How Much Does Child Custody Cost in Georgia (2026)
Georgia child custody cost estimate for Atlanta: § 19-9-3, $215-220 filing fees, $350-525/hour lawyer rates, evaluator, GAL.
Child custody costs in Georgia usually start with court filing fees and grow with attorney time, parent education, evaluator involvement, and any GAL or child-attorney appointment.
What you need to know
Child custody costs in Georgia usually start with court filing fees and grow with attorney time, parent education, evaluator involvement, and any GAL or child-attorney appointment. An agreed parenting plan can stay in the low thousands. A contested case that needs professional investigation, testimony, or repeated hearings can move into five figures before trial.
This calculator focuses on custody-specific costs, not the broader financial issues that can appear in a divorce. The estimate uses sourced Georgia filing-fee data, a state attorney-rate assumption, parent education costs, custody evaluator assumptions, and GAL or child-attorney ranges. For the wider family-law context, compare the Georgia divorce cost calculator and the national child custody cost calculator.
Georgia-specific context matters because custody terminology, mandatory education, evaluator appointment rules, and child-representative practices vary by state. Georgia applies a best-interest standard under O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3 with no presumption for either parent or any particular form of custody A child age 14 or older may select the parent with whom the child wants to live, subject to the best-interest standard The calculation keeps those differences visible while still using a deterministic formula that can be checked against the stated inputs. PennyCheck keeps source notes in how we verify our data, and families budgeting for legal costs may also want to compare cash planning with the emergency fund calculator.
Georgia custody cost breakdown
The Georgia estimate has five cost components. **Court filing fees** are documented as $215-220; this is the baseline cost for opening or responding to a custody matter, before service, copies, or motion fees. **Parent education** is listed at $30-75. Georgia Superior Court Rule 24.8 allows courts with established parenting seminars to require completion in domestic-relations cases involving children. County practice controls timing and provider details.
**Attorney time** is the largest controllable cost. The calculator uses $360 per hour from Clio Lawyer Rates 2026 - Georgia, with Atlanta rates commonly running $350-525/hour. An agreed case uses about 10 hours because the main work is preparing, reviewing, and filing a parenting plan. A contested case uses about 48 hours because pleadings, negotiation, discovery, hearing preparation, and settlement attempts compound quickly.
**Custody evaluator fees** are modeled at $2,500-10,000, with a midpoint of $6,000. **GAL or child-attorney fees** are modeled at $2,000-8,000, with a midpoint of $4,500. These professional costs do not appear in every case, but they can dominate the estimate when the court needs independent child-focused information.
What changes the cost in Georgia
Agreement status is the biggest cost driver. Parents who agree on decision-making, parenting time, exchange logistics, school-year schedules, holidays, and communication terms can usually keep the attorney-hour estimate near 10 hours. Once those terms are disputed, the estimate moves toward 48 hours before evaluator or GAL costs are added.
The second driver is whether specialized professionals become involved. A custody evaluator adds interviews, document review, parent-child observations, collateral contacts, and a report. A GAL or child attorney adds another professional voice whose work must be funded, coordinated, and addressed in hearings. In Georgia, this appointment is discretionary, so the calculator separates it from the base attorney-time estimate.
The third driver is location. Atlanta attorney rates can run $350-525/hour, while smaller markets may price lower. If a custody case also affects housing choices or cash flow, the home affordability calculator can help estimate whether a post-case budget supports the same residence.
How the Georgia estimate is sourced
The filing-fee source is Gwinnett County Superior Court - Fees, verified 2026-04-21. Attorney-rate assumptions come from Clio Lawyer Rates 2026 - Georgia. Evaluator assumptions come from Georgia Uniform Superior Court Rules - Rule 24.9. The generator contract requires each of those source URLs to point to a specific data page, not an agency homepage, before a state can move toward generation.
The calculation deliberately separates sourced fixed costs from scenario costs. Filing fees and parent education are included in every estimate. Evaluator and GAL costs are included only when the user selects those branches. That keeps an agreed parenting-plan scenario from being inflated by professional costs that may never be ordered, while still showing how quickly a contested case can change.
Georgia custody law context is summarized from O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3 and Georgia Uniform Superior Court Rules 24.8-24.10. Georgia applies a best-interest standard under O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3 with no presumption for either parent or any particular form of custody A child age 14 or older may select the parent with whom the child wants to live, subject to the best-interest standard Georgia custody cases involving permanent custody or modification generally require a parenting plan under Uniform Superior Court Rule 24.10 and O.C.G.A. § 19-9-1 These notes shape the page context, but they do not override the formula. The formula remains transparent: filing fee plus education cost plus attorney time plus selected professional costs.
Georgia document and hearing planning
A custody budget becomes more accurate when the family can separate facts that are already documented from facts that still need attorney development. Before a first consultation, parents can gather school calendars, report cards, medical appointment records, childcare schedules, travel plans, prior orders, communication logs, proposed exchanges, and a simple timeline of day-to-day caregiving. Organized records help counsel evaluate which issues are ready for negotiation and which issues may need declarations, subpoenas, witnesses, or a hearing.
In Georgia, the estimate uses 10 attorney hours for an agreed path, 25 hours when the path is uncertain, and 48 hours for contested litigation. Those assumptions are not predictions about a judge. They are workload assumptions. Every unresolved schedule issue, school decision, medical decision, exchange problem, or safety allegation can add review time before anyone appears in court. A parent who can convert broad disagreement into a specific proposed parenting schedule usually gives the attorney fewer open questions to price.
Georgia evaluator and GAL cost planning
Professional involvement is the part of the estimate most likely to surprise families. The calculator keeps evaluator and GAL or child-attorney costs outside the base attorney-time estimate because those costs are branch costs, not automatic charges. The Georgia evaluator assumption is $2,500-10,000, and the GAL or child-attorney assumption is $2,000-8,000. A court order can allocate those costs between parents, require deposits, set hourly limits, or revisit payment after more facts are known.
Ask local counsel how Atlanta courts usually handle deposits, deadlines, report access, objections, and testimony for child-focused professionals. Also ask which facts make appointment more likely: disputed safety claims, relocation disputes, refusal to communicate, inconsistent school involvement, special medical needs, or competing accounts from third-party caregivers. Those questions do two things. They improve the budget, and they show whether spending money on professional investigation is likely to clarify the case or simply add another expensive layer.
Ways to plan for Georgia custody costs
The most reliable way to reduce custody cost is to reduce disputed attorney time. Parents who can narrow disagreements before filing, bring a proposed parenting schedule to counsel, and organize school, medical, communication, and exchange records usually spend less time recreating facts. Every avoided hearing can save several hours of preparation and appearance time.
Mediation or settlement conferences can also reduce cost when both parents use them to resolve concrete terms. A parenting plan that answers weekday schedules, summer time, transportation, school decisions, medical decisions, relocation notice, and communication rules leaves fewer questions for the court. If savings need to be built before filing, the savings goal calculator can estimate how long a legal-cost reserve may take.
Fee waivers may reduce court filing cost for qualifying households, but they do not usually remove private attorney, evaluator, or GAL charges. The estimate should therefore be treated as a planning range rather than a court quote. It is based on sourced Georgia assumptions and should be compared with local counsel before major decisions.
State-specific note
Georgia custody cases are governed by O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3 and Georgia Uniform Superior Court Rules 24.8-24.10. Georgia applies a best-interest standard under O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3 with no presumption for either parent or any particular form of custody A child age 14 or older may select the parent with whom the child wants to live, subject to the best-interest standard Georgia custody cases involving permanent custody or modification generally require a parenting plan under Uniform Superior Court Rule 24.10 and O.C.G.A. § 19-9-1 Parenting class requirement: required or commonly ordered.
How we calculate this
This calculator combines five custody cost components: filing fees, required parent education, attorney time, custody evaluator costs, and GAL or child-attorney costs. Attorney hours use 10 hours for agreed cases, 48 hours for contested cases, and 25 hours when the user is unsure. Attorney cost uses $360 per hour from Clio Lawyer Rates 2026 - Georgia. The estimate applies 0.8x and 1.6x range multipliers to show normal variation without changing the sourced midpoint. Professional costs are included only when selected, because many custody cases resolve without evaluator or GAL appointment.
Key takeaways
- Agreed Georgia custody cases estimate at $3,092-$6,184 before unusual court orders.
- Contested Georgia custody cases estimate at $22,436-$44,872 when evaluator and GAL costs are included.
- Georgia filing fees are documented as $215-220; evaluator costs are documented as $2,500-10,000.
- Georgia planning should separate attorney time from evaluator and GAL costs because those professional charges are branch-specific.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does child custody cost in Georgia?
Are parenting classes required in Georgia custody cases?
What is the biggest cost driver in a Georgia custody case?
When does a custody evaluator affect the estimate?
Is this Georgia estimate legal advice?
Add this tool to your website
Free forever<iframe
id="pc-georgia"
src="https://pennycheck.com/embed/legal/custody/georgia"
width="100%" height="650" frameborder="0"
style="border:none;overflow:hidden"
title="How Much Does Child Custody Cost in Georgia (2026)">
</iframe>
<script>
window.addEventListener("message",function(e){
if(e.data&&e.data.type==="pennycheck-resize"&&e.data.slug==="georgia"){
document.getElementById("pc-georgia").style.height=e.data.height+"px";
}
});
</script>Data sources
- Gwinnett County Superior Court - FeesVerified 2026-04-21
- Clio Lawyer Rates 2026 - GeorgiaVerified 2026-04-21
- Georgia Uniform Superior Court Rules - Rule 24.9Verified 2026-04-21