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States→Georgia→Walker County→Estate Planning

Estate Planning for Walker County, Georgia Property Owners

For most Walker County homeowners, the house is what drags an estate into probate. A transfer-on-death deed or a living trust keeps it out—here is how to set up either one and record it locally.

1. Overview2. Settling an Estate3. Estate Planning

For a Walker County property owner, the biggest probate risk is the home itself. Real estate is what forces most families into the Probate Court. The two tools that keep a Walker County home out of probate are a transfer-on-death deed recorded with the Clerk of Superior Court, and a revocable living trust that holds title to the property.

Record a Transfer-on-Death Deed in Walker County

A transfer-on-death deed lets an owner name a beneficiary who receives Walker County property automatically at death, without probate. It is recorded with the Clerk of Superior Courtduring the owner’s lifetime and can be revoked any time.

Create a GeorgiaTOD deed →Walker Countysigning requirements →

Where to Record Property Documents

Deeds and other real property documents for Walker County are recorded with the Clerk of Superior Court at 103 South Duke Street, LaFayette, GA 30728. Phone: 706-638-1742.

Recording costs $25 base recording fee; TOD deeds are generally transfer-tax exempt. Page count, cover sheets, and any local transfer-tax add-ons under Georgia law can change the final amount, so confirm the total with the Clerk of Superior Court before submitting.

Walker County doesn't offer e-recording. Plan to record by mail or in person.

Recording Office Record

Clerk of Superior Court

Walker County

Address

103 South Duke StreetLaFayette, GA 30728

Phone

706-638-1742

E-recording

Not available
Visit recorder website →

Recording fees

Base recording fee$25

Flat fee of $25.00 per instrument. No per-page fee. The fee is inclusive of sums collected pursuant to O.C.G.A. 15-6-61, 15-6-77.4, 15-6-98, 45-17-4, and 47-14-51.

O.C.G.A. 15-6-77 (as amended by 2024 Ga. Laws 603, eff. 1/1/2025)

Transfer tax

$1.00 per $1,000 of consideration (O.C.G.A. 48-6-1). Transfer-on-death deeds are generally exempt (No consideration exchanged at recording. Transfer tax applies only when consideration exceeds $100.00 (O.C.G.A. 48-6-1).). Georgia also imposes an intangible recording tax of $1.50 per $500 ($3.00 per $1,000) on instruments securing long-term notes (O.C.G.A. 48-6-61). This applies to mortgages/deeds to secure debt, not to transfer deeds.

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Verified June 3, 2026 · Source

A Living Trust Covers More Than One Deed

A transfer-on-death deed moves a single property. A revocable living trust holds the home, bank and investment accounts, and other assets together, so the whole estate skips the Probate Court — not just the house. For a Walker County family with more than one major asset, the trust is usually the cleaner plan.

Create a Revocable Trust in 15 minutes
SimplyTrustSimplyTrust Editorial·Updated June 3, 2026

Legal Sources

  • O.C.G.A. 15-6-77 (as amended by 2024 Ga. Laws 603, eff. 1/1/2025)

Data sourced from Georgia statutes and official state code. How we research.

Frequently Asked Questions

Deeds and other real property documents for Walker County are recorded with the Clerk of Superior Court at 103 South Duke Street, LaFayette, GA 30728. Call 706-638-1742 to confirm current recording procedures.

Recording a deed in Walker County costs $25 base recording fee; TOD deeds are generally transfer-tax exempt. Page count, required cover sheets, and any local transfer tax can change the final total.

Walker County does not offer e-recording. Plan to record by mail or in person at the Clerk of Superior Court.

Contact the Clerk of Superior Court for current recording hours. Reach the office at 706-638-1742. Confirm whether walk-in or mail-in recording is preferred before you go.

Yes. Deeds recorded in Georgia must be signed in front of a notary and 1 witness before the Clerk of Superior Court will accept them. A transfer-on-death deed follows the same execution rules — see the Walker County signing requirements.

A transfer-on-death (TOD) deed names a beneficiary who receives the property automatically when the owner dies, without probate. The deed is recorded with the Clerk of Superior Courtduring the owner’s lifetime. Start one with the Georgia TOD deed form.

Georgia Estate Planning Attorneys

Find estate planning attorneys serving Walker County by practice area.

Georgia Estate Planning Attorneys

91 firms

Georgia Estate Administration Attorneys

2 firms

Georgia Trust Administration Attorneys

15 firms

Georgia Probate Attorneys

90 firms

Georgia Probate Litigation Attorneys

5 firms

Georgia Trust Litigation Attorneys

2 firms

Georgia Elder Law Attorneys

16 firms

Georgia Tax Planning Attorneys

9 firms

Georgia Conservatorship Attorneys

8 firms

Georgia Guardianship Attorneys

14 firms

Georgia Special Needs Planning Attorneys

8 firms

Georgia Asset Protection Attorneys

9 firms

Georgia Medicaid Planning Attorneys

6 firms

Georgia Estate Planning Articles

Estate planning articles for Georgia.

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Georgia Estate Planning Articles

Estate planning articles for Georgia.

What Is the Cost of Probate in Georgia?

What Is the Cost of Probate in Georgia?

Georgia probate costs 2 to 5 percent of the estate value, plus a $200 filing fee.
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Revocable Trusts in Georgia Versus Nevada

Georgia and Nevada offer different frameworks for revocable trusts, with variations in tax treatment, formation requirements, and administration.
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SimplyTrustSimplyTrust EditorialJanuary 6, 2026
Why There’s No Inheritance Tax in Georgia

Why There’s No Inheritance Tax in Georgia

Georgia does not impose an inheritance tax, allowing beneficiaries to receive inherited assets without state-level taxation, providing significant advantages for families planning their estates.
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SimplyTrustSimplyTrust EditorialJanuary 5, 2026
Estate Tax in Georgia History: What Changed

Estate Tax in Georgia History: What Changed

Georgia eliminated its state estate tax, leaving residents to focus only on federal estate tax obligations and other essential estate planning considerations.
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SimplyTrustSimplyTrust EditorialJanuary 5, 2026