Today begins the last reading of the bill, which has provoked mass protests in Georgia, on foreign agents in the Georgian parliament, reported DPA and BTA.
The third and final reading of the bill will begin today in Tbilisi, and the vote in the plenary hall is scheduled for tomorrow, said Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili.
The ruling majority of the party "Georgian Dream" says he wants to bring more transparency to foreign funding of NGOs.
Tens of thousands of people in the former Soviet republic demonstrated against the bill in the capital Tbilisi. Critics of the bill say the government has modeled it on Russia's foreign agents law and that the new legislation aims to hinder the work of independent associations and media.
In Russia, many organizations and individuals are designated as foreign agents, which often creates serious legal problems for them, DPA notes.
The bill is seen as a means of political repression and silencing critics, and demonstrators say it jeopardizes Georgia's bid to join the European Union.
Opposition parties in Georgia call on the rulers to abandon the bill.