Tbilisi (GBC) – The pace of price increases for medical services not covered by Georgia’s universal healthcare program slowed significantly in February 2026. According to Geostat, prices rose by just 4% year-on-year, a sharp drop compared to the 25–26% growth recorded in previous months.

Statistics show that as recently as January 2026, the sector’s annual growth rate was 25.5%, but the rate stabilized sharply in February.

Price Regulation and the DRG System

The slowdown affects only services outside state funding. Under the diagnosis-related group (DRG) model used in the universal healthcare program, clinics cannot arbitrarily raise prices, meaning most price changes occurred in the unreformed segment of the sector.

Competition Agency Monitoring

The Competition and Consumer Protection Agency is monitoring the medical market, analyzing data from large inpatient clinics covering January 2022 to October 2025.
The agency aims to determine:

• Whether price increases of up to 100% were economically justified;
• Whether increases were driven by higher costs or market factors;
• Whether clinics artificially inflated prices.

According to the agency’s representative, Giorgi Kedelidze, the study will highlight areas with the highest inflation. The date for publishing the initial results has not yet been announced.