A small estate affidavit is a simplified legal document that allows heirs to collect certain assets from a deceased person’s estate without going through the full probate process. In Georgia, this option is available when the total estate value is $10,000 or less.
For most Georgia families with any real estate or meaningful savings, the small estate affidavit is not available — the $10,000 threshold is very low. But for smaller estates, it can save significant time and money.
Who Can Use a Georgia Small Estate Affidavit?
Georgia’s small estate affidavit procedure (under O.C.G.A. § 53-2-40) is available when:
- The total value of the probate estate is $10,000 or less
- At least 30 days have passed since the person’s death
- No probate proceeding has been opened or is pending
- The person signing the affidavit is legally entitled to the assets (an heir or creditor)
The $10,000 limit applies only to probate assets — assets that would otherwise go through probate. Assets with beneficiary designations, joint ownership, or in a trust do not count toward this threshold.
What Can a Small Estate Affidavit Collect?
A small estate affidavit can be used to collect personal property — bank account balances, vehicle titles, and similar assets. It is presented to the institution holding the asset (a bank, the DMV, etc.) along with a death certificate.
Real estate generally cannot be transferred using a small estate affidavit in Georgia. A deed still needs to be recorded with the county, and most title insurance companies will require a full probate proceeding before insuring title to real property.
How to Use a Small Estate Affidavit in Georgia
- Confirm the estate qualifies — total probate assets at or below $10,000, at least 30 days since death, no probate proceedings pending
- Prepare the affidavit — it must identify the deceased, describe the assets, state the value, and identify the person claiming the assets
- Sign the affidavit before a notary
- Present it to the institution along with a death certificate and identification
There is no court filing required. The institution reviews the documents and, if satisfied, releases the assets directly.
The $10,000 Problem
The small estate threshold in Georgia is one of the lowest in the country. Most other states allow small estate affidavits for estates up to $50,000, $100,000, or more. Georgia’s $10,000 limit means that almost any estate with a bank account, a retirement account without a beneficiary, or personal property of any significance requires full probate.
This is one reason probate avoidance planning matters so much in Georgia. The shortcuts available in other states are largely unavailable here. A simple estate with $30,000 in bank accounts and no beneficiary designations will go through full probate — costing thousands in fees and months of delay — when it could have been avoided entirely with basic planning.
The Better Solution: Plan Ahead
Rather than hoping your estate qualifies for the small estate affidavit, the better approach is to set up your estate so probate is not needed at all. A combination of a revocable living trust, beneficiary designations, and transfer-on-death designations will keep virtually your entire estate out of probate — regardless of value.
The Hive Law helps Georgia families build complete estate plans that avoid probate for estates of any size. Start with a Family Protection Audit to understand your current exposure and what planning would look like.