What kinds of legal questions do foreign-owned Georgian companies actually have?
Once incorporation and tax structure are sorted, the recurring legal layer of a foreign-owned Georgian company tends to fall into seven buckets:
- Contract drafting and review — supplier agreements, customer terms, NDAs, IP assignments, employment contracts.
- Dispute resolution — when something has gone wrong with a counterparty (negotiation, mediation, litigation, arbitration).
- Corporate maintenance — charter amendments, share transfers, board resolutions, registered-address changes.
- Employment law — termination, leaving payments, non-competes, contractor-vs-employee classification.
- IP and licensing — trademarks, software-licensing agreements, IP assignments from contractors to the company.
- Regulatory questions — when the business activity intersects with sectoral regulators (data protection, financial services, healthcare, etc.).
- Cross-border coordination — when a Georgian transaction touches a foreign legal system and Georgian-law advice needs to dock with US/EU counsel.
Most foreign-founder LLCs run on a low-touch monthly retainer (a few hours of advisory time bundled with response-time SLAs) plus discrete project fees for major one-off matters.
How does the Georgian Bar admission requirement matter?
Tax advice and litigation in Georgia are not unregulated fields. Georgian Bar admission (membership of the Georgian Bar Association) is required to:
- Formally represent a client before the Revenue Service in a binding capacity.
- Issue tax-litigation opinions.
- Appear before Georgian courts in litigation.
- Invoke attorney-client privilege under Georgian law.
Many “legal services” on the Georgian market are provided by administrative consultants — they can prepare paperwork, but they cannot give a client legally privileged advice or defend a position on audit. For ongoing legal support of any foreign-owned Georgian company, working with a Bar-admitted firm (rather than an unregulated intermediary) is the correct standard.
How does Georgian dispute resolution actually work?
Georgian commercial disputes can be resolved through four channels[1]:
- Negotiation. The cheapest, fastest, and the route any reasonable lawyer tries first. Most disputes resolve at this stage if both sides have viable counterparts.
- Mediation. Court-annexed and private mediation are both available under the Law of Georgia on Mediation. Voluntary, confidential, and considerably cheaper than litigation. Several of our partners are certified mediators.
- Litigation before the Tbilisi City Court Civil Cases Panel (or the equivalent regional court). The primary venue for commercial disputes that cannot be resolved otherwise. Foreign-language administration of proceedings has improved significantly since 2020 — court translators are available, and parallel English-language documentation is now routinely accepted.
- Arbitrationbefore the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Georgian Chamber of Commerce, when the contract permits. Arbitration is increasingly common in cross-border B2B contracts where neither party wants the other’s domestic courts.
For most foreign-founder situations, options 1 and 2 resolve the matter. The remaining 10–15% go to court, and the foreign-friendly administration of those proceedings is much better than reputation suggests.
What about contract law for cross-border deals?
Most foreign-owned Georgian companies sign cross-border contracts where the choice of governing law matters significantly. Three patterns we see most often:
- Georgian-law contracts for Georgian counterparties.Drafted in Georgian (the courts’ language) with a parallel English working translation for the foreign founder. Standard for Georgian supplier and employment contracts.
- Foreign-law contracts (typically English law) for cross-border SaaS or service deals. The foreign-counterparty’s home jurisdiction. Enforcement in Georgia of foreign-law judgments depends on the applicable bilateral arrangement; Georgian courts generally recognise foreign judgments under the Civil Code’s recognition framework, though enforcement timelines vary.
- Arbitration clauses. A clean middle path: cross-border B2B contracts with arbitration in a neutral forum (often Vienna, London, or Geneva) under ICC or LCIA rules. Avoids any sovereign-courts question.
How does Georgian employment law treat foreign founders?
Georgian employment law (Labor Code) is comparatively flexible by EU standards[3]. The standard features foreign founders should know:
- Probationary periods of up to 6 months are permitted for new employees, with simpler termination during the period.
- At-will-style termination.Termination at the employer’s initiative requires statutory grounds and statutory notice (typically 30 days), but the system is considerably more flexible than e.g. German or French law.
- Severance pay in narrow statutory circumstances; not required for probation-period terminations or for-cause dismissals.
- Annual leave of 24 working days minimum.
- Maternity leave of 730 days total (substantially funded by the state for most of the period).
Most foreign-founder LLCs employ a small number of Georgian- resident employees plus contract with foreign-resident contractors abroad. The classification line between an employee and a contractor matters; we advise on it routinely.
What does “day-to-day” legal support actually look like?
A typical recurring legal retainer covers:
- Up to a defined number of advisory hours per month (typically 2–10).
- Same-business-day response-time SLA on routine queries.
- Quarterly compliance check-ins.
- Standard contract templates maintained and version-controlled.
- Discounted hourly rates for project work above the included hours.
Most foreign-founder LLCs at early stage run on a 2–4 advisory-hours/month retainer. As the company matures and contract volume grows, retainers scale up.