Who we help

If any of these sound like you, you're in the right place.

We focus narrowly on one situation: a Georgia family with a house in a loved one's name and no clear roadmap for what to do next. Underneath that, there are four flavors of family we hear from most.

Adult children who just lost a parent

The situation
Your mom or dad owned a home. You and your siblings are the heirs. You're also handling the funeral, the bills, the family group chat, and your own grief.
What you need
Someone to tell you what step one actually looks like — and what NOT to do in the next 30 days before you accidentally make things worse.
How we help
A 15-minute call to map your specific situation, a one-page written plan, and an introduction to a probate attorney in your parent's county.

Siblings co-inheriting a house

The situation
Two, three, or four of you all inherit the house together. Nobody's in charge. Everyone has a different idea of what should happen. Half of you live out of state.
What you need
A coordinator who can talk to all of you at once, lay out the legal options (probate, Year's Support, partition), and help you find a path that doesn't require unanimous agreement on every detail.
How we help
We can do the consultation as a group call. The written plan goes to all of you at the same time so nobody's relaying through the cousin who's 'handling it.'

Heirs with no will (intestate)

The situation
Your loved one died without a will. Now Georgia's intestate succession law decides who inherits and in what order. Spoiler: it's rarely as simple as 'the spouse gets everything' or 'the oldest kid takes over.'
What you need
A clear explanation of the Georgia intestate order for your specific family makeup, an explanation of Letters of Administration (the no-will equivalent of executor papers), and an attorney who handles intestate cases regularly.
How we help
See our no-will page for the longer breakdown. Then call us — intestate is what we see most often.

Out-of-state family inheriting Georgia property

The situation
You live in New York, Houston, Kingston, or LA. The house is in Atlanta. You've never set foot in Fulton County Probate Court and you don't want to start now.
What you need
A team in Georgia who can handle the Georgia side — court filings, attorney meetings, property visits, mortgage servicer calls — while you stay where you are.
How we help
Most of our work with out-of-state heirs happens by phone and email. We coordinate locally and report up to you. You travel to Atlanta only when the will reading or a hearing requires it — often, that's never.

Who we're not the right fit for.