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CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com is the best way to find Georgia child custody, child support, and child visitation lawyers and family law attorneys, along with Georgia laws and information.

To find a checked out family lawyer, enter your city and state, above, and click "Find My Lawyer."

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Georgia Child Custody, Child Support
and Child Visitation Lawyers

Child Support, Child Custody and Visitation in Georgia

The laws of Georgia governing child support, child custody and child visitation are generally contained in the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (O.C.G.A), available here.

To fully understand Georgia law, it may be necessary to read and interpret statutes with case law and regulatory law. It is also important to know if law is up to date. For these and other reasons, it is always best to consult with a qualified family law attorney to know how the law applies to your particular situation. The following legal summaries are not intended as legal advice and should not be relied on as such. They are intended only as an introduction to the way that the law functions in these areas.

Child Support in Georgia

Child support is the court-ordered payment by one parent to the custodial parent of a minor child, generally after divorce or separation.

Calculation:

The amount of child support is calculated using the Percentage of Income formula, which takes into account the gross income of both the custodial parent and non-custodial parent.

  Number of Children   Percentage of Gross Income paid by
the Non-custodial Parent
  1   17 to 23%
  2   23 to 28%
  3   25 to 32%
  4   29 to 35%
  5 or more children   31 to 37%

Continuation of Child Support beyond 18th Birthday:

Child support in Georgia generally continues until a child reaches the age of majority, dies, marries or becomes emancipated, whichever occurs first. Courts, in their discretion, may also direct either or both parents to support the child financially up to age 20, who has not been previously married or has become emancipated, who is enrolled in and attending a secondary school, and who has attained majority before completing his or her secondary school education.


Child Custody in Georgia

In Georgia, child custody is granted based on the “best interest of the child.” Georgia primarily recognizes four forms of child custody: sole custody, joint custody, joint legal custody, and joint physical custody.

Courts generally grant a right to a child that is 14 years and older to select the parent with whom he or would prefer to stay, subject to the determination of the eligibility of the parent to be fit to take the custody of the child.

Some of the key factors that will be considered by Georgia courts in granting the custody include:

  • • Wishes of the parents
  • • Wishes of the child as to custody
  • • Interaction of the child with parents and siblings
  • • Child's adjustment in the home, school and community
  • • Mental and physical health and stability of the individuals involved
  • • Capacity and natural mental and emotional outlook of each parent to provide love, affection, and guidance to the child and the ability to provide continuous education and nurturing to the child
  • • Each parent's knowledge and familiarity of the child and the child's needs
  • • Capacity and natural mental and emotional outlook of each parent to provide the child with food, clothing, medical care, day-to-day needs, and other necessary basic care
  • • Home environment of each parent to ensure the safety and nurturance of the child
  • • Consideration to the length of time the child has lived in a stable, satisfactory environment and the desirability of maintaining continuity
  • • Stability of the family unit of each of the parents and the presence or absence of each parent's support systems within the community to benefit the child
  • • Each parent's involvement, or lack thereof, in the child's educational, social, and extracurricular activities
  • • Each parent's employment schedule and the related flexibility or limitations, if any, of a parent to care for the child
  • • Home, school, and community record and history of the child, as well as any health or educational special needs of the child
  • • Each parent's past performance and relative abilities for future performance of parenting responsibilities
  • • Willingness and ability of each of the parents to facilitate and encourage a close and continuing parent-child relationship between the child and the other parent, consistent with the best interest of the child
  • • Any recommendation by a court appointed custody evaluator or guardian ad litem
  • • Any evidence of family violence or sexual, mental, or physical child abuse or criminal history of either parent
  • • Any evidence of substance abuse by either parent

Child Visitation in Georgia

Child visitation refers to the ability of a non-custodial parent to spend time with his or her child. Child visitation is often associated with the term “parenting plan,” which typically outlines the type of legal custody and physical custody of each parent.

Georgia does not have a law that spells out visitation guidelines. However, O.C.G.A. §19-9-3(d) states that: "It is the express policy of this state to encourage that a minor child has continuing contact with parents and grandparents who have shown the ability to act in the best interest of the child and to encourage parents to share in the rights and responsibilities of raising their children after such parents have separated or dissolved their marriage."

Parents can reach an agreement on their own relating to child visitation or the court can intervene, if the parents are not able to reach an agreement on child visitation or child custody. In such a case of disagreement, both parents will be required to participate in a mediation process before having a court hearing or before a judge hears the case.

Finding your Georgia Family Lawyer

CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com provides the best way to find Georgia child custody lawyers, child support lawyers, and child visitation lawyers and attorneys, along with Georgia state child custody, child support, and child visitation laws and information.

To find the right family lawyer for you, it's critical to use a method that makes sense. Two common methods make little sense:

Advertisements & Attorney Listing Services

Is the family lawyer with the biggest ad in the phone book the best family lawyer for you? Not likely. It's easy to see why you might not find the attorney who's right for you through an advertisement.

How about services that merely list attorneys, often on websites? Are they any better? Probably not. Listing services are typically just advertisements. Like the phone book, cash is usually the only criteria for a service to list a family lawyer.

Ask yourself: Do listing services screen attorneys in any way?

Do they check …

  • • References of other attorneys?
  • • References of former clients?
  • • If a family lawyer has a disciplinary history?
  • • If a family lawyer is properly licensed in Georgia?
  • • If family law or family law a significant part of a lawyer's practice?

Listing services typically fail to answer any of these questions. They simply leave it up to you.

Client Referrals

Client (non-lawyer) referrals usually make little sense. Why? Because clients rarely know enough about the process of practicing law to understand what their family lawyer actually did for them. Or to understand if their family lawyer did a quality job for them compared to other family lawyers.

Could they have achieved a better result with another attorney? Were the results achieved by the family lawyer typical for that lawyer?

It's not that client referrals can't be helpful, but they should be only one of several criteria that a person uses to hire an attorney.

The CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com Method

CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com provides the best way to find a quality, prescreened Georgia family lawyer in your area. What do we mean by prescreened? We mean that we do the hard part. It's free, easy, and confidential.

We have a lawyer who works for us check out family lawyers and family lawyers for you, by doing out the following:

  • (1). We make sure family law or family law is a substantial part of the lawyer's practice
  • (2). We make sure the family lawyers are properly licensed in Georgia
  • (3). We make sure the family lawyers have no public record of professional discipline
  • (4). We speak to three former clients of the family lawyer who have had favorable experiences
  • (5). We speak to three other attorneys who speak highly of the family lawyer and their expertise in family law
There are over 27,000 active, licensed attorneys in Georgia. To check out the licensure of a particular Georgia lawyer you can go to this link, where each of them is listed by name. To check out of a particular Georgia lawyer has a public record of professional discipline, click here.

You can do some of what we do yourself. You can use our How to Check Out Lawyers page to check out a specific Georgia family lawyer who you are already thinking about using. You can also use the links to check out any other Georgia lawyer. Alternatively, you can use CheckedOutFamilyLawyers.com to learn more about verified Georgia family lawyers who we've already checked out.

Our Georgia family lawyers cover the entire state of Georgia and include lawyers located in Atlanta, Georgia ; the Atlanta metropolitan area; Augusta, Georgia ; Columbus, Georgia ; Savannah, Georgia ; Fulton County, Cobb County; DeKalb County; Clayton County; Clarke County; Chatham County; Bibb County; Muscogee County; Richmond County; Henry County; Paulding County; Forsyth County; Cherokee County; Carroll County; and Douglas County.
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