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When to consider hiring help, what to look for in a probate attorney, and firms serving Douglas County.
We found 3 estate law firms serving Douglas County. Douglas County is part of the Atlanta Regional Commission region.
These firms handle estate administration, will contests, trust litigation, and other probate matters in Douglas County Probate Court.
Georgia uses formal, court-supervised probate, which makes an attorney worthwhile for most estates in Douglas County — the filing sequence, notice requirements, and accounting leave little room for error. Estates under the small-estate threshold are the usual exception.
Probate attorney fees in Georgia are based on reasonable compensation — typically 2%O.C.G.A. § 53-7-6 (personal representative may provide competent legal counsel; court may fix reasonable attorney fees as administration expenses; no statutory percentage)Verified May 30, 2026 to 4%O.C.G.A. § 53-7-6 (personal representative may provide competent legal counsel; court may fix reasonable attorney fees as administration expenses; no statutory percentage)Verified May 30, 2026 of the estate's value, billed hourly or as a flat fee. Ask a Douglas County firm to quote a structure up front.
A probate attorney files the petition with the Probate Court, publishes the required creditor notices, prepares the inventory and accounting, handles creditor claims and tax filings, and guides the final distribution. They represent the personal representative — not the beneficiaries — a distinction that matters if a dispute develops.
Serves Atlanta, Georgia, along with Fulton County, Cobb County, Cherokee County, Forsyth County, DeKalb County, Gwinnett County, and Douglas County.
Location
900 Circle 75 Parkway, Suite 800Atlanta, GA 30339
Phone
(770) 933-9009
Service Area
7 counties
Serves as west Georgia and Douglas County's estate planning attorneys, handling estate planning, probate, elder law, wills, and civil litigation across the Atlanta metro area.
Location
8701 Hospital Drive, Suite BDouglasville, GA 30135
Phone
(770) 949-7300
Service Area
5 counties
These firms are based in other regions but serve Douglas County.
Not every estate needs one. Simple estates, small estates under the affidavit threshold, and states with informal probate can often be handled without counsel. Contested wills, out-of-state property, and business interests usually need an attorney. The Georgia self-filing assessment scores whether this estate can be handled without one.
Georgia uses reasonable fees for probate. Typical Douglas County rates run $200–$500/hour, with simple estates taking 20–40 hours. Flat-fee arrangements are available from some firms.
Files the petition, publishes required notices, helps with the inventory and accounting, handles creditor claims and tax filings, and guides the final distribution. The attorney represents the personal representative, not the beneficiaries — a distinction that matters if disputes arise.
Referrals from an estate planning attorney you already work with are the best source. Bar association directories are second. Avoid attorneys who won't quote a fee structure up front or who won't explain whether your estate qualifies for simplified procedures.
Yes — by avoiding probate altogether. A revocable living trust removes the estate from court jurisdiction, which removes the need for a probate attorney at settlement time. Create a revocable trust online for about what one hour of probate-attorney time costs.
Firm listings are for informational purposes only. SimplyTrust does not endorse or recommend any specific firm or attorney. Contact firms directly to discuss your situation and verify their current practice areas and availability. Information last verified: June 2026.
Douglas County
8700 Hospital Drive, 3rd Floor, Judicial Side
Douglasville, GA 30134
Phone:
770-920-7249Fax:
770-920-7381
Hours:
Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
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