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Carroll County, GA
  1. US
  2. Georgia
  3. Carroll County
Carrollton, GA
  1. Carroll County, GA Law
  2. Child Custody

Carroll County, GA Child Custody Guide

Quick Links

  • What Georgia Residents Need To Know About How to Get Custody of a Child
  • How Georgia Courts make Child Custody Decisions
  • How Does Child Custody Work in Georgia?
  • Who Claims a Child on Taxes After a Custody Case?
  • Can You Change Child Support Payment Amounts By Moving to a Different State?
  • How to Enforce a Child Custody Order in Georgia
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Carroll County Family Court

Learn about the child custody resources available to you at the Carroll County Family Court.

Georgia Child Custody Guide
- Georgia's Child Custody Basics - (Basics)
  • What Georgia Residents Need To Know About How to Get Custody of a Child
  • How Georgia Courts make Child Custody Decisions
- Child Custody FAQ - (FAQ)
  • How Does Child Custody Work in Georgia?
  • Can You Change Child Support Payment Amounts By Moving to a Different State?
  • What Is Physical vs. Legal Custody of a Child?
  • What is Joint vs. Sole Custody of a Child?
  • What Is Split Custody?
- Child Support Enforcement - (Enforcement)
  • How to Enforce a Child Custody Order in Georgia
- Taxes - (Taxes)
  • Who Claims a Child on Taxes After a Custody Case?
- Working With a Lawyer - (Lawyers)
  • How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer in Georgia

What Georgia Residents Need To Know About How to Get Custody of a Child

Welcome to the fastest and easiest way to find out about child custody law in Georgia.

How to approach your child custody question depends on your personal circumstances. Most people find themselves wrestling with issues of parental responsibility at the time of a divorce from the child’s other parent. But child custody concerns arise in many other circumstances as well—for example, if a child’s parents never married or if a grandparent or other family member has concerns about a child’s wellbeing.

Here, you'll find clear and accurate information about how to get custody of a child, including:

  • How child custody works in Georgia
  • How to find and use the Carroll County family law court
  • How judges make custody decisions
  • How to find a good child custody lawyer
  • How to get help creating a parenting plan
  • How to enforce a child custody or visitation order in Georgia

To start, here are some important things keep in mind if you find yourself facing a possible child custody fight:  more...  


Child Custody FAQ

  • Get Help Finding a Georgia Child Custody Lawyer
  • What Is Physical vs. Legal Custody of a Child?
  • What is Joint vs. Sole Custody of a Child?
  • What Is Split Custody?
  • About This Website
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How Georgia Courts make Child Custody Decisions

Resources and Takeaways: To study the specific factors used by Georgia family law judges, read Georgia Code Section 19-9-3. If you’re working with a lawyer, mediator, or both, ask them for help understanding how Georgia law applies to your specific circumstances. And be sure to take advantage of any self-help resources available from the Georgia family law court for Carroll County.

more...  

How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer in Georgia

There are many legal matters you can handle on your own, but a child custody fight is probably not one of them. First, the stakes are high for all involved—especially for the children. Second, Georgia child custody laws and procedures are complex and it’s tough to handle complexity under stress. Mistakes may lead to confusing, expensive, and unhappy outcomes.

We don’t say these things to scare you. Our intention is to underscore reality and to encourage you to ask for help. Even if you can’t afford to hire a lawyer outright, you may be able to find free or low-cost legal assistance. At the very least, you can take advantage of the increasing number of custody self-help resources offered by local courts.

more...  
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How Does Child Custody Work in Georgia?

If you’re confused about the different types of child custody and how they work, you’re not alone. Here, we’ll demystify some of the basic terms and concepts you need to know when you’re trying to create a good parenting plan, focusing on what it means to share custody of your kids.

To start, let’s look at the two basic legal elements of child custody: physical custody and legal custody.

Physical Custody

Physical custody is all about where your children live. You and your children’s other parent may share physical custody or just one of you may get physical custody. The legal term for sharing is joint physical custody. If the kids live with just one parent, that’s called sole physical custody.

more...  

How to Enforce a Child Custody Order in Georgia

Your options for enforcing a child custody agreement depend on whether a court approved your plan. If a judge issued or approved your custody agreement, it has the strength of a court order. That means the agreement is legally binding on both parents and violations will be easier to prove, correct, and sometimes even punish.

Enforcement If You Don’t Have a Court Order

Without a court order, police or the courts can enforce your custody agreement only if you believe your child is in immediate danger. If that is ever the case, don’t wait to call the local police or the child abduction unit at the county district attorney’s office.

more...  

Who Claims a Child on Taxes After a Custody Case?

When parents divorce or separate, the law allows only one of them to claim their child as a tax dependent. By default, the IRS gives this right to the custodial parent—that is, the parent with whom the child lives for more than half of the year. But there are ways to change the default rule and give child-related tax benefits to the non-custodial parent.

In this article, you'll learn:

  • How Recent Changes to Federal Tax Law Affect Divorced or Separated Parents
  • Which Parent Gets the Child Tax Credit After a Divorce
  • When a Non-Custodial Parent Can Claim the Child Tax Credit
  • Who Claims a Child on Taxes When Parents Have Joint Custody
  • How the Child Tax Credit Works

more...  

Get Georgia Parenting Plan Help

Here are five places you can turn to get help creating a child custody and visitation agreement in Georgia.

Your lawyer or a legal aid representative. This one’s obvious, but if you have a lawyer (whether paid or volunteer) that should be the first person you turn to for guidance on creating your parenting agreement. If you need help finding legal assistance, see How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer in Georgia.

Mediation. A skilled child custody mediator can help with everything from living arrangements and visitation schedules to decision-making responsibilities and financial agreements. A mediator’s job is to help you explore all the options and settle on the solutions that work best for all involved, especially the kids. Here are several ways to find a qualified mediator:

more...  

Can You Change Child Support Payment Amounts By Moving to a Different State?

A 2019 study showed that child support payment amounts vary dramatically from state to state. A parent in one state may pay or receive up to three times as much as a parent in an identical situation who lives in another state—and the differences don’t depend on cost of living.

Given this, a parent might reasonably wonder whether it would be possible to get a lot more child support—or pay a lot less—by moving to the state next door. For better or worse, it’s not that easy.

more...  

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Child Custody FAQ

Get Help Finding a Georgia Child Custody Lawyer

If you want to find a good child custody lawyer, consider starting with these sources:

  • Family and friends. Ask people you know and trust whether they have hired a family lawyer in the past -- or if they know someone else who has. If you hear a name once, that could be a starting point. If you hear the same name many times, put that person on your list of lawyers to call.
  • Other lawyers. If you know and respect a lawyer who works in another of the law -- for example a business or estate planning lawyer -- ask if they know a good family law attorney (or whether they’re willing to ask around on your behalf).
  • Counselors or therapists. If you’re seeing a counselor or therapist -- especially a marriage counselor -- ask for lawyer recommendations.
  • Professional associations. If you don't get any good personal referrals, turn to professional associations for family lawyers. Many good family lawyers belong to the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML). You can also contact the State Bar of Georgia for family lawyer referrals.

More Information for Georgia Residents

To learn more, including:

  • how to find free or low-cost legal assistance, and
  • interview questions to ask a professional before you turn over your case

see How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer in Georgia.

Child Custody FAQ

What Is Physical vs. Legal Custody of a Child?

Every child custody decision has two essential parts:

Physical custody determines where the children will live.

Legal custody refers to the right to make other important decisions for the children—for example, religious upbringing, medical care, and choices about education.

For more details about the different types of child custody and how they fit together, see How Does Child Custody Work in Georgia?

Child Custody FAQ

What is Joint vs. Sole Custody of a Child?

While the terms physical custody and legal custody refer to types of decisions affecting your children, “joint custody” and “sole custody” refer to who makes those choices on behalf of the kids.

Joint custody refers to a situation where both parents make decisions.

Sole custody means that just one parent has control.

Note that these two types of custody can be blended, and that joint custody doesn’t necessarily mean a 50/50 split.

For example, parents could be granted joint legal custody—giving them both a say in important decisions about their child’s education, religious training, medical treatment, and the like—while one parent gets sole physical custody, meaning that the child will live with him or her and most likely visit the other.

For more details about the different types of child custody and how they fit together, see How Does Child Custody Work in Georgia?

Child Custody FAQ

What Is Split Custody?

Split custody means that each parent takes primary custody of different kids—think of the film “The Parent Trap,” where the parents separate the twin sisters as babies, raising one in California and one in Boston. Such arrangements are unlikely to lead to Hollywood endings and are usually disfavored, but there are rare situations in which split custody may make sense. For example, if the siblings aren’t close or if a particular child-parent relationship is unusually strained, an unconventional arrangement might be appropriate.

Before you ask for split custody, it’s wise to consult a counselor or custody evaluator—a therapist that specializes in softening the blow of divorce on children by evaluating the family situation and making recommendations. Your lawyer or your local court should be able to help you find a qualified custody evaluator in your area.

Child Custody FAQ

About This Website

Here at Legal Consumer, we've been busy building websites to get people the legal answers and information they need. Our goal is to guide you to reliable, local information about your options.

We'll be adding new topics over time, but you can currently use our websites to find comprehensive information on:

  • Child Custody (this website)
  • Bankruptcy
  • Unemployment Law
  • Minimum Wage & Overtime Law
  • Student Loans
  • Obamacare (Health Insurance)
  • Medicare Advantage
  • Living Wills and POAs
  • Inheritance Law
  • Your Legal Rights

On this website, when you choose your state or enter your zip code, you will quickly learn:

  • how child custody works in your state
  • how to find and use your local family law court
  • how judges make custody decisions
  • how to find a good child custody lawyer
  • how to get help creating parenting plan
  • how to enfoce a child custody or visitation order in your state
  • and more.

We know that it's stressful to face difficult issues involving your family and we want to make it as easy as possible for you to find the answers you need.

Who We Are

Legal Consumer

Legal Consumer is a company that believes you should have access to quality information about the legal issues affecting your life. Whether you’re facing financial difficulties, family challenges, health concerns, or trouble at your job, we want to help you get the resources you need. Our websites are written by lawyers and designed to give you accurate, relevant information for your location.

Albin Renauer, Owner and Founder

Albin Renauer is an independent web and database developer and Webby Award judge. He first created LegalConsumer.com as an online companion to his book, How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, to help people file for bankruptcy.

After receiving his J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School in 1985, Albin worked for various public-interest law firms in the Bay Area and as a staff attorney for Chief Justice Rose Bird of the California Supreme Court.  He spent 17 years as an editor at leading do-it-yourself legal publisher Nolo, where he helped create numerous books and software programs, including the bestselling Quicken WillMaker. He also edited Law on the Net, the first online directory of legal resources, and was the architect of Nolo's Webby Award winning website.

Shae Irving, Writer and Editor

Shae Irving has been a legal editor and writer since 1994, when she joined the editorial staff at Nolo, specializing in estate planning, health care, and family law issues. For almost a decade, she was the managing editor of Nolo’s bestselling Quicken WillMaker software. Her books include Living Wills and Powers of Attorney for California and Prenuptial Agreements: How to Write a Fair and Lasting Contract. Shae graduated from Berkeley Law and briefly practiced at a large San Francisco law firm before becoming an editor and author. She began working with Legal Consumer in 2013.

Carroll County, GA: Child Custody By ZipCode
LOCAL CHILD CUSTODY INFO
  • Georgia Child Custody Home Page
  • What Georgia Residents Need to Know About Child Custody
  • How Courts Make Child Custody Decisions in Georgia?
  • How Child Custody Works in Georgia?
  • Find Your County Family Law Court
CHILD CUSTODY BASICS
  • Georgia Child Custody Home Page
  • What Georgia Residents Need to Know About Child Custody
  • How Courts Make Child Custody Decisions in Georgia?
  • How Child Custody Works
  • What is Physical v. Legal Custody of a Child?
  • What is Sole v. Joint Custody of a Child?
  • What is Split Custody?
ENFORCING CHILD CUSTODY OR VISITATION
  • How to Enforce a Child Custody or Visitation Order in
  • Will Georgia Police Enforce a Child Custody Order?
  • How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer
  • Find Your County Family Law Court
GET HELP WITH A CHILD CUSTODY CASE
  • What Georgia Residents Need to Know About Child Custody
  • How to Find a Child Custody Lawyer in Georgia
  • Resources for Making a Parenting Plan or Agreement in Georgia
About
  • About Child Custody Site

Change Location

Current Location: Carrollton, Georgia, Carroll County

Carroll County Cities >

City Legal Guides for Carroll County

  1. Carrollton - 55,393
  2. Villa Rica - 20,222
  3. Temple - 11,728
  4. Bowdon - 9,009
  1. Mount Zion - 6,310
  2. Whitesburg - 3,974
  3. Roopville - 3,891
  4. Ephesus - 427

Georgia Counties >

Counties in Georgia

  1. Appling County - 18,236 (Baxley)
  2. Atkinson County - 8,375 (Pearson)
  3. Bacon County - 11,096 (Alma)
  4. Baker County - 3,451 (Newton)
  5. Baldwin County - 45,720 (Milledgeville)
  6. Banks County - 18,395 (Homer)
  7. Barrow County - 69,367 (Winder)
  8. Bartow County - 100,157 (Cartersville)
  9. Ben Hill County - 17,634 (Fitzgerald)
  10. Berrien County - 19,286 (Nashville)
  11. Bibb County - 155,547 (Macon)
  12. Bleckley County - 13,063 (Cochran)
  13. Brantley County - 18,411 (Nahunta)
  14. Brooks County - 16,243 (Quitman)
  15. Bryan County - 30,233 (Pembroke)
  16. Bulloch County - 70,217 (Statesboro)
  17. Burke County - 23,316 (Waynesboro)
  18. Butts County - 23,655 (Jackson)
  19. Calhoun County - 6,694 (Morgan)
  20. Camden County - 50,513 (Woodbine)
  21. Candler County - 10,998 (Metter)
  22. Carroll County - 110,527 (Carrollton)
  23. Catoosa County - 63,942 (Ringgold)
  24. Charlton County - 12,171 (Folkston)
  25. Chatham County - 265,128 (Savannah)
  26. Chattahoochee County - 11,267 (Cusseta)
  27. Chattooga County - 26,015 (Summerville)
  28. Cherokee County - 214,346 (Canton)
  29. Clarke County - 116,714 (Athens)
  30. Clay County - 3,183 (Fort Gaines)
  31. Clayton County - 259,424 (Jonesboro)
  32. Clinch County - 6,798 (Homerville)
  33. Cobb County - 688,078 (Marietta)
  34. Coffee County - 42,356 (Douglas)
  35. Colquitt County - 45,498 (Moultrie)
  36. Columbia County - 124,053 (Appling)
  37. Cook County - 17,212 (Adel)
  38. Coweta County - 127,317 (Newnan)
  39. Crawford County - 12,630 (Knoxville)
  40. Crisp County - 23,439 (Cordele)
  41. Dade County - 16,633 (Trenton)
  42. Dawson County - 22,330 (Dawsonville)
  43. Decatur County - 27,842 (Bainbridge)
  44. DeKalb County - 691,893 (Decatur)
  45. Dodge County - 21,796 (Eastman)
  46. Dooly County - 14,918 (Vienna)
  47. Dougherty County - 94,565 (Albany)
  48. Douglas County - 132,403 (Douglasville)
  49. Early County - 11,008 (Blakely)
  50. Echols County - 4,034 (Statenville)
  51. Effingham County - 52,250 (Springfield)
  52. Elbert County - 20,166 (Elberton)
  53. Emanuel County - 22,598 (Swainsboro)
  54. Evans County - 11,000 (Claxton)
  55. Fannin County - 23,682 (Blue Ridge)
  56. Fayette County - 106,567 (Fayetteville)
  57. Floyd County - 96,317 (Rome)
  58. Forsyth County - 175,511 (Cumming)
  59. Franklin County - 22,084 (Carnesville)
  60. Fulton County - 920,581 (Atlanta)
  61. Gilmer County - 28,292 (Ellijay)
  62. Glascock County - 3,082 (Gibson)
  63. Glynn County - 79,626 (Brunswick)
  64. Gordon County - 55,186 (Calhoun)
  65. Grady County - 25,011 (Cairo)
  66. Greene County - 15,994 (Greensboro)
  67. Gwinnett County - 805,321 (Lawrenceville)
  68. Habersham County - 43,041 (Clarkesville)
  69. Hall County - 179,684 (Gainesville)
  70. Hancock County - 9,429 (Sparta)
  71. Haralson County - 28,780 (Buchanan)
  72. Harris County - 32,024 (Hamilton)
  73. Hart County - 25,213 (Hartwell)
  74. Heard County - 11,834 (Franklin)
  75. Henry County - 203,922 (McDonough)
  76. Houston County - 139,900 (Perry)
  77. Irwin County - 9,538 (Ocilla)
  78. Jackson County - 60,485 (Jefferson)
  79. Jasper County - 13,900 (Monticello)
  80. Jeff Davis County - 15,068 (Hazlehurst)
  1. Jefferson County - 16,930 (Louisville)
  2. Jenkins County - 8,340 (Millen)
  3. Johnson County - 9,980 (Wrightsville)
  4. Jones County - 28,669 (Gray)
  5. Lamar County - 18,317 (Barnesville)
  6. Lanier County - 10,078 (Lakeland)
  7. Laurens County - 48,434 (Dublin)
  8. Lee County - 28,298 (Leesburg)
  9. Liberty County - 63,453 (Hinesville)
  10. Lincoln County - 7,996 (Lincolnton)
  11. Long County - 14,464 (Ludowici)
  12. Lowndes County - 109,233 (Valdosta)
  13. Lumpkin County - 29,966 (Dahlonega)
  14. McDuffie County - 21,875 (Thomson)
  15. McIntosh County - 14,333 (Darien)
  16. Macon County - 14,740 (Oglethorpe)
  17. Madison County - 28,120 (Danielsville)
  18. Marion County - 8,742 (Buena Vista)
  19. Meriwether County - 21,992 (Greenville)
  20. Miller County - 6,125 (Colquitt)
  21. Mitchell County - 23,498 (Camilla)
  22. Monroe County - 26,424 (Forsyth)
  23. Montgomery County - 9,123 (Mount Vernon)
  24. Morgan County - 17,868 (Madison)
  25. Murray County - 39,628 (Chatsworth)
  26. Muscogee County - 189,885 (Columbus)
  27. Newton County - 99,958 (Covington)
  28. Oconee County - 32,808 (Watkinsville)
  29. Oglethorpe County - 14,899 (Lexington)
  30. Paulding County - 142,324 (Dallas)
  31. Peach County - 27,695 (Fort Valley)
  32. Pickens County - 29,431 (Jasper)
  33. Pierce County - 18,758 (Blackshear)
  34. Pike County - 17,869 (Zebulon)
  35. Polk County - 41,475 (Cedartown)
  36. Pulaski County - 12,010 (Hawkinsville)
  37. Putnam County - 21,218 (Eatonton)
  38. Quitman County - 2,513 (Georgetown)
  39. Rabun County - 16,276 (Clayton)
  40. Randolph County - 7,719 (Cuthbert)
  41. Richmond County - 200,549 (Augusta)
  42. Rockdale County - 85,215 (Conyers)
  43. Schley County - 5,010 (Ellaville)
  44. Screven County - 14,593 (Sylvania)
  45. Seminole County - 8,729 (Donalsonville)
  46. Spalding County - 64,073 (Griffin)
  47. Stephens County - 26,175 (Toccoa)
  48. Stewart County - 6,058 (Lumpkin)
  49. Sumter County - 32,819 (Americus)
  50. Talbot County - 6,865 (Talbotton)
  51. Taliaferro County - 1,717 (Crawfordville)
  52. Tattnall County - 25,520 (Reidsville)
  53. Taylor County - 8,906 (Butler)
  54. Telfair County - 16,500 (McRae)
  55. Terrell County - 9,315 (Dawson)
  56. Thomas County - 44,720 (Thomasville)
  57. Tift County - 40,118 (Tifton)
  58. Toombs County - 27,223 (Lyons)
  59. Towns County - 10,471 (Hiawassee)
  60. Treutlen County - 6,885 (Soperton)
  61. Troup County - 67,044 (Lagrange)
  62. Turner County - 8,930 (Ashburn)
  63. Twiggs County - 9,023 (Jeffersonville)
  64. Union County - 21,356 (Blairsville)
  65. Upson County - 27,153 (Thomaston)
  66. Walker County - 68,756 (Lafayette)
  67. Walton County - 83,768 (Monroe)
  68. Ware County - 36,312 (Waycross)
  69. Warren County - 5,834 (Warrenton)
  70. Washington County - 21,187 (Sandersville)
  71. Wayne County - 30,099 (Jesup)
  72. Webster County - 2,799 (Preston)
  73. Wheeler County - 7,421 (Alamo)
  74. White County - 27,144 (Cleveland)
  75. Whitfield County - 102,599 (Dalton)
  76. Wilcox County - 9,255 (Abbeville)
  77. Wilkes County - 10,593 (Washington)
  78. Wilkinson County - 9,563 (Irwinton)
  79. Worth County - 21,679 (Sylvester)
Dade County Walker County Catoosa County Rabun County Whitfield County Murray County Fannin County Towns County Union County Gilmer County Habersham County White County Lumpkin County Stephens County Gordon County Dawson County Chattooga County Floyd County Pickens County Franklin County Hall County Hart County Banks County Bartow County Cherokee County Forsyth County Jackson County Elbert County Madison County Fulton County Gwinnett County Barrow County Polk County Paulding County Cobb County Oglethorpe County Clarke County Wilkes County Lincoln County DeKalb County Oconee County Walton County Haralson County Carroll County Morgan County Douglas County Rockdale County Greene County Newton County Taliaferro County Columbia County McDuffie County Clayton County Henry County Warren County Fayette County Richmond County Jasper County Coweta County Putnam County Hancock County Butts County Heard County Spalding County Glascock County Jefferson County Burke County Meriwether County Washington County Troup County Pike County Lamar County Monroe County Baldwin County Jones County Screven County Wilkinson County Upson County Jenkins County Bibb County Twiggs County Talbot County Harris County Crawford County Emanuel County Johnson County Taylor County Laurens County Peach County Houston County Bulloch County Muscogee County Effingham County Bleckley County Marion County Candler County Chattahoochee County Macon County Macon County Taylor County Treutlen County Dodge County Schley County Schley County Schley County Taylor County Pulaski County Toombs County Montgomery County Tattnall County Wheeler County Dooly County Evans County Bryan County Chatham County Stewart County Webster County Sumter County Telfair County Wilcox County Liberty County Crisp County Long County Quitman County Terrell County Terrell County Terrell County Jeff Davis County Appling County Randolph County Lee County Turner County Ben Hill County Worth County Wayne County Coffee County Clay County Irwin County Bacon County McIntosh County Lee County Dougherty County Calhoun County Tift County Pierce County Early County Berrien County Ware County Glynn County Baker County Mitchell County Atkinson County Brantley County Cook County Colquitt County Miller County Clinch County Lanier County Camden County Seminole County Decatur County Grady County Thomas County Charlton County Brooks County Lowndes County Echols County Echols County

Largest Georgia Cities >

Largest Georgia Cities

  1. Atlanta - 531,648
  2. Lawrenceville - 215,169
  3. Augusta-Richmond County - 195,182
  4. Columbus - 189,885
  5. Savannah - 151,833
  6. Augusta - 134,777
  7. Lilburn - 132,114
  8. Marietta - 116,739
  9. Warner Robins - 110,876
  10. Athens-Clarke County - 100,266
  11. Newnan - 99,028
  12. Lithonia - 97,282
  13. McDonough - 94,921
  14. Sandy Springs - 93,853
  15. Woodstock - 92,804
  16. Macon - 91,351
  17. Gainesville - 88,853
  18. Roswell - 88,346
  19. Evans - 86,553
  20. Athens - 86,464
  21. Cumming - 85,749
  22. Jonesboro - 82,590
  23. Albany - 77,434
  24. Norcross - 77,160
  25. Johns Creek - 76,728
  26. Rome - 76,489
  27. Riverdale - 75,759
  28. Dalton - 74,005
  29. Valdosta - 70,162
  30. Tucker - 60,902
  31. Stockbridge - 58,796
  32. Alpharetta - 57,551
  33. Smyrna - 56,941
  34. Mableton - 55,614
  35. Carrollton - 55,393
  36. Hinesville - 52,662
  37. Hiram - 52,219
  38. Holly Springs - 51,788
  39. Conyers - 51,532
  40. Cartersville - 51,048
  41. Statesboro - 47,688
  42. LaGrange - 47,489
  43. Dunwoody - 46,267
  44. Fayetteville - 41,611
  45. North Atlanta - 40,456
  46. Ellenwood - 39,865
  47. Stone Mountain - 39,850
  48. Dallas - 38,018
  49. Powder Springs - 37,454
  50. Griffin - 36,944
  1. Flowery Branch - 36,352
  2. Martinez - 35,795
  3. Calhoun - 35,788
  4. Canton - 35,700
  5. Peachtree City - 34,364
  6. East Point - 33,940
  7. Brunswick - 33,555
  8. Milledgeville - 33,284
  9. Redan - 33,015
  10. Vinings - 32,670
  11. Milton - 32,661
  12. Austell - 31,994
  13. Thomasville - 31,793
  14. Rincon - 31,639
  15. Douglasville - 30,961
  16. Saint Marys - 29,986
  17. Kennesaw - 29,783
  18. Loganville - 28,797
  19. Locust Grove - 28,493
  20. ZEBULON BRANCH - 27,939
  21. Moultrie - 27,838
  22. Abraham Baldwin College - 27,153
  23. Duluth - 26,600
  24. Dublin - 26,252
  25. Waycross - 26,202
  26. Americus - 25,896
  27. Cornelia - 25,565
  28. Ringgold - 25,158
  29. Perry - 25,004
  30. Douglas - 24,824
  31. Cedartown - 24,695
  32. Winder - 24,572
  33. Tifton - 24,114
  34. Jefferson - 23,033
  35. Jesup - 22,247
  36. Cordele - 21,800
  37. Hampton - 21,712
  38. Everett - 21,321
  39. Lizella - 20,718
  40. Hephzibah - 20,618
  41. Monroe - 20,531
  42. Richmond Hill - 20,495
  43. Acworth - 20,425
  44. Villa Rica - 20,222
  45. Watkinsville - 20,131
  46. Leesburg - 20,018
  47. Chatsworth - 19,527
  48. Union City - 19,456
  49. Decatur - 19,335
  50. Thomaston - 19,225

100 Largest US Cities >

100 Largest US Cities

  1. New York, NY - 8,175,133
  2. Los Angeles, CA - 3,792,621
  3. Houston, TX - 3,075,388
  4. Phoenix, AZ - 2,972,357
  5. Chicago, IL - 2,695,598
  6. Brooklyn, NY - 2,504,700
  7. San Diego, CA - 2,259,481
  8. San Jose, CA - 1,661,105
  9. Manhattan, NY - 1,585,873
  10. Philadelphia, PA - 1,526,006
  11. Bronx, NY - 1,385,108
  12. San Antonio, TX - 1,327,407
  13. Dallas, TX - 1,197,816
  14. Sacramento, CA - 1,072,790
  15. Seattle, WA - 965,769
  16. Salt Lake City, UT - 932,320
  17. Miami, FL - 908,839
  18. Jacksonville, FL - 821,784
  19. Indianapolis, IN - 820,445
  20. San Bernardino, CA - 807,147
  21. San Francisco, CA - 805,235
  22. Fort Worth, TX - 791,745
  23. Austin, TX - 790,390
  24. Columbus, OH - 787,033
  25. Hempstead, NY - 759,757
  26. Charlotte, NC - 731,424
  27. Detroit, MI - 713,777
  28. Fresno, CA - 664,000
  29. El Paso, TX - 649,121
  30. Memphis, TN - 646,889
  31. Albuquerque, NM - 633,223
  32. Tampa, FL - 625,570
  33. Egypt Lake-Leto, FL - 625,570
  34. Baltimore, MD - 620,961
  35. Boston, MA - 617,594
  36. Ontario, CA - 615,598
  37. Washington, DC - 601,723
  38. Nashville, TN - 601,222
  39. Denver, CO - 600,158
  40. Milwaukee, WI - 594,833
  41. Portland, OR - 583,776
  42. Las Vegas, NV - 583,756
  43. Oklahoma City, OK - 579,999
  44. Tulsa, OK - 569,469
  45. Nashville-Davidson, TN - 545,524
  46. Orlando, FL - 539,261
  47. Atlanta, GA - 531,648
  48. Tucson, AZ - 520,116
  49. Arlington, TX - 491,713
  50. Brookhaven, NY - 486,040
  1. Staten Island, NY - 468,730
  2. Long Beach, CA - 462,257
  3. Kansas City, MO - 459,787
  4. Riverside, CA - 456,130
  5. Birmingham, AL - 455,278
  6. Mesa, AZ - 439,041
  7. Virginia Beach, VA - 437,994
  8. Tacoma, WA - 427,051
  9. Colorado Springs, CO - 416,427
  10. Oakland, CA - 411,480
  11. Omaha, NE - 408,958
  12. Raleigh, NC - 403,892
  13. Cleveland, OH - 396,815
  14. Bakersfield, CA - 393,778
  15. Honolulu, HI - 390,738
  16. Chandler, AZ - 388,838
  17. Minneapolis, MN - 382,578
  18. Wichita, KS - 382,368
  19. Inglewood, CA - 369,694
  20. Hayward, CA - 366,577
  21. Spokane, WA - 353,581
  22. New Orleans, LA - 343,829
  23. Stockton, CA - 343,203
  24. Compton, CA - 342,576
  25. Hialeah, FL - 342,086
  26. Country Club, FL - 342,086
  27. Anaheim, CA - 336,265
  28. Fremont, CA - 325,166
  29. Aurora, CO - 325,078
  30. Santa Ana, CA - 324,528
  31. Clearwater, FL - 319,594
  32. Saint Louis, MO - 319,294
  33. Whittier, CA - 316,911
  34. Modesto, CA - 312,842
  35. Pittsburgh, PA - 305,704
  36. Corpus Christi, TX - 305,215
  37. Cincinnati, OH - 296,943
  38. Oyster Bay, NY - 293,214
  39. Anchorage, AK - 291,826
  40. Toledo, OH - 287,208
  41. Saint Paul, MN - 285,068
  42. Murrieta, CA - 282,939
  43. Fort Lauderdale, FL - 282,219
  44. Newark, NJ - 277,140
  45. Greensboro, NC - 269,666
  46. Pasadena, CA - 268,040
  47. Greenville, SC - 263,637
  48. Plantation, FL - 261,673
  49. Buffalo, NY - 261,310
  50. Lexington, KY - 260,512

50 States >

50 State Child Custody Info

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Carroll County, GA: Law

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