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Losing someone you love is hard enough without the confusion of legal paperwork. Probate in Bryan County depends on estate size—estates under $15,000 may qualify for a simplified procedure. All filings go through the Probate Court at 151 South College Street, Suite 106, Pembroke.
Probate is the court-supervised process of settling someone's estate after they die — validating the will, paying debts and taxes, and transferring what's left to the heirs. In Bryan County, probate runs through the Probate Court at 151 South College Street, Suite 106, Pembroke.
The personal representative opens the case, gives notice to heirs and creditors, files an inventory of the estate's assets, settles outstanding debts and taxes, and then distributes the remainder under the will — or under Georgia intestacy law when there is no will.
Most Georgia estates take 9 monthsO.C.G.A. § 7-1-239Verified May 7, 2026 to 12 monthsO.C.G.A. § 7-1-239Verified May 7, 2026 to move through this process. The 3 monthsO.C.G.A. § 53-7-41Verified May 7, 2026 creditor claim window is the largest fixed piece of that timeline — a mandatory wait regardless of how simple the estate is.
Probate cases in Bryan County are filed with the Probate Court, located at 151 South College Street, Suite 106, Pembroke, GA 31321. The clerk's office is open Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Reach the clerk at 912-653-3856.
Probate Judge Hon. Billy D. Reynolds, Sr. presides over probate matters at the Probate Court. The clerk's office is open Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM.
Handling an estate in Bryan County, Georgia means working through both immediate tasks (securing property, ordering death certificates, stopping benefits) and the formal probate process at the Probate Court at 151 South College Street, Suite 106, Pembroke.
Probate matters here are routed through the Richmond Hill Satellite Office. Knowing which office handles what saves time during the first few weeks.
Whether probate is necessary in Bryan County depends on how the deceased's assets were titled and what estate planning was in place. The local court is the Probate Court at 151 South College Street, Suite 106, Pembroke.
Assets in a funded revocable living trust pass directly to beneficiaries without probate. Life insurance, retirement accounts with named beneficiaries, and jointly-held property with survivorship rights also transfer automatically. Only assets titled solely in the deceased's name — or caught by a pour-over will for unfunded trust assets — go through the Probate Court.
Georgia has a low threshold for simplified procedures — only estates under $15,000O.C.G.A. § 7-1-239Verified May 7, 2026 qualify. Most estates in Bryan County with real property will require full probate through the Probate Court.
See what portion of this estate may require probate:
Opening probate at the Probate Court requires the original will (or proof there isn't one), a certified death certificate, and documentation of assets — deeds, account statements, vehicle titles. Asset titling is what separates probate property from everything that passes automatically.
When someone dies without a will in Bryan County, Georgia law decides who inherits. The distribution follows a fixed order based on family relationships—spouse, children, parents, siblings—and the outcome isn't always what families assume.
Enter the family details to see who inherits under Georgia law:
Georgia has constitutional homestead protection that shields the primary residence from most creditor claims during probate.
The Probate Court can approve a family allowance for the surviving spouse and minor children while the estate is being settled. This has priority over creditor claims.
Georgia has adopted digital asset access laws, allowing executors to manage the deceased's email, social media, and online accounts as part of estate administration.
Data sourced from Georgia statutes and official state code. How we research.
The Probate Court for Bryan County is located in Pembroke, Georgia. Full address, phone, hours, and e-filing details are listed on this page.
A simple probate in Georgia typically closes in 6–9 months. Average estates run 9–12 months. Complex estates with disputes or tax issues can take 12–24 months. Timing in Bryan County tracks the state range unless the docket is unusually backed up.
No. Georgia allows estates under $15,000 to use a Bank Deposit Affidavit and skip formal probate. The waiting period is 45 days after death. Use the Georgia probate decision tool to see if the estate qualifies.
When there is no will, Georgia's intestate succession rules decide who inherits. Spouses, children, and parents are prioritized in that order. The Bryan County probate court applies the state rules without variation. See who inherits in Georgia for the exact order.
A revocable living trust is the cleanest way for most families to skip probate entirely. Assets titled to the trust pass to beneficiaries without court involvement, filing fees, or the Bryan County probate docket. Create a revocable trust online to avoid putting your family through this process later.
Bryan County
151 South College Street, Suite 106
Pembroke, GA 31321
Phone:
912-653-3856Fax:
912-653-3845
Hours:
Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Articles about estate planning, probate, and trusts relevant to families in Bryan County.
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This calculator provides general information about intestate succession and is not legal advice. Intestacy laws vary by state and situation. Consult a licensed attorney in your state for guidance specific to your family.Data verified 2026-05-07
Articles about estate planning, probate, and trusts relevant to families in Bryan County.