Real Estate
Our firm provides comprehensive legal support to buyers, sellers, landlords, tenants, and developers to ensure smooth and efficient real estate transactions across residential, commercial, and industrial properties.

Our Approach
Buying, selling, or leasing real estate involves numerous legal complexities that require careful attention to detail. Our firm provides comprehensive legal support to clients involved in residential, commercial, and industrial real estate transactions. We assist clients in negotiating and drafting purchase agreements, conducting due diligence, resolving title issues, facilitating property closings, and addressing zoning and land use matters. Whether you’re a buyer, seller, landlord, tenant, or developer, our experienced attorneys ensure that your real estate transactions proceed smoothly and efficiently.
We Help:
Did You Know?
Georgia
- 1Georgia requires a licensed attorney to handle real estate transactions.
- 2The Georgia Real Estate Commission regulates real estate professionals and oversees licensing requirements for real estate agents, brokers, and appraisers.
- 3Atlanta’s BeltLine project is a transformative urban redevelopment initiative that aims to create a network of parks, trails, and transit options along a former railway corridor, enhancing property values and quality of life in surrounding neighborhoods.
North Carolina
- 1North Carolina requires a licensed attorney and the real estate market in North Carolina's mountain region is highly sought after, offering a wide range of properties from rustic cabins and historic homes to modern retreats and upscale gated communities, all set against a backdrop of stunning natural beauty.
- 2The North Carolina Real Estate Commission is the state agency responsible for licensing and regulating real estate brokers, ensuring that all professionals meet rigorous standards of education and conduct to protect the public's interest.
- 3The Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains provide an unparalleled quality of life, with abundant outdoor recreation, including hiking, fishing, and skiing, and a vibrant culture found in mountain towns like Murphy, Andrews, Hayesville and Brasstown.
Tennessee
- 1Tennessee’s real estate market offers a diverse array of properties, from historic homes and downtown lofts to rural retreats and mountain cabins.
- 2The Tennessee Real Estate Commission regulates the licensing and conduct of real estate professionals, ensuring consumer protection and adherence to ethical standards.
- 3Tennessee’s Great Smoky Mountains National Park is a popular destination for outdoor enthusiasts and nature lovers, offering hiking trails, scenic drives, and abundant wildlife viewing opportunities.
About Arbor Legacy Lawyers P.C.
Hello, we are your neighborhood Personal Family Lawyers.
We know that your legacy is about more than wills and trusts, and it is about more than money. As your trusted advisors, we help you make the very best legal decisions for your family with the kind of guidance usually reserved for only very high net worth individuals.
Our life and legacy planning model covers not just what happens with your assets, but sets you up to pass on what matters most to you: Your values. Your priorities. Your relationships. Your life. Your legacy.

Schedule Your Free 15-Minute Consult
With our life and legacy planning model, we help you confidently make legal and financial decisions so you know you have a plan to keep everyone you love out of court and out of conflict after you pass. Schedule a complimentary consult to learn more.

Frequently Asked Questions About Estate Planning
Your Last Will is a legal document through which you distribute some of your assets upon death. Other assets will be distributed not based on your Last Will but on your beneficiary designations, depending on the situation. Over two-thirds of the U.S. adult population does not have a last will, and for those who do, most Last Wills do not fully cover their situation. Upon death, the only want to make a Last Will valid is to file it in the probate court, a public and normally lengthy process that delays your family access to what you have left behind.
In the world of estate planning, the best outcome for you, your family, and your loved ones will be achieved only by working with a lawyer who encounters estate planning situations daily. You have worked your whole life for what you have and the relationships you have created. Unfortunately, some families collapse after the death of a loved one because they either did no planning at all, or if they did, it was through an online platform that knew nothing about their family or circumstances and that ultimately failed them when their family needed help the most. We encourage a lifelong relationship between you and your estate planning attorney so that you have a lawyer for life to be there for your family when you cannot be.
This is the most often asked question in estate planning, and that is okay – we know the topic of cost is a sensitive one when it comes to choosing a professional to guide you, and we have designed our fees on a flat-fee basis only so that you know exactly what you are committing to – and there are no surprises. While we cannot quote fees online or over the phone, we invite you to check out our upcoming educational events where we teach you things about estate planning you do not even know to ask, plus we will cover during our next event our unique meeting process and fee schedule so that you know exactly how to take the next steps at the best time for you and your family.
Think of a Trust as a “Will substitute.” What we mean is that just as a Last Will distributes your assets upon death, a Revocable Living Trust does the same. The upside of a Trust over a Will is that a Trust need not be filed with the probate court to be effective, whereas a Last Will must be filed with the probate court to have any effect. As a result, a Trust remains a private document pertaining to your private affairs, whereas a Last Will becomes a public document after you pass away no matter how private you were during your lifetime. Of course, there are additional types of trusts as well that serve different purposes, and each family’s unique situation must be taken into account to design the right overall estate plan, which may include one or more Trusts.
No, of course not! After you are gone, your loved ones will miss you deeply – they will long for your words of counsel and concern, and hearing an old voicemail or reading a letter from you again would be a tremendous gift. This has nothing to do with money. Through our unique life and legacy planning process, you can give your loved ones the most precious gift of all – a lasting expression of your love. This is because we believe estate planning is not just about transferring your financial assets and personal belongings. It is equally about capturing and transferring your valuable intangible gifts: your values, insights, stories, and experiences. What could be more valuable? Estate planning is not only for those rich with money. Everyone we know already has an estate as valuable as anything in the world and that they should protect.
Your estate plan works no matter where in the U.S. you might physically be (such as on vacation) or might move to. This said, we always recommend finding your neighborhood Personal Family Lawyer to review your out-of-state plan to help you ensure you make any necessary updates based on differences in state law.
Avoid the Six Mistakes Most Families Make When Choosing An Estate Planning Attorney
Did you know that many families fly in the dark when it comes to securing their legacy for their loved ones? You can avoid these mistakes today by discovering exactly what to consider when hiring the best estate planning attorney for your family.

