Probate in Atlanta
By Find Local Law Editorial Team · Last reviewed: May 26, 2026
Researched and drafted with AI assistance and verified against primary sources (statutes, Judicial Council forms, and official court websites). This is general information, not legal advice.
If you need to settle an estate in Atlanta, the matter is handled by the Fulton County Probate Court. That court proves wills, issues letters testamentary, appoints executors and administrators, and oversees the administration of estates and certain guardianships. Atlanta is the county seat, so a resident’s estate is administered there.
The local court decides where your case is heard; the substantive law lives in our statewide guides. Start with the Georgia probate hub, then read about how probate works, the executor’s duties, or dying without a will.
Settling an estate involves real deadlines and paperwork. To get matched with a local Atlanta probate attorney, connect with a lawyer.
Local court
Court: Probate matters for Atlanta residents — proving wills, appointing executors and administrators, and overseeing estates — are handled by the Fulton County Probate Court.
Atlanta is the seat of Fulton County, so estates of residents here are administered in the Fulton County Probate Court, which handles wills, letters testamentary, administrations, and guardianships. Verify the court's current location, hours, and filing procedures on its official website before you file.
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Start your free intakeFrequently asked questions
- Where do I probate a will in Atlanta?
- In the Fulton County Probate Court, since Atlanta is the county seat. That court proves the will, appoints the executor, and oversees administration of the estate.
- What if someone dies in Atlanta without a will?
- The Fulton County Probate Court appoints an administrator and the estate passes under Georgia's intestacy rules. The local court controls the process; see our statewide probate guides for how the law divides the estate.