The primary objective of the GeoPortal is to provide centralized access to spatial and attribute data. Before the digitization of these services, land registration and map verification were cumbersome, bureaucratic processes prone to corruption and inaccuracy. The creation of maps.gov.ge democratized access to this information, allowing users to view, verify, and download spatial data from anywhere in the world.
The portal serves three main pillars:
The expansion of Maps.gov.ge has been heavily accelerated via international project collaborations. The Norwegian Project
View detailed land parcel boundaries, systemic land registration field zones, and legal property titles.
The core of the portal is the interactive cadastral map. This is a detailed, layered map that displays:
During the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, Georgian officials discreetly used maps.gov.ge to verify that no shelling had landed on Georgian territory. International donor organizations (EU, World Bank, UNDP) now require their local partners to reference maps.gov.ge for any land-based project.
Today, the platform combines:
For a property, one click reveals whether it has active mortgages, liens, or judicial seizures. Banks, notaries, and buyers rely on this daily. It has reduced real estate fraud dramatically.
What makes maps.gov.ge indispensable is not any single dataset, but how they stack.