Tether Plans GELT, a Georgian Lari Stablecoin
Tether says it plans to launch GELT, a Georgian lari stablecoin. Here is what the announcement suggests, what is confirmed so far, and why the Georgia angle matters.

Tether has announced plans to launch GELT, a stablecoin pegged to the Georgian lari, in partnership with the government of Georgia. The move would make GELT one of the few stablecoins tied to a non-dollar fiat currency and marks Tether’s expanding focus on sovereign digital asset infrastructure.

What Tether Said About GELT

Tether and the Georgian government announced that GELT would serve as the official stablecoin of Georgia, pegged to the Georgian lari. The announcement describes a planned launch, not a live product, and no specific release date has been confirmed publicly.

The partnership builds on an earlier memorandum of understanding in which Tether agreed to work with Georgia on blockchain, Bitcoin, and peer-to-peer infrastructure. That MOU signaled Georgia’s interest in digital asset development at a government level before the GELT stablecoin was formally introduced.

The language around GELT positions it as a government-backed initiative rather than a purely private-sector product. Tether is the source of the claim, and the Georgian government’s involvement gives the project an official framing that distinguishes it from most stablecoin launches.

Why a Georgian Lari Stablecoin Stands Out

The vast majority of stablecoins in circulation are pegged to the U.S. dollar. A lari-denominated stablecoin targets a specific national economy rather than serving as a generic dollar proxy, which makes it a different kind of product from Tether’s flagship USDT.

Local-currency stablecoins could simplify domestic payments and remittances in ways that dollar-pegged tokens cannot. However, no confirmed details about GELT’s blockchain infrastructure, exchange listings, or integration with Georgian financial institutions have been published as of this writing.

The stablecoin sector has faced its own challenges recently, with incidents like the StablR depeg following a reported multisig exploit highlighting the risks that even established stablecoin designs carry. Whether GELT will address those technical risks differently remains unclear.

Georgia’s central bank has signaled interest in consumer protection and risk management regulations for the digital asset sector, though how those rules would apply to GELT specifically has not been detailed.

The broader regulatory landscape for crypto continues to shift globally. Developments like the SEC’s delayed tokenized stock exemption plan show how regulators across jurisdictions are still determining how digital asset products fit within existing legal structures. Even physical security concerns tied to crypto holdings have drawn regulatory attention in other countries.

Until Tether publishes a launch timeline, technical specifications, and details on lari reserve backing, GELT remains a stated intention rather than a finished product.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.