Comparison
Ankara vs Tbilisi
Two non-coastal capitals with serious price advantages over Istanbul. Ankara is Türkiye's administrative capital; Tbilisi is Georgia's nomad hub. Here's the honest comparison.
Ankara and Tbilisi are both inland capitals at materially lower costs than their countries' best-known cities. Ankara is Türkiye's administrative capital — government, embassies, universities — and avoided the post-2020 housing boom that hit Istanbul. Tbilisi is Georgia's nomad and freelancer hub with a unique 1% Small Business tax regime.
Cost-wise the two cities are within striking distance, with Tbilisi slightly cheaper. A couple's comfortable central lifestyle runs ~$1,500–$2,300/mo in Ankara versus ~$1,500–$2,300/mo in Tbilisi — within the same range. Both are dramatically cheaper than Istanbul.
On residency: Türkiye's residence permit and CBI routes are well-trodden in Ankara via the embassy quarter and government infrastructure. Georgia offers 360-day visa-free entry for many nationalities and a unique 1% Small Business tax for low-revenue freelancers, plus an HNWI / IT special regime.
Both are dramatically cheaper than Istanbul
30–40% below Istanbul on most categories. Inland-capital pricing without a coastal premium.
Georgia's 1% Small Business is unique
1% turnover tax for individual entrepreneurs under a revenue threshold. Genuinely low-bar, well-tested, popular with low-revenue freelancers.
Ankara has government/embassy depth
Türkiye's administrative capital — embassies, ministries, universities. Useful if your work touches Turkish officialdom or diplomatic infrastructure.
Georgia's 360-day visa-free is uncommon
Many nationalities can stay 360 days visa-free in Georgia. Türkiye's visa-free is 60–90 days; longer requires the residence permit.
Side-by-side comparison
Couple, central, comfortable lifestyle
~$1,500–$2,300/mo
~$1,500–$2,300/mo
Central 1-bed rent
~$500–$900/mo
~$500–$900/mo
Eating out (mid-range, per person)
~$8–14
~$10–16
Public transport pass
~$30/mo
~$25/mo
Private health insurance (adult)
~$60–200/mo
~$50–150/mo
Visa-free entry
60–90 days (most passports)
360 days (many passports)
Residency route
Short-term residence permit, CBI USD 400K
Investor / freelance / HNWI residency
Tax — favourable regime
Proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption
1% Small Business + HNWI / IT special regime
Climate
Continental — cold winters, hot summers
Continental — cold winters, warm summers
Which city is right for you?
Better for
Ankara
- Foreigners with embassy, government or academic ties
- Those targeting Turkish citizenship via property
- Cost-prioritising professionals wanting deeper Turkish services
- Those who don't need a coastal or Istanbul-scale city
Better for
Tbilisi
- Low-revenue freelancers using Georgia's 1% Small Business regime
- Russian-speakers prioritising 360-day visa-free entry
- Cost-prioritising solo nomads on early-career budgets
- Foreigners wanting a smaller, manageable capital
The honest take
Ankara and Tbilisi appeal to overlapping audiences — cost-conscious foreigners who don't need the megacity scale of Istanbul or the Mediterranean coastal lifestyle of Antalya. Tbilisi's 1% Small Business regime is unique and works well for low-revenue solo freelancers; Ankara's pitch is administrative depth, embassy access and clear path into Türkiye's residence-permit and CBI systems.
Tax-wise Tbilisi has the more concrete special regime today. Georgia's 1% Small Business tax for individual entrepreneurs has clear revenue caps and is well-tested — it works precisely as advertised for the audience it's designed for. Türkiye's proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption (2026) is potentially more generous for high-foreign-income foreigners but is still proposed. Confirm specifics with a tax advisor before relocating around either.
Run the numbers for your situation