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Nomads & Communities
17APR

Georgia activates Law 1509 fines, publishes nothing

3 min read
13:28UTC

Georgia's Law No.1509 fine ladder activated on 1 May 2026 with first offences at 2,000 GEL (around $740) doubling for a repeat and tripling thereafter, and one week in neither the MIA nor the Labour Inspectorate has published a fine, an inspection or a sector breakdown.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Georgia's fine ladder is live and unlogged; the deterrence is the silence, not the docket.

Georgia's Law No.1509 activated its fine ladder on Friday 1 May 2026, the operational delivery of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) inspection powers granted in March 2026 and the penalty mechanism enacted in the law itself on 15 April . 1 First offences carry 2,000 GEL (Georgian lari, approximately $740), roughly a month of Tbilisi rent for a one-bed flat in Saburtalo. The figure doubles for a repeat within twelve months and triples thereafter, taking the worst case to 12,000 GEL for a third offence. The law itself does not say which roles trigger the ladder, so operational risk runs through inspector judgement rather than statute.

One week in, neither the MIA nor the Labour Inspectorate has published a fine count, an inspection count, or a sector breakdown. 2 The silence tracks the pattern flagged in the previous briefing cycle: visible capacity, invisible enforcement. Tbilisi is producing a chilling effect through the credible threat of inspection rather than through prosecuted cases. Foreign residents have no public dataset against which to price their day-to-day risk, which is precisely the architecture the law's drafters appear to have wanted.

Sub-clause T, the short-term professional activity exemption that would create a legal pathway for nomads working contracts shorter than the standard work-permit horizon, still lacks an implementing decree. Both Eurofast and Fragomen post-enactment briefings confirm the absence. 3 Sub-clauses K and L, which read narrowly to leave remote workers employed by foreign companies outside the law's explicit scope , are intact but have not been the subject of any ministerial clarification. The boundary between a permitted foreign-employer remote worker and a fineable unauthorised local worker now sits in an inspector's notebook.

The Hungary 2018 to 2020 pattern under the second Orban government still holds as the operational template: a narrow legal text paired with broad ministerial discretion produces foreign-resident chilling effects at near-zero administrative cost. Two signals would break the pattern: an MIA publication of a first-fortnight fine figure, or the appearance of Sub-clause T's missing decree.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Georgia, the country in the South Caucasus (not the US state), became a popular destination for remote workers, particularly from 2022 onward, because of its low cost of living, no-visa-on-arrival policy for most nationalities, and a small but visible nomad community in Tbilisi. On 1 May 2026, Georgia activated a new fine system under Law No.1509. The first fine is 2,000 GEL (Georgian lari), roughly $740 at current rates, which is about a month's rent for a one-bedroom flat in the popular Saburtalo neighbourhood. A second offence within twelve months doubles the fine; a third offence triples it to 12,000 GEL. The law targets unauthorised foreign work. Remote workers employed by foreign companies are probably not the direct target, based on how the law is written. But the law does not say so clearly, and the government has not clarified. Neither the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) nor the Labour Inspectorate has published how many fines have been issued, who has been inspected, or what counts as 'unauthorised work' in practice. That silence is what makes the situation uncertain for nomads currently in Tbilisi.

First Reported In

Update #3 · Twelve days to a split STR framework

Pravda Georgia· 8 May 2026
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