With the Small Business Status, you are required by law to declare and pay taxes by the 15th day of each month. The declarations you need to make:
- Income Declarations (1% on turnover).
- IF registered for VAT, you must make monthly VAT turnover declarations – including VATable (18%) and non-VATable (0%) turnover). Being registered means you can claim back VAT on purchases where it is collected at source (so long as you attain “qualified” VAT status).
- Reverse VAT declarations (18% on all international service purchases) (Mandatory on international purchases, even if you are not VAT registered). If VAT registered, you can claim this 18% back and effectively pay 0%.
- Salary tax (20%) + 2+2% pension, for Georgian employees. Salary tax is dependant on where your employees are based. Salary income tax is due if the employment is exercised in the territory of Georgia (DTA exceptions apply).
- Keeping of the general journal (effectively a spreadsheet of your business expenses). This is not a tax to pay, it is simply a mandatory record keeping requirement. In the event of an audit, the journal must be supplied. It does not need to be submitted to the RS at any other time.
Should you register for VAT? If all your income derives from B2B transactions from foreign clients and/or B2C digitally rendered to foreign customers, and you have any business expenses where you pay VAT or reverse VAT, then the answer is typically YES.
As you can see from this breakdown, if you are an Individual whose clients are based outside of Georgia, if your service purchases, contractors, etc. are from treaty countries, you are VAT registered, and have no employees, you will likely only pay 1% on turnover, claim back most or all of your reverse VAT.
The taxes are great, but there is a lot of monthly declarations and record keeping which need to be performed.