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Company Setup· 6 min read

Georgia's Virtual Zone, Small Business Status, and International Company Status in 2026

Georgia has three distinctive tax regimes that draw cross-border movers. Here's what each one really qualifies, and where the cases go wrong.

Georgia has three distinctive tax frameworks that recur in cross-border-mover planning: Virtual Zone, Small Business Status for individual entrepreneurs (IE), and International Company Status (ICS) for qualifying companies. Each is real. Each has eligibility conditions that are checked, not assumed.

Virtual Zone

A Virtual Zone Person status applies to companies engaged in qualifying IT activities exporting services outside Georgia. The status provides corporate income tax relief on qualifying export income subject to specific conditions.

Strengths. Real benefit for genuine IT-export companies.

Watch for. The activity must be qualifying IT activity per the regulation, and the export-outside-Georgia condition matters. Substance is checked. Status can be revoked if conditions cease to be met.

Small Business Status for IE

Individual Entrepreneurs (IE) registered under Small Business Status pay turnover tax at the published rate (historically 1% subject to a turnover cap) for qualifying activities.

Strengths. Very low effective rate for qualifying IE income.

Watch for. Activity restrictions - certain categories are excluded. Turnover cap - exceeding it changes the regime. The status is for individual entrepreneurs operating real activity, not for wrapping employment income from a single foreign employer (which can be recharacterised).

International Company Status

For qualifying IT and maritime companies with real operations in Georgia, ICS provides a reduced corporate income tax rate (historically 5% on qualifying income).

Strengths. A working regime for real operating companies in qualifying sectors.

Watch for. Real substance requirements - genuine local operations, qualifying employees, real activity. The condition list is non-trivial.

Where cases go wrong

  • Treating Small Business Status as universal - it excludes many activities and has a turnover cap.
  • Assuming Virtual Zone applies because "we do IT" - the export-of-services condition and qualifying-activity definition matter.
  • Wrapping employment income from a single foreign employer as IE Small Business income - this is often recharacterisable.
  • Underestimating substance for ICS.
  • Ignoring the home-country tax position - a Georgian-tax-efficient regime doesn't fix the question of where the mover is actually tax-resident.

How we coordinate Georgian tax planning

  1. Confirm the actual activity against the regime's eligibility.
  2. Plan substance to match what the regime expects.
  3. Plan the home-country tax position - exit, treaty, ongoing residence tests.
  4. Document the regime application cleanly.
  5. Monitor turnover and activity for status maintenance.

Georgia's incentives are real tools when used for the profiles they're designed for.

Bordercase notes are informational and do not constitute legal, tax, or fiduciary advice.