What Are Grandparent Visitation Rights in Georgia?

Parents have the legal right to make decisions about the care and well-being of their children. When a marriage is ended by divorce, or if the parents were never married, custody and visitation of minor children often become a dispute between the parents. Sadly, co-parenting disputes can result in a child's grandparents not being able to see their grandchild. In other families, parents may decide jointly that they do not want their children to have contact with their grandparents.

When a child's biological grandparents are not permitted to visit their grandchild, they may decide to ask a court for legal grandparent visitation rights. In the state of Georgia, grandparent visitation rights can be legally protected in many instances. Visitation is when a court grants someone the right to regular visits with a minor child.

Grandparent Visitation Rights in Georgia

Georgia, like all states, has addressed grandparent visitation rights in state law, but the laws vary considerably from state to state. In Georgia, grandparents do not automatically get visitation rights but they do have an avenue to legally request visitation with their grandchild. They are allowed to request this if:

  1. The child’s parents have divorced or separated, and the child is not living with both parents (Georgia grandparents cannot file for visitation of children who live with both parents); OR
  2. The child’s parent is incapacitated, incarcerated, or deceased.

Since 2012, Georgia has had legislation friendly to grandparents who want legally granted visitation with grandchildren, and provides for decisions to be made "in the best interest of the child."

The Georgia Grandparents Visitation Statute encourages a relationship between grandparents and grandchildren, provided it is in the best interest of the child:

“It is the express policy of this state to encourage that a child has continuing contact with parents and grandparents who have shown the ability to act in the best interest of the child and to encourage parents to share in the rights and responsibilities of raising their child after such parents have separated or dissolved their marriage or relationship.”

Grandparents can sue for visitation rights in Georgia in two ways: