At Least 41 Companies Register as Litigation Funders Under Georgia’s New Law
More than 40 companies have signed up under Georgia's new litigation-funding registry, an early measure of how the state's sweeping 2025 reform is reshaping an industry that long operated with little public disclosure.
As reported by the Daily Report, at least 41 companies have registered as litigation funders in Georgia — though some observers question whether registration alone will meaningfully change how the industry operates.
The registry stems from Senate Bill 69, the litigation-funding measure Governor Brian Kemp signed in April 2025 as part of a broader tort-reform package. The law requires commercial litigation financiers operating in the state to register with the Georgia Department of Banking and Finance through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System, with the registration requirement taking effect on January 1, 2026.
Beyond registration, SB 69 restricts foreign ownership of funders, bars financing tied to foreign adversaries, and makes a funder's involvement discoverable in civil litigation. It also establishes a consumer-protection disclosure regime and requires registrants to disclose ownership details and any criminal convictions.
Supporters cast the framework as a long-overdue set of guardrails for an opaque, fast-growing market. Skeptics counter that a registration list, absent aggressive enforcement or deeper disclosure of funding terms, may do little to illuminate who is bankrolling litigation or on what terms — the very questions the reform set out to answer.








