Tether and the Government of Georgia announced plans on May 25, 2026 to launch GEL-T, a stablecoin pegged 1:1 to the Georgian lari and built on Tether’s existing private stablecoin infrastructure. This is not a pilot or a sandbox experiment — it is a live national-currency deployment on the same rails that already carry hundreds of billions in USDT daily. For traders watching how sovereign money evolves on-chain, this is the clearest signal yet that some governments are willing to outsource the tech stack rather than wait on a central bank digital currency.
What Happened
The announcement caps a process that began with a memorandum of understanding signed between Tether and Georgian authorities in June 2023. After nearly three years of framework-building, Georgia’s National Bank issued stablecoin-specific regulations in early 2026 — covering full reserve backing, minimum capital requirements, periodic audits by major accounting firms for larger reserves, AML compliance, and a defined redemption window. Those rules were purpose-built for exactly this kind of arrangement.
GEL-T will run on Tether’s existing stablecoin rails, meaning the same blockchain infrastructure already moving USDT will carry a tokenised version of Georgia’s national currency from day one. The stated objectives are lower cross-border transaction costs, near-instant settlement, and programmable payment functionality — goals that have driven every major stablecoin pitch to governments over the past five years, but rarely with a sitting government officially co-signing the launch.
Georgia’s regulatory framework draws from several established models. The National Bank of Georgia aligned its rules with Europe’s MiCA, the US GENIUS Act, and Dubai’s VARA guidelines — a deliberate move to keep GEL-T compatible with the emerging global stablecoin compliance stack rather than building something that would be isolated or unrecognised by trading partners.
What It Means for Traders
GEL-T is a niche instrument by market-cap standards — the Georgian lari is not a reserve currency and Georgia’s economy is small. But the architecture of this deal matters more than the size. Tether has now demonstrated it can sign a government as a counterparty, not just a regulator, and deploy a national-currency stablecoin within a recognised compliance wrapper. That template is replicable.
For traders already positioned in Tether-adjacent exposure, the signal is that Tether’s infrastructure ambitions extend well beyond dollar dominance. Each jurisdiction-specific stablecoin it launches adds another layer of institutional legitimacy and broadens the network of entities dependent on Tether’s operational continuity. That is a structural development, not a trade for today, but one that compounds over years.
Watch for the reserve custody question to surface as adoption grows. The National Bank of Georgia requires reserves to be held separately from company funds, but regulators in larger economies considering similar deals will apply far more scrutiny to how Tether holds and audits those reserves in real time. GEL-T’s transparency track record will become a reference case.
The Bigger Picture
The CBDC vs. private stablecoin debate has run for years without a clear winner. CBDCs give central banks direct control over issuance, distribution, and programmable monetary policy — but most have moved slowly, with only a handful of countries past the pilot stage at any meaningful scale. Georgia just took a different path: outsource the tech and issuance to a proven private operator, retain regulatory oversight, and go live faster.
The risks of that model are real. A private issuer sitting underneath a national currency creates counterparty exposure for the government and for anyone holding GEL-T. If Tether faces operational or regulatory pressure — from the US, from EU enforcement, or from its own reserve disclosures — GEL-T holders are exposed to that risk in a way that holders of a true CBDC would not be. Georgia is betting that a strong domestic regulatory framework, combined with Tether’s operational track record, is sufficient mitigation. That bet is untested at the sovereign level.
The broader sector implication is significant. Smaller and mid-sized economies looking for digital payment modernisation without the multi-year cost of building a central bank digital currency now have a template. If GEL-T launches cleanly and achieves meaningful adoption in domestic and cross-border payments, expect several countries in similar positions — across Central Asia, the Caucasus, and parts of Southeast Asia — to evaluate comparable arrangements with Tether or its competitors.
Conclusion
GEL-T is not a large-cap stablecoin event. It is a governance event — proof that a sovereign government will formally co-brand a national currency instrument and hand the issuance rails to a private stablecoin operator. The framework Georgia built to enable this, drawing from MiCA, the GENIUS Act, and VARA, is arguably the more durable contribution. It gives other regulators a working blueprint for exactly how to structure private-rail national-currency stablecoins without ceding oversight. Whether that blueprint becomes the dominant model or a cautionary tale depends on how GEL-T performs in practice — and how transparent Tether’s reserve management remains as the programme scales.
Source: CryptoSlate. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

















