Georgia General Warranty Deed
Fill in the details below to generate a Georgia general warranty deed, formatted to the state’s recording conventions. Preview is free and watermarked.
Georgia is awaiting final attorney review, so documents for this state are currently preview-only (watermarked). Recording-ready download unlocks once review completes.
No official statutory form was located for this document in Georgia (O.C.G.A. § 44-5-30 (see also §§ 44-5-62, 44-5-63)). This is a self-help template pending attorney review.
Official Code of Georgia Annotated (Justia mirror; official: legis.ga.gov)Fill in the form and your watermarked Georgia general warranty deed will appear here.
Preview is watermarked. Remove it when you download.
Frequently asked questions
Is a general warranty deed valid in Georgia?+
Georgia recognizes general warranty deeds that meet its statutory requirements; there is no single mandatory state form (O.C.G.A. § 44-5-30 (see also §§ 44-5-62, 44-5-63)). Any document that meets the requirements is valid.
What does Georgia require to record a general warranty deed?+
The deed must be signed and acknowledged before a notary public and signed by 1 witness, then recorded with the county recording office. Georgia also typically requires a separate filing (PT-61). Requirements vary by county - verify before recording.
Do I need a lawyer to use TheEasyForms?+
No. TheEasyForms provides self-help document templates and is not a law firm; using it does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you want legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
Can I preview a general warranty deed for free?+
Yes. Every document has a free, watermarked preview so you can review it before you pay to remove the watermark and download a recording-ready PDF.
TheEasyForms provides self-help document templates and is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is created by using this site or our API. We do not record or file documents on your behalf; recording requirements vary by county, and you record with your county yourself. If you need legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your state.