Visit (visa-free with US residence): Sri Lankan citizen in United States → Georgia
Sri Lankan citizens who hold a valid US visa or US residence permit may enter Georgia visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period — no Georgian visa needed. Georgia's government ordinance lists the United States among the countries whose visa or residence-permit holders are waived from the visa requirement.
Sri Lankan citizens who hold a valid US visa or US residence permit may enter Georgia visa-free for a short visit under Georgia's ordinance on visa/residence-permit holders — no Georgian visa needed; stay up to 90 days in any 180-day period.
- Validity
- Visa-free entry — no Georgian visa is issued; stay up to 90 days in any 180-day period
- Entries
- Each visa-free entry is granted at the border on presentation of a valid US visa or residence permit
- Max stay per visit
- Up to 90 days in any 180-day period
When to start
Start 1–1 days before your travel date.
Although Sri Lankan citizens normally need a Georgian visa, Georgia's government ordinance lets holders of a valid visa or residence permit of any listed country — the United States is on that list — enter and stay visa-free for 90 calendar days in any 180-day period. Your US visa or US residence permit must be valid on the day you cross the Georgian border.
The waiver applies only while your US visa or US residence permit is valid on the day of entry, and that validity must be evidenced by a travel or other appropriate document — so carry the US document itself together with your passport and be ready to show them at the Georgian border.
Present your passport and your valid US visa or US residence permit at the checkpoint; you are admitted visa-free and receive your stay stamp for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. The Border Police make the final decision on entry.
What you'll need
- Valid passport (travel document) — A passport valid for your whole stay, with at least two free pages — the same travel document that carries or accompanies your US visa. ✓ verified
- Valid US visa or US residence permit — Your US entry document — a valid US visa (e.g. in your passport) or a US residence permit (e.g. a green card) — which must be valid on the day you cross the Georgian border. This is what triggers the visa waiver. ✓ verified
- Health and accident insurance (mandatory for tourists since 1 Jan 2026) — A valid health and accident insurance policy, in physical or electronic form, covering the full period of your stay — required of every tourist entering Georgia, visa-free entrants included. ✓ verified
Where you'll apply
Nothing to apply for in advance and no visa-centre step: you enter visa-free at the Georgian border on the strength of your valid US visa or US residence permit, and receive your stay stamp on arrival.
Fees
| Visa-free entry | varies |
Gotchas to watch
- This visa-free entry depends on your US visa or US residence permit being valid for the whole stay — if it lapses you fall back to the normal Georgia visa route (the e-Visa Portal or a Georgian consulate).
- The US document must be valid on the day you cross the Georgian border, and you must be able to evidence it with a travel or other appropriate document.
- The 90-day allowance is counted across any 180-day period, not per entry — previous days spent in Georgia count against it.
- Since 1 January 2026 all tourists must hold health and accident insurance for the whole stay, even when entering visa-free.
- Visa-free eligibility does not guarantee entry — the Georgian Border Police make the final decision at the checkpoint.