National Bank of Georgia Vice President and Board Member Nino Jeladze reported a net income of 320,205 GEL for 2025, according to her annual asset declaration. The document shows she assumed the vice president’s role in February 2025, while continuing to serve on the central bank’s board.
Her spouse, Nika Andriashvili, earned 182,747 GEL in January alone while holding a senior risk and compliance position at Bank of Georgia, according to the declaration.
Real estate holdings in Tbilisi and regions
The declaration details multiple real estate assets owned by the family. Jeladze owns a 119.6 sq. m residential home on Lisi Street in Tbilisi, purchased in 2018 for 143,000 Euros.
She also owns a 13.2 sq. m non-residential unit on the same street, acquired in 2025 for 10,667 GEL. The document notes that the property is used as a basement storage space.
In addition, her spouse holds a 50% share in a 806 sq. m residential property located in Phartskhisi village, Tetritskaro municipality. The share was inherited in 2022.
The family also owns a Toyota RAV4 purchased in 2023 for 93,758 GEL.
Global investment portfolio and financial assets
The declaration shows active investment activity in international markets. Jeladze holds shares and ETFs in major global companies and funds, including AMD, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, NVIDIA, S&P 500 ETF (SPY), Bitcoin-linked ETFs (BTCO and IBIT), and SPDR Gold Shares (GLD). Many of these positions were acquired in 2025–2026.
Her spouse holds 830 shares in Lion Finance Group PLC, received as part of variable compensation in shares.
Bank deposits, savings and liabilities
The couple maintains diversified savings across Georgian banks, including ProCredit Bank, Bank of Georgia, and TBC Bank, in USD, EUR, and GEL accounts. Declared cash savings include $27,000 and 10,000 GEL.
The declaration also lists two long-term loans from TBC Bank: a €145,000 mortgage taken in 2018 and an 80,000 GEL loan taken in 2023, both with repayment schedules extending into the 2030s.
Additional expenses include school tuition payments at the British-Georgian Academy and online purchases, reflecting household spending alongside investment and debt obligations.


