Are Trump’s signature tariffs even legal?
Rising health care costs, limits on executive power and two ongoing conflicts are all substantive issues Trump faces in the new year as midterms near.
Nearly 20 new Georgia laws are now in effect or scheduled to take effect as the New Year begins.
Passed during the 2025 legislative session, the measures impact courts, consumers, insurance, health care, elections, vehicles and professional licensing.
Below is a law-by-law snapshot, using bill numbers, official act names where provided, and effective dates as outlined by the Georgia General Assembly.
New Georgia laws in 2026
Here are the new laws that took effect on Jan. 1, 2026:
- SB 69: Georgia Courts Access and Consumer Protection Act
- Requires litigation financiers to register with the Department of Banking and Finance
- Prohibits litigation financing tied to certain foreign governments or adversaries
- Adds consumer protections, disclosure rules and criminal penalties
- Allows digital discovery of certain litigation financing agreements
- HB 179: Court transcripts and digital records
- Allows some court proceedings to be digitally recorded and transcribed later if needed
- HB 55: Alapaha Judicial Circuit judgeship
- Adds a third superior court judge to the Alapaha Judicial Circuit
- SB 199: Ethics and campaign finance reforms
- Bars State Ethics Commission investigations of candidates within 60 days of an election
- Moves local officials’ campaign filings to the State Ethics Commission
- Standardizes campaign reporting dates and expands PAC disclosure rules
- SB 112: HVAC warranty protections
- Automatically transfers HVAC manufacturer warranties to new homeowners
- Prohibits requiring warranty registration as a condition of coverage
- SB 201: Home repair contracts after disasters
- Strengthens consumer protections for post-disaster home repair contracts
- Prohibits certain insurance policies from allowing assignment of proceeds to contractors within one year of a disaster
- SB 35: Property insurance nonrenewal notices
- Increases required notice for nonrenewal of certain residential property insurance policies from 30 to 60 days
- SB 191: Issue date notice requirements
- Defines “issue date” for agency decisions to clarify appeal and finality timelines
- HB 197: Prior authorization reforms
- Requires insurers and review agents to improve communication with treating providers
- Encourages reduced prior authorization requirements for high-performing providers
- HB 584: Behavioral health program oversight changes
- Transfers licensing and oversight of drug treatment and certain mental health programs to the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities
- Allows emergency relocation of residents and placement of facility monitors
- HB 567: Teledentistry coverage
- Authorizes regulated teledentistry in Georgia
- Requires dental plans to cover qualifying teledentistry services
- Local government, zoning and environmental regulation
- HB 351: Solid waste permitting revisions
- Revises solid waste permitting rules and public notice requirements
- Removes outdated terminology and the definition of “special solid waste”
- HB 155: Annexation and zoning dispute reforms (effective: Jan. 1, 2026 (Part I))
- Revises annexation arbitration timelines and zoning appeal procedures
- Requires countywide referendums for certain annexations
- HB 513: Gas station video surveillance ordinances (effective: Jan. 1, 2026 (service delivery provisions))
- Allows continuation of certain local gas station surveillance ordinances
- Vehicles and license plates
- HB 551: Temporary operating permits and vehicle registration
- Expands issuance of temporary operating permits, including third-party vendors
- Updates dealer plate rules and restricts tax-avoidance registrations
- HB 208: New organization and veteran license plates
- Authorizes new specialty plates, including additional plates for disabled veterans
- SB 291: America First license plate
- Creates a specialty license plate featuring the American flag and “America First” wording
- Directs proceeds to the state general fund
- Professional licensing and tax credits
- HB 148: Public Accountancy Act of 2025
- Expands alternative education and experience pathways to CPA licensure
- Updates rules for accounting firms and practice mobility
- HB 475: Tax credits and certification fees
- Clarifies state authority over film and production tax credit certification
- Allows collection of reasonable application fees
For more information, visit legis.ga.gov.
Vanessa Countryman is the Trending Topics Reporter for the Deep South Connect Team Georgia. Email her at Vcountryman@gannett.com.

Alice J. Roden started working for Trending Insurance News at the end of 2021. Alice grew up in Salt Lake City, UT. A writer with a vast insurance industry background Alice has help with several of the biggest insurance companies. Before joining Trending Insurance News, Alice briefly worked as a freelance journalist for several radio stations. She covers home, renters and other property insurance stories.

