Tether is teaming up with the Government of Georgia to launch GEL₮, a new stablecoin tied to the Georgian lari under a custom crypto rulebook. The project aims to move Georgia’s national currency onto regulated digital rails while keeping clear rules for reserves, redemptions and compliance.
According to Tether, GEL₮ will operate as a digital equivalent of the Georgian lari, with lower fees, near-instant settlement and programmable payments between wallets and platforms. The stablecoin would assist fuel cross-border commerce, digital payments and fintech businesses both within Georgia and beyond the wider region, the release said. Tether describes the launch as “one of the first” joint efforts to put a national currency directly on digital asset rails under a dedicated stablecoin regulatory framework.
At the same time, officials in Tbilisi see GEL₮ as part of a broader push to turn Georgia into a blockchain and Web3 hub. The new coin builds on a 2023 memorandum of understanding where Tether and the government agreed to develop peer‑to‑peer infrastructure, crypto education programs and a fund for local Web3 startups. As a result, GEL₮ plugs directly into that ecosystem and gives local builders a regulated, lari‑denominated asset they can integrate into new apps and services.
GEL₮ And A New Crypto Framework Put Georgia On The Map
The GEL₮ launch sits on top of a stablecoin framework that Georgia has spent several years designing with its central bank and parliament. Lawmakers aimed to offer legal certainty on reserve management, issuer oversight and anti‑money‑laundering rules so that serious digital asset firms can operate there without regulatory guesswork. Tether notes that Georgia’s rules seek “substantive compatibility” with emerging United States stablecoin laws like the proposed GENIUS Act, which could make it easier for GEL₮ and Georgian platforms to interact with U.S.‑facing markets in the future.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino says stablecoins are becoming part of “global financial infrastructure” and argues that Georgia is “taking the lead” by building a serious framework instead of experimenting without rules. In practice, this means local authorities should launch GEL₮ with explicit redemption rights, audited reserves and direct oversight, rather than letting it operate in a legal grey zone. Tether and Georgian officials say more information about how users will be able to mint, redeem and access GEL₮, and the timing for the rollout, will come at later stages of the initiative.
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