Tether and the Government of Georgia have announced GEL₮, the official stablecoin of Georgia, putting the Georgian Lari directly on digital asset market . The announcement on May 25, 2026 marks one of the first joint efforts between a national government and a stablecoin issuer to put a fiat currency directly onto digital asset rails under a purpose-built regulatory framework.
Tether and the Government of Georgia to Launch GEL₮, the Official Stablecoin of Georgia https://t.co/ueSLlJzot1
— Tether (@tether) May 25, 2026
The GEL₮ launch comes as governments and central banks worldwide confront a structural shift in how money actually moves.
Importance of Stablecoins & Why Release GEL₮
Stablecoins are no longer a niche crypto instrument. They can be used for payments, settlements, remittances, and cross-border transfers.
Value moves globally in seconds rather than waiting days through fragmented banking systems. Tether’s USD₮ already has a market cap approaching $190 billion, with 24-hour trading volumes that regularly surpass traditional payment networks like Visa and Mastercard.
Georgia choosing Tether reflects both the scale of that infrastructure and Tether’s experience operating digital fiat at global volume. GEL₮ is designed to function as a digital representation of the Georgian Lari. It focuses on:
- Lower transaction costs
- Near-instant settlement
- Programmable payments
- More efficient value movement across digital financial systems
The Regulatory Framework Behind GEL₮
The announcement builds on years of legislative and regulatory work by the Government and the National Bank of Georgia.
The country has been building one of the most advanced digital asset frameworks in the region, creating legal clarity rather than regulatory ambiguity.
The stablecoin framework was developed with global standards. It is built with reserve management, consumer rights, issuer oversight, and AML compliance.
The most important detail is what comes next. Georgia’s framework has been designed to achieve substantive compatibility with emerging U.S. stablecoin regulation, including the GENIUS Act.
That positions Georgia among the earliest countries pursuing direct regulatory interoperability with the U.S. digital asset framework. Other jurisdictions building stablecoin frameworks will be watching closely.
What Officials Are Saying
Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze framed the announcement around partnership. “Together with visionary partners like Tether, Georgia is laying the foundations for a more connected, transparent, and digitally empowered financial world.”
Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether , focused on what the regulatory move enables. “Stablecoins are no longer a niche financial instrument. They are becoming part of the infrastructure layer for global finance. Georgia has moved early to create serious regulatory architecture for digital assets and stablecoins, and that clarity creates the foundation for real innovation and adoption.”
President of the National Bank of Georgia, Natia Turnava, added that the collaboration is part of a broader strategy to advance secure, modern, and internationally aligned digital financial infrastructure. Vakhtang Turnava, Member of Parliament, called Georgia a potential strategic bridge between traditional finance and the digital economy of the future.
Georgia’s Existing Crypto Position
Georgia isn’t entering the DeFi space from zero. The country has already emerged as one of the more advanced jurisdictions for digital asset payments.
Citizens can make tax payments by instantly converting digital assets into local currency. That practical infrastructure already exists. GEL₮ builds on top of it rather than starting from scratch.
The initiative is expected to support cross-border commerce, fintech development, digital payments, and broader access to programmable financial infrastructure across Georgia and the wider region. Further details about GEL₮’s structure, rollout, and regulatory implementation will come later.
Finally, compatibility with the U.S. GENIUS Act positions Georgia as one of the first countries seeking regulatory interoperability with the evolving U.S. digital asset framework. Other governments will be watching how this plays out, because Georgia just moved first.