Compare taxes and see how much you save moving from Georgia to Portugal
Both Georgia (flat 20%) and Portugal's IFICI regime (20% flat for qualifying new residents for 10 years) charge exactly $20,000 in income tax at $100,000 USD. The tax comparison is a dead heat. Portugal's standard rate without IFICI is much higher ($30,000 at $100K). The real decision between Georgia and Portugal is about lifestyle and long-term goals: Georgia offers dramatically lower cost of living (Tbilisi is 50–60% cheaper than Lisbon), visa-free entry for 365 days for many nationalities, and an extraordinarily simple bureaucratic environment. Portugal offers EU residency, a pathway to one of the world's most valuable passports, Mediterranean climate, and established digital nomad infrastructure. For US digital nomads in particular, both countries attract large American communities.
Flat Personal Income Tax
Flat 20% personal income tax — one of the world's simplest and lowest systems
Progressive / IFICI 20% Flat
Standard 13.25-48%; IFICI regime 20% flat for qualifying new residents
At $100,000 income:
Both Georgia (flat 20%) and Portugal's IFICI regime (20% flat for qualifying new residents) charge 20% income tax — $20,000 at $100K USD. Portugal's standard rate is much higher ($30,000). The decision between Georgia and Portugal for digital nomads is not about taxes — it's about lifestyle, EU access (Portugal), cost of living (Georgia is much cheaper), and visa requirements.
| Income | GE Tax | PT Tax | Savings | 10-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $10,000 | $10,000 | $0 | $0 |
| $75,000 | $15,000 | $15,000 | $0 | $0 |
| $100,000 | $20,000 | $20,000 | $0 | $0 |
| $150,000 | $30,000 | $30,000 | $0 | $0 |
| $250,000 | $50,000 | $50,000 | $0 | $0 |
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Hiring Internationally? Deel Handles Compliance →The tax comparison is a dead heat when comparing Georgia's standard flat 20% with Portugal's IFICI regime (20% flat for 10 years). The deciding factors are non-tax: Portugal offers EU residency and a pathway to EU citizenship — one of the world's most valuable passports, providing visa-free access to 185+ countries and permanent work rights in 27 EU countries. This is enormously valuable for non-EU nationals, particularly Americans and Canadians who face visa complexity in Europe. Georgia offers no EU membership. For those who prioritise EU citizenship, Portugal wins decisively despite the bureaucratic challenges.
Georgia (the country in the South Caucasus) levies a flat 20% personal income tax on all employment and business income earned within Georgia. There is no application, no time limit, and no qualifying conditions — it applies automatically to all tax residents. Georgia uses a territorial-style system where income earned remotely for foreign clients while physically in Georgia may qualify for the Virtual Zone Company (0% corporate tax) or Sole Entrepreneur (1% gross revenue tax) regimes in some cases. The flat 20% applies to locally-sourced employment. This simplicity — compared to Portugal's IFICI application process — is a major practical advantage.
The IFICI (Incentivo Fiscal à Investigação Científica e Inovação) replaced Portugal's popular NHR (Non-Habitual Resident) programme that closed to new applicants at end of 2023. Like NHR, IFICI offers a flat 20% income tax rate for qualifying new residents. However, IFICI has stricter criteria than NHR — eligible activities are more narrowly defined, focusing on tech, science, research, and highly qualified professional roles. The 10-year duration is the same. For new arrivals to Portugal, IFICI is essential to access Portugal's equivalent of Georgia's 20% flat rate — without it, Portugal's standard progressive rates reaching 48% are significantly higher.
Tbilisi is dramatically cheaper than Lisbon. A comfortable one-bedroom apartment in Tbilisi city centre costs $400–$700/month versus $1,500–$2,500/month in Lisbon. Eating out in Tbilisi costs $5–$15 per meal at good restaurants versus $20–$40 in Lisbon. Transport, utilities, and groceries are similarly 40–60% cheaper in Tbilisi. For a digital nomad earning $100,000/year and paying 20% tax ($20,000), annual living expenses in Tbilisi might total $18,000–$25,000 (leaving $55,000–$62,000 savings), versus $35,000–$50,000 in Lisbon (leaving $30,000–$45,000 savings). The cost of living difference is the dominant financial factor in this comparison — not tax.
Georgia offers one of the world's simplest long-stay options: nationals of 94+ countries (including USA, UK, EU, Canada, Australia) can enter visa-free and stay for 365 days per calendar year. After 183+ days, they become Georgian tax residents. This requires no application, no minimum income, and no bureaucratic process — just arrive. Portugal's D8 Digital Nomad Visa requires: proof of remote income (minimum €3,280/month from non-Portuguese sources), health insurance, and clean criminal record. Processing takes 2–4 months. The D8 leads to residency and eventually citizenship. Georgia is the faster, simpler option; Portugal is the longer-term, EU-pathway option.
Both cities have excellent digital infrastructure for remote workers. Tbilisi has outstanding internet speeds — consistently ranking in the top 20 globally for fixed broadband and mobile data. Co-working spaces are abundant, high-quality, and affordable ($100–$200/month for a dedicated desk). Lisbon has developed into one of Europe's premier tech hubs (Web Summit is held there annually) with excellent co-working infrastructure, fast internet, and a large English-speaking expat community. Tbilisi's internet may actually be faster in practice; Lisbon's ecosystem is more developed for networking, conferences, and European business connections. Both are comfortably workable for professional remote workers.
Yes. American citizens and green card holders must file US federal tax returns every year regardless of where they live — this is a requirement unique to the USA (and Eritrea). Living in Georgia or Portugal does not exempt Americans from US tax filing obligations. However, US expats can use the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE — up to approximately $126,000/year excluded from US tax in 2026) or Foreign Tax Credits (credit for 20% tax paid to Georgia or Portugal). Most Americans earning under $126,000 while abroad pay minimal or zero net US income tax — but the filing requirement remains. Greenback Expat Tax Services specialises in US expat returns including FEIE, FBAR, and state obligations.