
Fragomen
Global immigration law firm whose Georgia briefings confirmed Sub-clause T remains unimplemented.
Last refreshed: 2 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Did Fragomen's Georgia law briefing confirm Sub-clause T has no implementing decree?
Timeline for Fragomen
Mentioned in: Thailand halves its visa-free entry window
Nomads & CommunitiesMentioned in: Georgia activates Law 1509 fines, publishes nothing
Nomads & CommunitiesMentioned in: Bulgaria nomad floor corrected to 27,533 euro
Nomads & CommunitiesMentioned in: Europe automates its 90-day nomad clock
Nomads & CommunitiesMentioned in: Greece closes in-country nomad visa route
Nomads & CommunitiesWhat did Fragomen publish about Georgia's digital nomad rules in 2026?
What is Fragomen and what immigration services does it provide?
Can Fragomen handle my Greek digital nomad visa application?
Background
Fragomen is one of the world's largest dedicated immigration law firms, with offices across 60+ countries including Georgia. In the context of Georgia's Law No.1509, Fragomen is one of two advisory firms, alongside Eurofast, whose post-enactment client briefings were checked to assess whether Sub-clause T (the short-term professional activity exemption) had received an implementing decree. The absence of any Sub-clause T reference in Fragomen's Georgia briefings confirmed that the exemption remained legally inoperable as of May 2026.
Fragomen advises multinational corporations and individuals on immigration compliance in most jurisdictions where significant foreign-worker populations exist. Its Georgia practice expanded after 2022 as Tbilisi became a major nomad destination and foreign-employer obligations under Georgian law became a live advisory concern. Fragomen's briefing on the 1 May fine-ladder activation noted sub-clauses K and L, the foreign-employer remote-worker exemptions, but contained no reference to a Sub-clause T decree. Its European practice also tracked the EU's Entry/Exit System rollout, noting that the phased transition window let member states keep running manual passport checks at high-volume land crossings even after the system's 10 April 2026 activation date.
For the nomad audience, Fragomen functions as a monitoring source on both fronts: its silence on a Sub-clause T decree in Georgia and its confirmation of manual-check leeway during the EES transition both read as operational signal, filling gaps that government agencies have Left unannounced.