On May 25, Tether — the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin USDT with a capitalization of around $190 billion — announced the launch of GELT (GEL₮), a digital representation of the Georgian lari. The partner is unusual: not a private bank or fintech startup, but the government of Georgia directly.
How This Differs From CBDC
GELT is not a central bank digital currency (CBDC). The National Bank of Georgia does not issue the token and does not control its technical architecture. Instead, Tether remains the issuer, while the state acts as an institutional partner and legislative backer. This is a fundamentally different model: a private company issues the token, and the state provides it with a legal environment.
This is why the key context is not technology, but the regulatory framework that Georgia has been building for years. As Crypto Briefing notes, the announcement is a "culmination of years of legislative and regulatory work by the Georgian government and the National Bank." This framework was specifically designed to be compatible with the American GENIUS Act — a federal standard for stablecoins that Trump signed in July 2025.
"Georgia has taken an early step to create a serious regulatory architecture for digital assets. This clarity forms the foundation for real innovation."
Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether
What Tether Gets From the Deal
For Tether, GELT is not its first regional token. The company has already issued MXNT (Mexican peso, 2022) and EURT (euro) — the latter had to be shut down following changes in European regulation. GELT fits into a strategy of geographic diversification: Georgia is attractive as a transit economy between Europe, Turkey, and Central Asia.
- Cross-border remittances — a market where commissions are traditionally highest and speed is lowest
- Programmed payments — smart contracts for trade settlements in the region
- Access to dollar liquidity through USDT for Georgian businesses that already actively use crypto
In parallel, Tether filed seven trademarks in South Korea and is testing USDT fuel payments in El Salvador through a partnership with trader Trafigura. Georgia is another point on the global map of presence.
What Remains Unanswered
Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze called the partnership a step toward a "transparent and digitally expanded financial world." But Tether directly stated: detailed information about GELT deployment and regulatory compliance will appear later. That is, there is currently no public mechanism for controlling reserves, audit conditions, or launch timelines — only an intention.
Georgia, meanwhile, is experiencing an acute internal political moment: the country is balancing between pro-European protests and a government that increasingly appeals to non-Western partnerships. Is a crypto deal with an American company a signal to the West or simply pragmatism?
If Georgia publishes the reserve backing conditions and the mechanism for independent GELT audit before its technical launch — the model could become a template for other small economies. If not, GELT risks remaining a PR announcement with the Georgian flag.