Georges de Regibus (Bulgarian: Жорж дьо Режибюс) (14 August 1867–7 November 1927) was a Swiss athlete and sports teacher credited with introducing association football to Bulgaria in 1894.
De Regibus was born in Épalinges, a commune in the canton of Vaud, part of French-speaking Switzerland. His father, Pierre de Regibus, was a descendant of an Italian family originally from Bologna. In 1889, de Regibus moved to Yverdon-les-Bains with his mother. In that city, he worked as a locksmith at the Jura–Simplon Railway carriage repair works while his mother earned money by selling chestnuts. In Yverdon, de Regibus got to be involved in various sports, most notably gymnastics, boxing and association football, and he soon received a federal gymnastics instructor's diploma. An acquaintance of de Regibus who played for Grasshoppers remembered him as a "quality goalkeeper". De Regibus' physique made him a suitable sportsman: of middle height, he had a very wide chest and appeared strong and thickset.
Georges de Regibus arrived in the Principality of Bulgaria in 1894. He came to that country along with nine other Swiss gymnastics teachers as part of a delegation of the Swiss Gymnastics Federation. The Swiss teachers had been invited during Bulgarian Minister of Education Georgi Zhivkov's visit to Lausanne in 1893 in order to familiarize Bulgarian people with formal physical education and organized sports. Other notable Swiss among these sports teachers were Charles Champaud, a teacher in Sofia regarded as the first person to represent Bulgaria at the Olympic Games (at the inaugural 1896 Summer Olympics), and Louis-Emil Eyer (1865–1919), a Bulgarophile who died as a Bulgarian Army soldier in World War I.