Georgia Surplus Funds Recovery

Georgia Surplus Funds Recovery
Software Built Around O.C.G.A. §48-4-5

Auto-tracks your 365-day GA O.C.G.A. §48-4-5 filing windows, generates state-required notarized claim petitions, and manages every Georgia case from county list to commission. Built for recovery professionals who can't afford missed deadlines.

No credit card required. 30-day free trial.

159
Georgia counties with active tax sale programs
365 days
GA O.C.G.A. §48-4-5 claim window after sale date
$400M+
Estimated Georgia surplus transferred annually to state unclaimed property
~7 hrs/wk
Saved per professional on GA deadline tracking

The Georgia law governing surplus funds recovery

Georgia O.C.G.A. §48-4-5 governs the distribution of excess proceeds from county tax sales. When a property sells at tax auction for more than the taxes, penalties, and costs owed, the surplus belongs to the former owner and any lienholders with a legal interest.

Georgia counties hold these funds and must provide notice where addresses are available. Former owners and lienholders have a 365-day window from the tax sale date to file a claim. After one year, unclaimed funds pass to the state under Georgia's unclaimed property statute.

Georgia O.C.G.A. § 48-4-5
Distribution of Excess Proceeds from Tax Sales
Excess proceeds from a tax sale are paid to the county superior court or designated officer. Interested parties — including former owners and lienholders — have one year from the date of the tax sale to file a claim. Unclaimed funds are subsequently transferred to the state's unclaimed property division.
365-day claim window from tax sale date
🔔 RecoverFlow auto-tracks every deadline
📧 7/3/1-day email alerts before expiry

Georgia claim documents — auto-generated by RecoverFlow

Georgia requires a court-filed petition process for most surplus claims, which means proper documentation is critical. RecoverFlow auto-populates required forms with case data.

Notarized Petition (Superior Court)
Filed with the county Superior Court. RecoverFlow pre-fills with claimant info, property address, sale date, and surplus amount.
Auto-generated
Certified Deed / Prior Ownership Records
Certified copy of deed or tax records establishing former ownership. RecoverFlow tracks whether this has been obtained.
Commission Agreement
Written agreement between the recovery professional and property owner. Must be executed before filing. Auto-generated by RecoverFlow.
Auto-generated
Owner Identity Verification
Government-issued ID for claimant. RecoverFlow tracks collection status and flags cases missing this document.
The Real Cost of Manual Tracking

What Georgia recovery professionals lose to spreadsheet chaos

Georgia has 159 counties — each running their own tax sale schedules, holding surplus funds independently, and processing claims at different speeds. Managing multi-county pipelines in a spreadsheet means constant date math and document juggling.

The Georgia surplus funds opportunity — quantified

$400M+
Estimated Georgia surplus funds transferred annually to the state's unclaimed property division — former owners' expired claims.
159
Georgia counties each running independent tax sale programs, requiring individual case tracking and county-specific filing procedures.
10–15%
Typical recovery commission in Georgia. On a $60,000 surplus, that's $6,000–$9,000. One saved deadline pays for RecoverFlow for years.

Your Georgia cases — deadlines at a glance

RecoverFlow's compliance tracker shows every Georgia case with color-coded deadline urgency. Red (≤30 days) cases surface automatically. You never calculate a date manually.

Compliance Tracker
GA 5 cases
PropertyCountySurplusSale DateDeadlineStatus
842 Peachtree St, Atlanta Fulton$52,400Apr 28, 2025 18 daysClaim Filed
3301 Cobb Pkwy, Marietta Cobb$38,700Jun 2, 2025 53 daysContacted
705 River Rd, Savannah Chatham$27,900Jul 17, 2025 79 daysLead
1188 Augusta Way, Augusta Richmond$44,200Sep 3, 2025 127 daysContract Signed
290 Columbus Dr, Columbus Muscogee$18,600Oct 11, 2025 165 daysLead

Stop losing Georgia deadlines in spreadsheets. Start now.

With 159 counties and hard 365-day deadlines under O.C.G.A. §48-4-5, Georgia recovery demands a purpose-built system. RecoverFlow auto-calculates every date, generates every document, and makes sure nothing expires silently.

No credit card required. Full access for 30 days.

Georgia surplus funds recovery — common questions

What is the deadline to claim Georgia surplus funds from a tax sale?
Under Georgia O.C.G.A. §48-4-5, former property owners have 365 days from the date of the tax sale to file a claim for surplus funds held by the county. After this window, unclaimed funds transfer to the state's unclaimed property division. RecoverFlow auto-calculates this deadline and sends alerts at 7, 3, and 1 days out.
Which Georgia statute governs surplus funds from tax sales?
Georgia O.C.G.A. §48-4-5 is the primary statute governing the distribution of excess proceeds from county tax sales. It establishes the one-year claim window, the court-filing process, and the transfer of unclaimed funds to the state.
What documents are required to claim Georgia tax sale surplus funds?
Georgia surplus claims typically require: (1) a notarized petition filed with the county Superior Court, (2) certified deed records proving former ownership, (3) government-issued ID, and (4) a signed commission agreement if represented by a recovery professional. RecoverFlow auto-generates the petition and commission agreement.
How long does Georgia surplus funds recovery take after filing?
After a complete claim is filed in Georgia, processing typically takes 60–120 days, depending on the county's court calendar and whether competing claimants exist. RecoverFlow tracks each case's stage and projected payout window.
Can a recovery specialist represent owners in Georgia surplus claims?
Yes. Georgia allows surplus recovery professionals to represent former owners under a written commission agreement executed before filing. RecoverFlow generates this agreement and tracks its execution status per case.