. Under Public Ruling N201, income an individual receives from the sale or exchange of crypto assets is not classified as Georgian-source income — because crypto has no physical form, is not tied to any specific location, and typically has no identifiable issuer. Georgia taxes individuals only on Georgian-source income, so if crypto profit does not qualify as Georgian-source, it falls outside the personal income tax system entirely.

This means, for a genuinely personal investor:

Buying and selling crypto: 0% tax on any profit
Exchanging one crypto asset for another: 0% tax
Profit magnitude does not matter — a small trade and a life-changing gain are treated the same way
No specific tax forms or declarations are required for purely personal, non-business crypto activity
An important nuance on residency

This exemption is based on the source of the income (not Georgian), not on your personal tax residency status. In principle, this means the exemption applies whether or not you are a Georgian tax resident — because Georgia only taxes individuals on Georgian-source income in either case. That said, this is a nuanced area of law with limited official guidance beyond the original 2019 ruling. If you have complex circumstances — large gains, multiple jurisdictions, potential tax treaty questions with your home country — get advice specific to your situation before relying on this.

Situation 2: Getting Paid in Crypto as an Individual Entrepreneur

This is where most confusion happens. The 0% exemption applies to personal investment activity — buying, selling, holding crypto as your own asset. It does not apply when crypto is the payment mechanism for a service you provided.

If a client pays your Georgian IE in crypto for freelance or consulting work, that crypto is ordinary business turnover — taxed exactly like a payment that arrived in EUR or USD. If you hold Small Business Status, it is taxed at 1% (up to the 500,000 GEL threshold). If you do not hold SBS, standard 20% income tax applies.

QuestionAnswer
How the payment is classifiedCrypto received as payment for goods/services rendered — treated as business income
Tax rate (with Small Business Status)1% on the GEL value of the payment
Tax rate (without SBS)20% standard income tax on net profit
When it becomes taxableOn the day the crypto arrives in your wallet — even if you never convert it to fiat
How it is valuedConverted to GEL using the official Revenue Service exchange rate for that date
Declaration requirementIncluded in your monthly turnover declaration by the 15th, same as any other payment
The critical compliance point

You must declare crypto payments even if you never sell or convert them. The taxable event is receipt, not conversion. If you invoice a client for 5,000 USD worth of Bitcoin and simply hold it in your wallet, that 5,000 USD equivalent (converted to GEL at the Revenue Service rate on the day it arrived) must appear in your monthly declaration regardless.

Situation 3: Crypto Mining — A Genuinely Different Regime

Mining is treated differently from both trading and receiving crypto as payment, because the ruling classifies it as the supply of computational power — a service — rather than a financial transaction.

Income Tax on Mining

Income from mining conducted within Georgia — using Georgian electricity and infrastructure — is generally treated as Georgian-source income for individuals, and taxed at the standard 20% personal income tax rate. This is a meaningfully different outcome from personal trading, where the 0% exemption does not apply.

VAT on Mining — Depends on Where Your Customer Is

This part is genuinely intricate. If you are selling computational power (hash power) as a service, VAT treatment depends on where the buyer of that hash power is based:

Selling hash power to a customer based outside Georgia, with no Georgian presence: not VAT taxable
Selling hash power to a customer based in Georgia, or one with a Georgian permanent establishment: VAT taxable at 18%
Buying hash power from abroad as a Georgian resident: this purchase is VAT taxable in Georgia

Mining is genuinely the most complex area of Georgian crypto tax, and the original 2019 ruling leaves some interpretive questions unresolved. If mining is part of your activity, this is an area where professional guidance is worth the cost — the wrong classification can mean a materially different tax bill.

VAT on Ordinary Crypto Transactions

Outside of mining, buying, selling, and exchanging crypto assets is treated similarly to currency transactions and is exempt from VAT. This aligns with the EU Court of Justice's Hedqvist ruling, which most EU member states also follow — Georgia's approach here is consistent with broader European practice, not an outlier.

Companies (LLCs): The Estonian Model Applies to Crypto Too

If your crypto activity runs through a Georgian LLC rather than as an individual, the standard Estonian-style corporate tax model applies:

SituationOutcome
Profits retained/reinvested in the company0% corporate tax
Profits distributed as dividends15% corporate tax on the distributed amount + 5% dividend withholding tax
VAT on crypto exchange transactionsExempt, same as for individuals
When you might need an LLC instead of an IEHiring staff, raising investment, or seeking a VASP license

For most solo traders and freelancers, an Individual Entrepreneur remains the simpler and more tax-efficient structure. The LLC route becomes relevant if you are building a genuine crypto business — an exchange, a fund, a platform — rather than trading or invoicing personally.

Do You Need a VASP License?

Georgia introduced Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) regulation in 2023, overseen by the National Bank of Georgia. A license is required if you provide regulated crypto services to others — running an exchange, holding client funds, managing third-party wallets, or offering conversion services as a business.

A VASP license is not required simply for:

Trading crypto for your own personal account
Receiving crypto as payment for your own freelance or consulting services
Holding crypto assets personally or through your IE

Practical Record-Keeping

Even though personal crypto trading requires no specific tax declaration, keeping clean records is strongly advisable — both to prove the personal, non-business nature of your activity if ever questioned, and to support any future residency, banking, or visa applications.

Keep records of purchase dates, amounts, and exchange used for all personal trades
For IE payments received in crypto, record the date of receipt and the Revenue Service exchange rate used
Keep bank and exchange statements separating personal trading activity from business income
If mining, keep detailed records of electricity costs, equipment, and buyer location for VAT purposes

Questions We Get Asked a Lot

Click any question to expand.

Is crypto really 100% tax-free in Georgia?

For personal trading and investment — yes, based on the 2019 Ministry of Finance ruling that remains in force. But this only applies to buying, selling, and exchanging crypto as a personal asset. If you receive crypto as payment for work, or if you mine it, different rules apply as covered above.

If I am paid in crypto as a freelancer, is that really taxed differently from trading crypto?

Yes, and this is the most misunderstood part of Georgian crypto tax. The 0% rule is about the character of the transaction — a personal capital transaction — not about the fact that crypto is involved. Payment for services rendered is business income regardless of what currency or asset it arrives in.

Do I need to be a Georgian tax resident to benefit from the 0% rule?

The exemption is based on crypto profit not being Georgian-source income — a rule that applies to how the income is classified, not to residency status specifically. In principle this benefits both residents and non-residents. For anyone with significant crypto holdings or complex cross-border circumstances, we recommend getting advice specific to your situation, including how your home country treats the income.

What Revenue Service exchange rate do I use for crypto payments?

The official rate published by the Revenue Service / National Bank of Georgia for the date the crypto was received — not the exchange rate on the day you convert it to fiat, and not the rate from Binance, Coinbase, or your bank. Your accountant checks this for each payment when preparing your monthly declaration.

Can I combine crypto trading with my Georgian IE's 1% tax status?

Yes — the two are independent. Your personal crypto trading remains 0% taxed regardless of your IE status. Your IE's 1% Small Business Status applies to your business turnover, which would include any crypto received as payment for your IE's services. Keep the two activities and their records clearly separated.

This article is based on Public Ruling N201 of the Minister of Finance of Georgia (28 June 2019) and publicly available legal analysis as of 2026. It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Crypto tax classification depends heavily on individual facts — consult a qualified Georgian tax adviser before making decisions based on this. Legal Vista LLC is a Georgian corporate law firm; all legal work is carried out by qualified Georgian advocates.

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