Car Purchase Index in Georgia
Car Purchase Affordability in Georgia
The Car Purchase Index measures how affordable it is to buy a car relative to local income levels. Georgia records an index value of 50 — a below-average result that signals a significant affordability gap. Buying a car in Georgia, relative to local earnings, is comparatively expensive.
Why Cars Are Expensive Relative to Income
Georgia manufactures no vehicles domestically. The entire vehicle stock is imported, and the import structure shapes prices:
- Import duties: Georgia levies moderate tariffs on vehicle imports (5–12% depending on engine size and age), but combined with 18% VAT and excise duty, a new car becomes considerably more expensive than in its country of origin
- New-car prices: A Toyota Corolla costs approximately 25,000–30,000 USD in Georgia; a Hyundai Tucson 30,000–38,000 USD — on par with Western European pricing, but against a national average income of roughly 500–700 USD/month
- Used-car dominance: Over 80% of registered vehicles in Georgia are used imports, sourced primarily from the United States, Japan, South Korea and the EU
The Dominant Used-Car Market
The Rustavi Bazroba, a massive open-air car market approximately 20 km south-east of Tbilisi, is one of the largest second-hand vehicle markets in the Caucasus. Hundreds of vehicles change hands here daily:
- Japanese/Korean used cars (5–10 years old): 3,000–8,000 USD — the mainstream segment of Georgia's car market
- US imports (salvage title / accident-damaged): 2,000–6,000 USD — widely available after repair; quality varies significantly
- EU imports (10+ years old): 4,000–12,000 USD — German brands (BMW, Mercedes, VW) are especially popular
Many Georgians purchase vehicles through the US auction platform Copart or through local brokers who ship and repair cars from the United States. This lowers acquisition costs, but the condition of these vehicles is often not transparent. Buyers should always commission an independent inspection before purchase.
Income-to-Price Ratio
The below-average result is driven primarily by the income gap. A serviceable used car priced at 5,000 USD costs a Georgian earning the national average (~600 USD/month) roughly 8 months' salary. In Western Europe, a comparable vehicle at 5,000 EUR equates to only 1.5–2 months' salary. This ratio makes car ownership in Georgia roughly four times as burdensome relative to income.
For Expats With Foreign Income
Expatriates earning a Western salary benefit significantly from Georgia's low absolute prices on the used-car market. A reliable Toyota Prius (hybrid, 7–10 years old) — by far the most popular vehicle in Tbilisi — costs 5,000–7,000 USD. Registration is handled at the Service Agency (formerly the "House of Justice") for approximately 60–100 GEL. Mandatory third-party liability insurance (MTPL) costs 50–100 GEL/year.
Bottom line: Georgia's car purchase index reflects a difficult ratio between vehicle prices and local earnings. For expatriates with foreign income, however, the used-car market is highly accessible — serviceable everyday vehicles start at 3,000–5,000 USD.
This article was created on April 18, 2026
Car Purchase Index — Global Ranking ↗
| # | Country | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hong Kong |
12 | 74 |
| 2 | Singapore |
15 | 67 |
| 2 | Macau |
15 | 67 |
| 2 | Monaco |
15 | 67 |
| 5 | Norway |
16 | 65 |
| … | |||
| 115 | Bolivia |
50 | 33 |
| 115 | Wallis and Futuna |
50 | 33 |
| 115 | Georgia |
50 | 33 |
| 125 | Suriname |
52 | 32 |
| 125 | Jamaica |
52 | 32 |
| … | |||
| 227 | South Sudan |
95 | 14 |
| 227 | Somalia |
95 | 14 |
| 231 | Korea DPR |
200 | 1 |












