About Alex M. Brown Law, LLC — Divorce Augusta Georgia
Divorce Augusta families face is approached with deep local knowledge and a 14-year track record at Alex M. Brown Law, LLC. Attorney Alex Brown is the founder and president of the Family Law Bar Association in Georgia — a credential that reflects his standing among peers as much as with clients. His family has lived in the Augusta area for over 150 years, giving him roots in Columbia, Richmond, and Burke Counties that influence how he understands local court culture and judicial expectations. The firm handles divorce, custody battles, high-asset divorce, military divorce, legitimation, and mediation for Augusta-area families, serving clients at a second office in Evans, Georgia. Residents throughout the area can find additional attorneys in the Augusta legal directory. Whether the case is a straightforward uncontested matter or a prolonged high-conflict custody dispute, Alex Brown builds his strategy around the client’s actual goals — not just courtroom positioning.
Mr. Brown’s courtroom presence and preparation consistently draw comment in client reviews. He is recognized by judges and the Georgia State Bar for his diligence and client-focused approach. His experience with military divorces — relevant in a metro anchored by Fort Eisenhower (formerly Fort Gordon) — adds a dimension of specialized knowledge that Augusta-area clients with service-member spouses will find valuable.
What Clients Say
Reviewers describe Alex Brown as genuinely invested in outcomes, not just billable hours. Clients praise his responsiveness, his clarity in explaining legal strategy, and his ability to find creative settlements that serve all parties fairly. A father who fought a 3.5-year custody battle credits Mr. Brown with securing full custody before the child’s fifth birthday. Military families and active-duty soldiers highlight his willingness to work through the specific complexities of service-member divorce. Several clients describe being surprised by how efficiently the process moved once Mr. Brown took over from prior counsel.
Divorce Augusta — Practice Areas & Services
- Divorce: Contested and uncontested divorce proceedings in Richmond County Superior Court, with experience in complex property division and multi-county service areas.
- Child Custody & Visitation: Initial custody determinations, modification petitions, and enforcement actions for parents in Columbia, Richmond, and Burke Counties.
- High-Asset Divorce: Division of business interests, retirement accounts, real property, and investments in marriages with complex financial estates.
- Military Divorce: Handling of SCRA protections, military pension division under the USFSPA, and deployment-related custody issues specific to Fort Eisenhower families.
- Fathers’ Rights & Legitimation: Legitimation petitions and custody advocacy for unmarried fathers establishing parental rights under Georgia law.
- Mediation: Attorney Brown serves as a family law mediator, offering Columbia and Richmond County clients an alternative to contested court proceedings.
- Domestic Violence & Protective Orders: Legal protection and representation for individuals dealing with domestic violence in the context of family law proceedings.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does divorce work in Augusta, Georgia?
Divorce petitions in Augusta are typically filed at Richmond County Superior Court, located in downtown Augusta. Georgia is a no-fault divorce state, allowing divorce on the ground of “irreconcilable differences,” though fault grounds like adultery can be raised and may affect alimony. Georgia does not have a mandatory waiting period after filing, but contested cases typically take six months to over a year to resolve depending on the issues involved.
How does Georgia divide property in a divorce?
Georgia is an equitable distribution state, meaning courts divide marital property fairly based on the specific circumstances of the marriage — not necessarily a 50/50 split. Judges consider factors such as the length of the marriage, each spouse’s financial contributions, and future earning capacity. Separate property owned before the marriage or received through inheritance generally stays with the original owner, though evidence of commingling can complicate that boundary.
What makes military divorce in Augusta different from a standard divorce?
Fort Eisenhower’s presence in the Augusta metro means military divorce is common in the area. Key distinctions include the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, which can delay proceedings while a spouse is deployed, and the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act, which governs how military pensions are divided. Custody agreements must also account for PCS moves and deployment schedules. An attorney with military divorce experience can draft orders that function within the military’s administrative requirements.
Quick Facts: Divorce in Augusta, Georgia
- Georgia Divorce Rate: Georgia reports a divorce rate of approximately 2.1 per 1,000 population, below the national median — though the Southeast as a region consistently shows higher dissolution rates than the national average — Bowling Green State University, National Center for Family & Marriage Research
- Richmond County Superior Court: Divorce and family law cases in Augusta are filed in Richmond County Superior Court, which handles all equitable and domestic relations matters for the city-county consolidated government — Georgia Courts
- Military Presence: Fort Eisenhower (formerly Fort Gordon), located just west of Augusta, is one of the largest military installations in the U.S. and a major factor in the region’s volume of military divorce and custody cases — U.S. Army / Fort Eisenhower
Related Guide: Find Divorce Lawyers in Augusta, GA


