Complimenting behavior, as a common speech act of human beings, has become an intriguing topic in linguistics. As a speech act which happens with a high frequency in our daily life, it plays a significant communicative function and serves to establish, consolidate and promote the interpersonal relationships. The responses to the compliment vary due to the social and individual elements. Different cultural customs, communicative topics, social power and gender affect compliment responses. The study aims to collect and summarize the compliment reply strategies by Georgian interviewees and explore: (i) which compliment response strategies prevail in compliment behaviour of Georgian informants? (ii) does social distance between the speaker and hearer affect their response strategies? (iii) can complement response among Georgian informants be applied to politeness principles which are proposed by Leech, and Brown and Levinson?