Georgia 183-Day Tax Residency Calculator
Add your entry and exit dates for Georgia to see how many days you have been present in any rolling 12-month period — and when you cross the 183-day tax residency threshold.
Add every stay in Georgia over roughly the last two years. Leave the exit date empty on your current trip if you are still in the country — it is counted through today.
How the 183-day rule works
Under Georgian tax law, you become a tax resident if you are actually present in Georgia for 183 days or more during any continuous 12-month period ending in the tax year. The days don't have to be consecutive: every day of presence inside the rolling window counts, and days older than the window fall back out of the count.
How this calculator counts days
Both the arrival day and the departure day are counted as full days of presence — the common interpretation of the day-count test. Overlapping or back-to-back trips are merged so no day is counted twice.
Not tax advice. This is a day-count estimate only. Tax residency can also arise on other grounds — for example the center-of-vital-interests tiebreaker in double-tax treaties, or Georgia's High Net Worth Individual regime — and how border days are counted can vary in edge cases. Confirm your status with the Revenue Service of Georgia (rs.ge) or a qualified tax professional.