What does Nino do at Legally.ge?
Nino oversees the firm's tax and corporate-incorporation practice and is the partner most foreign founders meet during the initial scoping call. Her role spans three things in roughly equal measure:
- Structuring. Designing the right Georgian entity (LLC, IE, or Small Business Status) for a given founder's home jurisdiction and expected revenue trajectory.
- Compliance. Sign-off on monthly tax declarations, year-end closing, and ad-hoc Revenue Service correspondence.
- Cross-border planning. Coordinating with foreign counsel when a Georgian company is the operational subsidiary of a holding entity in the EU, the US, or the Gulf.
Who does she typically advise?
Three founder profiles dominate her caseload:
- Solo digital founders moving from a high-tax EU jurisdiction to the 1% Small Business Status regime.
- Two-to-five-person SaaS teams that want a Georgian operating subsidiary under a Delaware or Estonian holding company.
- High-net-worth families establishing Georgian tax residency under the High Net Worth Individual programme to access Georgia's wide treaty network.
Why work with a Georgian Bar–admitted lawyer?
Tax advice in Georgia is not an unregulated field. Georgian Bar admission is required to formally represent a client before the Revenue Service in a binding capacity, to issue tax-litigation opinions, and to invoke attorney-client privilege under Georgian law. Many "incorporation services" on the market are administrative intermediaries — they can prepare paperwork, but they cannot give a client legally privileged advice or defend a position on audit. Nino can.
Languages and availability
Nino works fluently in English and Georgian, and corresponds well in Russian. Initial calls are conducted in any of the three. Written correspondence in formal matters is generally in English (the language in which most cross-border holding documents are drafted).
