It comes up constantly. Someone moves to Georgia — from Russia, Israel, Germany, Ukraine, wherever — gets settled, realises they need a car, and hits the same question: buy now or rent for a while? We work with expats every day and see how this plays out in practice. Not in a spreadsheet — in real life.
The conclusion we keep arriving at: for most people, the first year is better spent renting. Here’s why.
The Georgian Used Car Market Is Its Own Thing
Georgia spent years as a transit country for used cars from the US, Japan, and Korea. Low import duties made it a convenient entry point, and that legacy is still very visible in the market today. A large share of what’s listed are “American imports” — cars with a right-hand drive conversion, a Florida or Texas title, and often a rolled-back odometer. Alongside them are decent European and Japanese cars, but finding those requires either local knowledge, money for a proper inspection, or luck.
The main platforms are MyAuto.ge and SS.ge. Plenty of inventory, not a lot of transparency. If you don’t know the local quirks, can’t read Georgian, and don’t have a trusted mechanic, buying something solid on the first try is genuinely hard. This isn’t Germany, where every dealer hands you a service history. Here, you do your own due diligence — and that takes time and money.
Registration is its own topic. Putting a car in a foreigner’s name is possible, but requires a residence permit or local registration. Without one, you’re going through a Georgian individual or legal entity. It’s not complicated, but it takes time that most people don’t have right after moving.
What a Car Purchase Actually Costs in Year One
Say you have $13,000–$15,000 for a decent used car. Beyond the purchase price, here’s what gets added in the first year:
- Insurance (mandatory liability + basic comprehensive, if available) — $400–600
- Two scheduled services — around $400
- Unplanned repairs — a realistic minimum on a used car is $500–1,000
- Depreciation on resale after a year — 10–15% of the purchase price, or $1,300–2,000
- $13,000 sitting in a car instead of working — opportunity cost around $700–900
That’s $3,000–5,000 in costs on top of the car itself, in year one alone. Add time: finding the car, having it inspected, handling paperwork, tracking down a decent workshop when something breaks, and eventually organising the sale at the end of the year.
One of our clients moved from Moscow in 2022 and bought a Toyota Camry for $14,000. The car looked fine — 90,000 km on the clock. Three months in, the gearbox started giving trouble. Another $2,000 in repairs. He’s been with us on a long-term rental ever since and says he wishes he’d started there.
Long-Term Rental: What’s Actually Included
Long-term rental — from a month upward — is a different product from tourist-style daily hire. Different terms, different logic.
With us, a Toyota Camry, Hyundai Sonata, or BMW 5 Series starts from $600–700 per month. That covers full insurance, scheduled maintenance, tyre changes, and a replacement car if something goes wrong. You pick up the keys and drive. No searching for a workshop, no surprise bills.
A year at $700/month comes to $8,400. A purchase with all the real costs attached runs $16,000–18,000 over the same period. The gap is $7,000–10,000 — and that’s before factoring in the time you spend managing a car you own.
Year One Is Uncertain By Nature
When you’ve just arrived, there’s a lot you don’t know yet:
- Where will you actually be living in six months — Tbilisi, Batumi, or somewhere else entirely?
- How will your work situation develop?
- What kind of car do you actually need — something for the city, or a proper SUV for the mountains?
- Are you staying in Georgia at all?
In our experience, roughly one in three expats who planned to stay long-term changes their plans within the first year — whether that means leaving the country or moving within it. It’s not unusual. That’s just how the first year tends to go.
Selling a car in Georgia quickly and without taking a loss requires time. If you need to leave in a hurry, it becomes a real problem. With a rental, when the contract ends, you hand the car back.
You Won’t Know What Car You Need Until You’ve Been Here a While
Most people arrive thinking they’ll grab something small for the city. Then they discover Kazbegi, Mestia, Tusheti — and realise they actually need a proper SUV. Or the opposite: planned to drive around a lot, got something big, and end up stuck in Tbilisi traffic in the narrow streets of Vera or Saburtalo.
The first few months are spent figuring out how you actually live in this country. Our fleet covers the range — from the Camry and BMW 5 Series to the Range Rover and Mercedes G-Class. Try one, decide it’s not right, switch. That happens, and it’s fine.
When Buying Does Make Sense
There are situations where buying is the right call:
- You’re staying three years or more, have a residence permit, and have stable work or a business here.
- You have a trusted mechanic and a working knowledge of the local market.
- You need a specific model that isn’t available through rental.
- Family, kids in school, a settled life — you’re not going anywhere.
Over a three-year horizon, the numbers can shift in favour of ownership. By that point you’ll also know the market well enough to buy with confidence.
How Long-Term Rental Works With Us
Every car in our fleet has a known service history. All you need is a passport and a driving licence — no Georgian documents required. We deliver anywhere in Tbilisi, to the airport, to Batumi and back. For clients we’ve worked with for a while, we drop the deposit.
Terms are worked out for each person individually: duration, mileage, vehicle class. If you want advice on buying a car — that’s something we can help with too. It’s part of what we do.
The Short Version
In the first year after relocating, renting is almost always the better option — both financially and in terms of the time and energy involved. Buying makes sense when you already understand how you live in the country and know exactly what you’re getting into.
If you want to talk through what makes sense for your situation, get in touch.















