Cost-of-living index 91 · 9% below average

Georgia attorney fees

Attorney fees in Georgia reflect the state’s cost of living, local market competition, and the regulations of the Georgia state bar. Georgia’s cost-of-living index is 91 (where 100 is the U.S. average), so legal fees here tend to run 9% below the national norm.

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How much do lawyers charge in Georgia?

Attorneys in Georgia typically charge anywhere from about $91 for simpler, flat-fee matters to $317,800+ for complex or contested cases, depending on the type of case and how the lawyer bills. Because attorney prices track the local cost of living, Georgia lawyer fees run 9% below the U.S. average — the state’s cost-of-living index is 91, where 100 is the U.S. average.

Key takeaways

  • Georgia attorney fees run 9% below the U.S. average, tracking the state’s cost of living (index 91).
  • Injury claims like car accidents and personal injury are usually handled on a contingency fee — no upfront cost, with the lawyer paid only if you win.
  • Flat fees are common for an uncontested divorce, a real-estate closing, bankruptcy, and many criminal and immigration matters; hourly billing ($150–$400) is typical for complex or business cases.
  • Your final cost depends on case type, complexity, and where in Georgia you live — enter your ZIP for a localized figure.

Average attorney fees in Georgia by case type

Each figure is a national fee benchmark adjusted by Georgia’s cost-of-living index (91). Contingency cases show the typical total fee from a successful outcome.

Case type How it’s billed Low Average High
Car Accidents Contingency $1,800 $5,450 $13,600
Divorce Flat fee $1,800 $6,800 $18,150
Real Estate Flat fee $730 $1,350 $3,200
Personal Injury Contingency $2,700 $9,100 $27,250
Bankruptcy Flat fee $910 $1,800 $4,100
Criminal Defense Flat fee $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
Immigration Flat fee $910 $3,200 $9,100
Disability Contingency $1,800 $3,650 $8,350
Probate Flat fee $1,350 $4,100 $13,600
Truck Accident Contingency $4,550 $14,550 $45,400
Motorcycle Accident Contingency $2,700 $8,150 $27,250
Bicycle Accident Contingency $2,250 $7,250 $22,700
Uber Accident Contingency $2,700 $8,150 $29,950
Property Damage Contingency $1,350 $5,450 $18,150
Dog Attack Injury Contingency $2,700 $9,100 $27,250
Insurance Claim Contingency $1,800 $6,800 $22,700
Wrongful Death Contingency $13,600 $54,500 $227,000
Uncontested Divorce Flat fee $450 $1,100 $2,250
Family Law Hourly $1,350 $6,350 $18,150
Child Custody Hourly $1,800 $7,250 $22,700
Adoption Flat fee $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
Prenuptial Agreement Flat fee $910 $2,250 $6,800
Child Support Hourly $910 $3,200 $9,100
Domestic Violence Flat fee $1,350 $3,650 $10,900
Restraining Order Flat fee $910 $2,250 $6,800
Guardianship Flat fee $1,350 $3,650 $10,900
Surrogacy Flat fee $3,200 $7,250 $13,600
Power of Attorney Flat fee $180 $360 $910
Estate Planning Flat fee $450 $1,800 $4,550
Living Trust Flat fee $1,100 $2,250 $4,550
Elder Law Hourly $1,350 $4,550 $10,900
Will Flat fee $140 $360 $910
Defense Flat fee $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
DUI Flat fee $1,350 $3,650 $9,100
Pardon Flat fee $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
Expungement Flat fee $450 $1,350 $3,650
Juvenile Flat fee $1,350 $3,200 $9,100
Felony Defense Flat fee $3,200 $9,100 $27,250
Clemency Flat fee $1,800 $5,450 $13,600
Probation Violation Flat fee $910 $2,250 $6,800
Misdemeanor Flat fee $680 $1,350 $3,200
Security Clearance Flat fee $2,250 $6,800 $18,150
Discharge Upgrade Flat fee $1,350 $3,650 $9,100
H-1B Visa Flat fee $1,800 $3,200 $5,450
Green Card Flat fee $1,800 $3,650 $7,250
Citizenship Flat fee $450 $910 $2,250
EB-2 NIW Flat fee $3,650 $6,350 $10,900
K-1 Visa Flat fee $1,350 $2,250 $3,650
E-2 Visa Flat fee $3,200 $5,450 $9,100
Deportation Hourly $2,700 $7,250 $18,150
O-1 Visa Flat fee $3,200 $5,450 $9,100
Closing Flat fee $640 $1,100 $2,250
House Purchase Flat fee $730 $1,200 $2,250
Eviction Flat fee $450 $1,100 $2,700
Property Tax Appeal Contingency $140 $450 $1,800
Foreclosure Flat fee $1,350 $3,200 $6,800
HOA Hourly $1,350 $3,650 $9,100
Tenant Hourly $910 $2,250 $5,450
Chapter 7 Flat fee $910 $1,350 $2,250
Chapter 13 Flat fee $2,700 $3,650 $5,450
Personal Loan Hourly $450 $1,800 $4,550
Debt Settlement Contingency $910 $2,700 $7,250
SSDI Contingency $1,800 $3,650 $8,350
Social Security Contingency $1,800 $3,650 $8,350
VA Disability Contingency $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
Long-Term Disability Contingency $2,250 $7,250 $22,700
Traffic Ticket Flat fee $91 $270 $680
Speeding Ticket Flat fee $91 $270 $680
Traffic Violation Flat fee $91 $270 $680
Reckless Driving Flat fee $910 $2,250 $4,550
Suspended License Flat fee $680 $1,600 $2,700
Patent Flat fee $4,550 $9,100 $16,350
Trademark Flat fee $540 $1,100 $2,250
Workers Compensation Contingency $1,350 $3,650 $9,100
Small Claims Flat fee $91 $450 $1,350
Civil Lawsuit Hourly $2,700 $13,600 $45,400
Consumer Protection Contingency $1,800 $4,550 $13,600
Lemon Law Contingency $1,800 $4,550 $13,600
Defamation Hourly $4,550 $13,600 $45,400
Employment Contingency $2,250 $9,100 $36,300
Discrimination Contingency $2,700 $10,900 $40,850
Wrongful Termination Contingency $2,700 $10,900 $40,850
Whistleblower Contingency $4,550 $18,150 $90,800
Tax Hourly $1,350 $4,550 $13,600
Business Hourly $1,350 $5,450 $22,700
Medical Malpractice Contingency $22,700 $90,800 $317,800

Estimates derived from national fee benchmarks adjusted by federal Regional Price Parities. See our methodology.

Attorney fees in major Georgia cities

Lawyer costs vary by metro within Georgia. Open a city for cost-of-living adjusted fee estimates and local attorneys — you can compare every case type from there.

How attorney fees work in Georgia

Like the rest of the United States, Georgia follows the American Rule, under which each party generally pays its own attorney fees regardless of who wins — unless a contract or statute shifts those fees. Georgia lawyers bill through several structures: hourly rates recorded in billable increments, contingency fees in injury claims, flat fees for defined services, and retainers that secure representation. The right structure — and the price you pay — depends on your case type and the Georgia bar’s rules of professional conduct.

A few state-specific rules shape what a case is worth and, in turn, what you pay a Georgia attorney:

  • Car accidents: Georgia is an at-fault (tort) state, so the driver who caused a crash and their insurer pay the damages, and your lawyer is paid a contingency share of the recovery.
  • Personal injury: Georgia uses modified comparative negligence, reducing an injury award by your share of fault and barring recovery once you are 50–51% or more at fault.
  • Divorce: Georgia is an equitable-distribution state, so marital property is divided fairly but not always equally, based on factors like income, custody, and contributions.
  • Real estate: Georgia is an attorney-closing state, so a real-estate lawyer typically prepares the paperwork and oversees the closing — a flat fee that is part of most transactions here.
  • Bankruptcy: Georgia has opted out of the federal bankruptcy exemptions, so filers must use the state exemption set to protect their home, car, and other property.
  • Probate: Georgia bases probate fees on "reasonable compensation" — billed hourly or as a flat fee — rather than a fixed percentage of the estate.

Within Georgia, lawyer costs still vary by jurisdiction: a major metropolitan area carries a higher cost-of-living index — and therefore higher typical fees — than a rural county. Entering your ZIP code resolves the most precise local index available so your estimate reflects your specific market.

Georgia attorney fee FAQs

What you pay a lawyer in Georgia depends on the case and how it is billed. A divorce averages about $6,800, while injury cases like car accidents are handled on contingency — roughly a third of your recovery, with no upfront cost. Because legal fees track the local cost of living, attorney prices in Georgia run 9% below the U.S. average.

In Georgia, an uncontested divorce often starts near $1,800, the average runs about $6,800, and a contested divorce can reach $18,150 or more. Most divorce attorneys charge a flat fee for simple cases or bill hourly for contested ones.

Car accident lawyers in Georgia work on a contingency fee — typically about 33% of your settlement before a lawsuit and up to 40% if it is litigated — so you pay $0 upfront and owe a fee only if you win.

Georgia's cost-of-living index is 91 (where the U.S. average is 100), so attorney prices here tend to run 9% below the U.S. average. Legal fees reflect local cost of living, office overhead, and market competition.

No. Georgia is an at-fault (tort) state, so the driver who caused the accident and their insurer are responsible for the damages.

Georgia is an equitable-distribution state, so marital property is divided fairly but not always equally, based on factors like income, custody, and each spouse's contributions.

Often, in part. Contingency percentages and flat fees for routine matters are fairly standardized, but the fee tier, payment schedule, and how case costs are handled are usually open to discussion — so it is worth comparing quotes from Georgia attorneys before you hire.

Georgia follows the American Rule: each side generally pays its own attorney fees regardless of who wins, unless a contract or a specific statute shifts those fees to the losing party.

Compare quotes, ask about flat-fee or limited-scope ("unbundled") representation, resolve disputes through mediation where possible, and keep your paperwork organized to cut billable hours. For estates, avoiding probate with a living trust can save substantially on legal costs.

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Fee figures are cost-of-living adjusted estimates for informational purposes only and are not legal advice or a quote. Consult a licensed Georgia attorney about your specific matter.