RulesofCivilProcedure.com Civil Procedure · Every State

§ 9-11-7.1.Redacted information; exceptions and filings under seal; correction; protective orders; waivers

Chapter 11. Civil Practice Act · Article 3. Pleadings and Motions · Last amended 2014 · Last verified July 17, 2026

In one sentenceO.C.G.A. § 9-11-7.1 requires most Georgia court filings that contain a social security number, taxpayer identification number, financial account number, or birth date to show only the last four digits or the birth year, with specific exceptions for garnishment, certain official records, filings under seal, and court-ordered protective measures.

Full Text of § 9-11-7.1

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h)

(a) Redacted filings. Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c) of this Code section or unless the court orders otherwise, a filing with the court that contains a social security number, taxpayer identification number, financial account number, or birth date shall include only:
(1) The last four digits of a social security number;
(2) The last four digits of a taxpayer identification number;
(3) The last four digits of a financial account number; and
(4) The year of an individual’s birth.
(b) Garnishment. A summons of garnishment that is filed with a court shall only include the last four digits of the defendant’s social security number, taxpayer identification number, or financial account number; provided, however, that the plaintiff shall provide the defendant’s full social security number, taxpayer identification number, or financial account number, if reasonably available to the plaintiff, on the copies of the summons of garnishment served on the garnishee and defendant.
(c) Exemptions from redaction requirement. Subsection (a) of this Code section shall not apply to the following:
(1) A financial account number that identifies property allegedly subject to forfeiture in a civil forfeiture proceeding;
(2) The official record of an administrative or agency proceeding;
(3) The official record of a court or tribunal in another case or proceeding;
(4) A filing made in a probate court; and
(5) A filing made under seal as provided in subsection (d) of this Code section.
(d) Filings made under seal. The court may order that a filing be made under seal without redaction. The court may later unseal the filing or order the filer to file a redacted version for the public record. A filer may petition the court to file an unredacted filing under seal. The court shall retain all filings made under seal as part of the record.
(e) Correction of unredacted information. An inadvertent failure to redact information which is required to be redacted shall be a curable defect and shall not preclude a document from being filed with the court. The court may order an unredacted filing be sealed and may also order that a redacted version of the same filing be filed for the public record.
(f) Protective orders. For good cause, the court may:
(1) Order a filing which contains additional personal or confidential information, other than the information required to be redacted pursuant to this Code section, be sealed and may also order that a redacted version of the same filing be filed for the public record; and
(2) Limit or prohibit a nonparty’s remote electronic access to a document filed with the court.
(g) Option for reference list. A filing that contains redacted information may be filed together with a reference list that identifies each item of redacted information and specifies an appropriate identifier that uniquely corresponds to each item listed. Such reference list shall be filed under seal and may be amended as of right. Any reference in a civil action to a listed identifier shall be construed to refer to the corresponding item of information.
(h) Waiver of protected identifiers. A filer waives the protections provided by subsection (a) of this Code section to the extent that he or she makes his or her own filing without redaction and not under seal.

Plain-English Summary

Court files are public records, which makes them a poor place to leave a full social security number sitting in plain view. This section requires that filings containing a social security number, taxpayer identification number, financial account number, or birth date include only the last four digits of the number, or just the year of birth, unless the court orders otherwise or one of the statute’s own exceptions applies.

Garnishment gets its own rule: the summons filed with the court shows only the last four digits, but the plaintiff still has to give the garnishee and the defendant the full number on their copies when reasonably available. Subsection (c) exempts several categories from the general redaction rule outright — property identified in a civil forfeiture case, the official record of an administrative or agency proceeding or of another court, probate court filings, and anything already filed under seal.

Filers who need to put unredacted information before the court have paths to do that without exposing it to the public: petitioning to file under seal, attaching a reference list (itself sealed) that assigns identifiers to the redacted items, or seeking a protective order for other sensitive information not covered by the mandatory redaction list, including an order limiting a nonparty’s remote electronic access to a filing. An inadvertent failure to redact is a curable defect, not a basis to reject the filing outright, and a filer who submits their own information without redacting it and without sealing it waives the statute’s protections for that filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What personal information has to be redacted from Georgia court filings?

Social security numbers, taxpayer identification numbers, financial account numbers, and birth dates — filings should show only the last four digits of the numbers or the year of birth, unless an exception applies.

Are garnishment filings redacted the same way as other Georgia court documents?

Mostly, but with a twist: the summons of garnishment filed with the court shows only the last four digits, yet the plaintiff must still provide the defendant's and garnishee's copies with the full number when it's reasonably available.

What if I accidentally file a document without redacting required information?

The statute treats that as a curable defect rather than a bar to filing; the court may order the unredacted filing sealed and may require a redacted version for the public record.

Can I ask a Georgia court to seal a filing that has to stay unredacted?

Yes. A filer may petition the court to file an unredacted document under seal, and the court retains all sealed filings as part of the record.

Do I lose the redaction protections if I file my own information without redacting it?

Yes. Subsection (h) treats a filer's own unredacted, unsealed filing as a waiver of the protections this section otherwise provides.

Amendment History

Code 1981, § 9-11-7.1, enacted by Ga. L. 2014, p. 482, § 2/SB 386.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, published by the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, Georgia Code Revision Commission / LexisNexis. Last verified July 17, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: Georgia redaction rule court filingssocial security number redaction Georgia court filingGeorgia filing under seal personal informationprotective order confidential filing GeorgiaGeorgia privacy redaction lawsuit