Mutual Wills Package of Last Wills and Testaments for Unmarried Persons living together with Adult Children - Georgia 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name in Field [1] and your county of residence in Field [3].
  3. In Article One, specify the name of the person you reside with in Field [4] and list your adult children's names and birth dates in Fields [5]-[10]. You can delete unused fields if necessary.
  4. For Article Three, detail any specific property bequests. Fill out the names, addresses, relationships, and descriptions of property for each beneficiary in Fields [11]-[28].
  5. In Article Four, indicate who will receive your homestead by filling out Field [29] or selecting your children in Field [30].
  6. Complete Articles Five and Six similarly for remaining property designations.
  7. Designate a Personal Representative in Article Seven by filling out Fields [34] and [35].
  8. Review all entries carefully before printing. Ensure you sign the document in front of two witnesses.

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A will should never be docHubd if the testator is asking the Notary questions about how to proceed. The customer should be following authoritative legal instructions and a certificate or certificates must be provided for the Notary to complete.
No, in Georgia, you dont need to docHub your will to make it legal. However, Georgia allows you to make your will self-proving, and youll need to go to a notary if you want to do that. A self-proving will speeds up probate because the court can accept the will without contacting the witnesses who signed it.
Many people hesitate to create a last will due to concerns about the expenses, but the exact price depends on which method you choose. You can technically write your own will for free, use an estate planning service for $10 to $250, or pay an attorney between $300 and $1,000 or more.
A joint will represents the wishes of two peoplegenerally but not necessarily marriedin a single instrument. Both testators must sign it. In some states, a joint will cannot be revoked after one of the testators dies, but this is not the case in Georgia unless the testators make a separate contract to that effect.
If the common intention is expressed in one instrument, the will may be called a joint will, and if the testators have executed two separate instrument to manifest their common intention, the will may be called a mutual will.
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