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States→Georgia→Polk County

Estate Planning & Probate in Polk County, Georgia

Most Polk County estate questions come down to one fork: avoid probate before a death, or work through it after one. This page points you to the right path—planning ahead, or settling an estate at the Probate Court.

Overview
Settling an Estate
Estate Planning
Polk County, GA Attorneys

Someone died — settling an estate

Filing probate at the Probate Court, what it costs, transferring property, and local attorneys.

What to do when someone dies in Polk County→

Planning ahead as a property owner

Keep a Polk County home out of probate with a transfer-on-death deed or a living trust.

Estate planning in Polk County→

The Probate Process in Polk County

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 Polk County, probate runs through the Probate Court at Courthouse No. 1 Room 102 Prior Street, Cedartown.

Full Polk Countyprobate guide: cost, how to file & attorneys →

Probate Court Record

Probate Court

Polk County

Address

Courthouse No. 1 Room 102 Prior StreetCedartown, GA 30125

Phone

770-749-2128

Hours

Monday - Friday, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Paper filing availableE-filing optional
How to file probate in Polk County→

Recording Deeds & Property Documents

Recording Office Record

Clerk of Superior Court

Polk County

Address

100 Prior Street, Suite 106Cedartown, GA 30125

Phone

770-749-2114

Hours

Monday - Friday, 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM

E-recording

Available via GSCCCA Authority eFileE-recording info →
Visit recorder website →

$25 base recording fee; TOD deeds are generally transfer-tax exempt.

Full recording details →
Open in Google Maps

Verified June 3, 2026 · Source

Frequently Asked Questions

The Probate Court for Polk County is located in Cedartown, Georgia. Full address, phone, hours, and e-filing details are listed on this page.

Yes. E-filing is available but optional in Polk County. Many families filing without an attorney prefer paper filing at the Probate Court; both are accepted.

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 Polk 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 Polk County probate docket. Create a revocable trust online to avoid putting your family through this process later.

Georgia Estate Law

Probate costs, will requirements, trust laws, and more. Compare with other states.

Explore

Georgia Estate Planning Articles

Articles about estate planning, probate, and trusts relevant to families in Polk County.

Is this your situation?

Get a complete guide for your specific circumstances.

Named as Executor

Named as Executor

Being named executor means navigating probate, managing assets, and distributing the estate. What's expected, what you can charge, and how to start.

Learn more
Death of a Parent

Death of a Parent

Losing a parent is overwhelming. What needs to happen next — settling the estate, navigating probate, and the steps to move forward.

Learn more

When you're ready, we're here.

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Georgia Estate Planning Articles

Articles about estate planning, probate, and trusts relevant to families in Polk County.

What Is the Cost of Probate in Georgia?

What Is the Cost of Probate in Georgia?

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Why There’s No Inheritance Tax in Georgia

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Estate Tax in Georgia History: What Changed

Estate Tax in Georgia History: What Changed

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