CAPITAL CITY BANK GROUP INC (CCBG) — 10-K

Filed 2026-02-27 · Period ending 2025-12-31 · 77,257 words · SEC EDGAR

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# CAPITAL CITY BANK GROUP INC (CCBG) — 10-K

**Filed:** 2026-02-27
**Period ending:** 2025-12-31
**Accession:** 0000726601-26-000007
**Source:** [SEC EDGAR](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660126000007/)
**Origin leaf:** ad771b450b07196f25b39292fddf93ce06098174266e528b77483046a8669fc0
**Words:** 77,257



---

UNITED STATES 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
WASHINGTON,
DC
20549
___________________________________ 
FORM 
10-K
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE 
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the 
fiscal year
ended 
December 31
, 2025
OR 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE 
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 
For the transition period from ____________ to ____________ 
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
Florida
0-13358
59-2273542
(State of Incorporation) 
(Commission File Number) 
(IRS Employer Identification No.) 
217 North Monroe Street
, 
Tallahassee
, 
Florida
32301
(Address of principal executive offices) 
(Zip Code) 
(
850
) 
402-7821
(Registrants telephone number, including area code) 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of Each Class
Trading Symbol(s)
Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered 
Common Stock, $0.01 par value
CCBG
The 
Nasdaq Stock Market
LLC 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
None
Indicate by check mark if
the registrant is a well-known
seasoned issuer, as defined in
Rule 405 of the Securities
Act. Yes 
No
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file
reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of
the Exchange Act. Yes 
No 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed
all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the 
preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant
was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject
to such filing requirements for the past 
90 days. Yes 
No
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted
electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted
pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-
T (232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months
(or for such shorter period that the registrant was required
to submit such files). Yes 
No 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated
filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging 
growth company.
See definition of large accelerated filer, accelerated filer, smaller reporting company, and emerging growth company in Rule
12b-2 of the 
Exchange Act 
Large accelerated filer 
Accelerated filer
Non-accelerated filer 
Smaller reporting company 
Emerging growth company 
If an emerging growth company,
indicate by check mark if the registrant
has elected not to use the
extended transition period for complying with any new
or revised 
financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a)
of the Exchange Act.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a
report on and attestation to its managements assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control
over 
financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting
firm that prepared or issued its audit 
report.
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act,
indicate by check mark whether the financial statements
of the registrant included in the filing reflect 
the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements
. 
Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections
are restatements that required a recovery analysis of
incentive-based compensation received by any of 
the registrants executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to 240.10D-1(b). 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company
(as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes 
No
The aggregate market value of the registrants common stock, $0.01 par value
per share, held by non-affiliates of the registrant on June
30, 2025, the last business day 
of the registrants most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was approximately $
539,591,085
(based on the closing sales price of the registrants common stock 
on that date). Shares of the registrants common stock held by each officer and director and
each person known to the registrant to own 10% or more of
the 
outstanding voting power of the registrant have been excluded
in that such persons may be deemed to be affiliates. This
determination of affiliate status is not a 
determination for other purposes. 
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the
issuers classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date. 
Class 
Outstanding at February 24, 2026 
Common Stock, $0.01 par value per share 
17,152,261
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Portions of our Proxy Statement for the Annual Meeting of Shareowners held on April 21, 2026, are incorporated by reference in Part III.
2 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC.
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2025
ON FORM 10-K
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART
I 
PAGE 
Item 1. 
[Business](#a905)
5 
Item 1A. 
[Risk Factors](#a15053)
23 
Item 1B. 
[Unresolved Staff Comments](#a17347)
39 
Item 1C. 
[Cybersecurity](#a17352)
39 
Item 2. 
[Properties](#a17553)
40 
Item 3. 
[Legal Proceedings](#a17597)
40 
Item 4. 
[Mine Safety Disclosure](#a17608)
40 
PART
II 
Item 5. 
[Market for the Registrants CommonEquity, Related ShareownerMatters, and Issuer Purchases of](#a17622)
[Equity Securities](#a17622)
41 
Item 6. 
[Selected Financial Data](#a18217)
43 
Item 7. 
[Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results ofOperations](#a19319)
45 
Item 7A. 
[Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk](#a32812)
69 
Item 8. 
[Financial Statements and Supplementary Data](#a32827)
70 
Item 9. 
[Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure](#a72696)
130 
Item 9A. 
[Controls and Procedures](#a72700)
130 
Item 9B. 
[Other Information](#a72892)
132 
PART
III 
Item 10. 
[Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance](#a72944)
133 
Item 11. 
[Executive Compensation](#a72967)
133 
Item 12. 
[Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Managementand Related Shareowner Matters](#a72985)
133 
Item 13. 
[Certain Relationships and Related Transactions,and Director Independence](#a73002)
133 
Item 14. 
[Principal Accountant Fees and Services](#a73019)
133 
PART
IV 
Item 15. 
[Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules](#a73041)
134 
Item 16. 
[Form 10-K Summary](#a73390)
135 
[Signatures](#a73398)
136 
3 
INTRODUCTORY NOTE 
This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements within
the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation 
Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, among others,
statements about our beliefs, plans, objectives, 
goals, expectations, estimates and intentions that are subject to significant
risks and uncertainties and are subject to change based 
on various factors, many of which are beyond our control.
The words may, could,
should, would, believe, 
anticipate, estimate, expect, intend, plan, target, vision,
goal, and similar expressions are intended to identify 
forward-looking statements. 
All forward-looking statements, by their nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties.
Forward-looking statements are based on 
current assumptions and expectations that are subject to change and may prove
to be inaccurate.
Our actual future results may 
differ materially from those set forth in our forward-looking
statements. 
In addition to those risks discussed in this Annual Report under Item 1A Risk Factors, factors
that could cause our actual results 
to differ materially from those in the forward-looking
statements, include, without limitation: 
Changes in trade, monetary,
and fiscal policies and laws, including actual changes in interest rates and the Fed Funds 
rate and changes in international trade policies, tariffs and treaties affecting
imports and exports, and their related 
impacts on macroeconomic conditions, customer behavior,
funding costs and loan and securities portfolios; 
Inflation, interest rate, market and monetary fluctuations; 
Local, regional, national, and international economic conditions (including
the value of the U.S. Dollar in relation to 
the currencies of other advanced and emerging market countries and
the performance of both domestic and 
international equity and debt markets and valuation of securities traded
on recognized domestic and international 
exchanges), and the impact they may have on us and our clients and our assessment of that impact; 
The costs and effects of legal and regulatory developments, the
outcomes of legal proceedings or regulatory or other 
governmental inquiries, the results of regulatory examinations or
reviews and the ability to obtain required regulatory 
approvals; 
The effect of changes in laws and regulations (including
laws and regulations concerning taxes, banking, securities, 
and insurance) and their application with which we and our subsidiaries must comply; 
The effect of changes in accounting policies and practices, as may
be adopted by the regulatory agencies, as well as 
other accounting standard setters; 
The accuracy of our financial statement estimates and assumptions; 
Changes in the creditworthiness, financial performance and/or condition
of our borrowers; 
Changes in the mix of loan geographies, sectors and types or the level of non-performing
assets and charge-offs; 
Changes in estimates of future credit loss reserve requirements based upon
the periodic review thereof under relevant 
regulatory and accounting requirements; 
Changes in our liquidity position; 
Changes in our capital levels, capital requirements or our ability to maintain
adequate regulatory capital ratios; 
The timely development and acceptance of new products and services
as well as risks (including reputational and 
litigation) attendant thereto, and perceived overall value of these products
and services by users; 
Changes in consumer spending, borrowing, and saving habits; 
Changes in deposit levels, deposit mix, pricing, or the availability and cost of other funding
sources; 
Greater than expected costs or difficulties related to the
integration of new products and lines of business; 
Technological changes; 
Risks associated with the development and use of artificial intelligence; 
The cost and effects of cyber incidents or other failures, interruptions,
or security breaches of our systems or those of 
our customers or third-party providers; 
Fraud or misconduct by internal or external parties which we may not be able
to prevent, detect or mitigate; 
Dispositions, acquisitions and integration of acquired businesses; 
Impairment of our goodwill or other intangible assets; 
Changes in the reliability of our vendors, internal control systems, or information
systems; 
Our ability to increase market share and control expenses; 
Our ability to attract and retain qualified employees; 
Changes in our organization, compensation, and benefit
plans; 
The soundness of other financial institutions; 
Volatility
and disruption in national and international financial and commodity
markets; 
Changes in the competitive environment in our markets and among banking
organizations and other financial service 
providers; 
Action or inaction by the federal government, including as a result of any prolonged government
shutdown or 
government intervention in the U.S. financial system; 
4 
A deterioration of the credit rating for U.S. long-term sovereign debt,
actions that the U.S. government may take to 
avoid exceeding the debt ceiling, and uncertainties surrounding the federal
budget and economic policy; 
The effects of natural disasters (including hurricanes),
widespread health emergencies (including pandemics), military 
conflict, terrorism, civil unrest, climate change or other geopolitical events; 
Our ability to declare and pay dividends; 
Structural changes in the markets for origination, sale and servicing of residential
mortgages; 
Any inability to implement and maintain effective internal
control over financial reporting and/or disclosure control; 
Potential claims, damages, penalties, fines, costs and reputational damage resulting
from pending or future litigation, 
regulatory proceedings and enforcement actions; 
Negative publicity and the impact on our reputation; including the
speed and scale at which information can spread 
through social media or digital channels, which could amplify adverse
market or customer reactions; and 
The limited trading activity and concentration of ownership of our common
stock. 
However, other factors besides those listed in Item
1A Risk Factors or discussed in this Annual Report and our other filings
with 
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) also could adversely
affect our results, and you should not consider any 
such list of factors to be a complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties.
Any forward-looking statements made by us or on 
our behalf speak only as of the date they are made.
We do not undertake
to update or revise any forward-looking statement, 
except as required by applicable law. 
5 
PART
I 
Item 1.
Business 
About Us 
General 
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. (CCBG) is a financial holding company
headquartered in Tallahassee,
Florida. CCBG was 
incorporated under Florida law on December 13, 1982, to acquire five national banks
and one state bank that all subsequently 
became part of CCBGs bank subsidiary,
Capital City Bank (CCB or the Bank). The Bank commenced operations
in 1895. In 
this report, the terms Company,
we, us, or our mean CCBG and all subsidiaries included in our consolidated
financial 
statements. 
CCBG is one of the largest publicly traded financial
holding companies headquartered in Florida and has approximately $4.
4 
billion in assets. 
We 
provide a full range of banking services, including traditional deposit and
credit services, mortgage banking, 
asset management, trust, merchant services, bankcards, securities brokerage
services and financial advisory services, including the 
sale of life insurance, risk management and asset protection services. The
Bank has 62 banking offices and 108 ATMs/ITMs
in 
Florida, Georgia, and Alabama.
Through Capital City Home Loans, LLC (CCHL), we have 28 additional
offices in the 
Southeast for our mortgage banking business.
The majority of the revenue, approximately 81%, is derived from our
Florida 
market areas while approximately 17% and 2% of the revenue is derived
from our Georgia and other market areas, respectively.
Below is a summary of our financial condition and results of operations for the past three
fiscal years, which we believe is a 
sufficient period for understanding our general business development.
Our financial condition and results of operations are more 
fully discussed in our Managements
Discussion and Analysis on page 45 and our consolidated financial
statements on page 70. 
Dollars in millions 
Year
Ended 
December 31,
Assets 
Deposits 
Shareowners 
Equity 
Revenue
(1)
Net Income 
2025 
$4,385.8
$3,662.3
$552.9
$286.7
$61.6
2024 
$4,324.9
$3,672.0
$495.3
$270.6
$52.9
2023 
$4,304.5
$3,701.8
$440.6
$252.7
$52.3
(1)
Revenue represents interest income plus noninterest income 
Dividends and management fees received from the Bank are CCBGs
primary source of income. Dividend payments by the Bank 
to CCBG depend on the capitalization, earnings and projected growth of
the Bank, and are limited by various regulatory 
restrictions, including compliance with a minimum Common Equity
Tier 1 Capital conservation buffer.
See the section entitled 
Regulatory Considerations in this Item 1 and Note 17 in the Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements for a discussion of the 
restrictions. 
Item 6 contains other financial and statistical information about us. 
Subsidiaries of CCBG 
CCBGs principal asset is the capital
stock of CCB, our wholly owned banking subsidiary,
which accounted for nearly 100% of 
consolidated assets and net income attributable to CCBG at December 31,
2025.
CCBG previously maintained an insurance 
subsidiary, Capital City Strategic
Wealth, LLC, which
was sold in August 2025.
CCB has three primary subsidiaries, Capital 
City Trust Company and Capital City Banc Investments,
Inc. (or Capital City Investments) which are wholly owned, and 
CCHL which became wholly owned effective January 1, 2025.
Operating Segment 
We have one
reportable segment with two principal services: Banking Services and Wealth
Management Services.
Banking 
Services are operated at CCB, and Wealth
Management Services are operated under two divisions (Capital City Trust
Company 
and Capital City Investments).
Revenues from these principal services for the year ended 2025
totaled approximately 92.8% and 
7.2% of our total revenue, respectively.
In 2024 and 2023, Banking Services (CCB) revenue was approximately 92.6% and 
93.5% of our total revenue for each respective year.
6 
Capital City Bank 
CCB is a Florida-chartered full-service bank engaged in the commercial and
retail banking business. Significant services offered 
by CCB include: 
Business Banking
We provide banking
services to corporations and other business clients. Credit products are available 
for a wide variety of general business purposes, including financing for
commercial business properties, equipment, 
inventories and accounts receivable, as well as commercial leasing and
letters of credit. We also provide
treasury 
management services, and, through a marketing alliance with Elavon, Inc., merchant
credit card transaction processing 
services. 
Commercial Real Estate Lending
We provide
a wide range of products to meet the financing needs of commercial 
developers and investors, residential builders and developers, and community
development. Credit products are available 
to purchase land and build structures for business use and for investors
who are developing residential or commercial 
property. 
Residential Real Estate Lending
We provide
an array of loan products through our subsidiary,
CCHL, to help meet the 
home financing needs of consumers, including conventional permanent and
construction-to-permanent (fixed, adjustable, 
or variable rate) financing arrangements as well as FHA, VA
and USDA rural development loan products.
CCHL also 
offers both fixed and adjustable-rate residential mortgage
(ARM) loans.
CCHL offers these products through its network 
of locations.
We do not offer subprime
residential real estate loans
Retail Credit
We provide
a full-range of loan products to meet the needs of consumers, including personal
loans, 
automobile loans, boat/RV
loans, home equity loans, and through a marketing alliance with ELAN, we offer
credit card 
programs. 
Institutional Banking 
We provide banking
services to meet the needs of state and local governments, public schools 
and colleges, charities, membership and not-for-profit
associations including customized checking and savings accounts, 
cash management systems, tax-exempt loans, lines of credit, and term
loans. 
Retail Banking 
We provide a full-range
of consumer banking services, including checking accounts, savings programs, 
interactive/automated teller machines (ATMs/ITMs),
debit/credit cards, night deposit services, safe deposit facilities, 
online banking, and mobile banking. 
Capital City Home Loans, LLC 
Capital City Home Loans,
LLC, or CCHL, originates, sells and services residential mortgage loans
through its retail origination 
channel. CCHL provides an array of the aforementioned loan products to
meet the needs of our consumers within the areas that 
we operate. CCHL is an approved Title II, non
-supervised direct endorsement mortgagee with the United States Department
of 
Housing and Urban Development (HUD). In addition, CCHL is an approved
issuer with the Government Federal National 
Mortgage Association (GNMA), as well as an approved seller and servicer with
the Federal National Mortgage Association 
(FNMA) and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC). 
Capital City Trust Company 
Capital City Trust Company,
or the Trust Company,
provides asset management for individuals through agency,
personal trust, 
IRA, and personal investment management accounts. Associations, endowments,
and other nonprofit entities hire the Trust 
Company to manage their investment portfolios. Additionally,
a staff of well-trained professionals serves individuals requiring
the 
services of a trustee, personal representative, or a guardian.
The market value of trust assets under discretionary management 
exceeded $1.326 billion at December 31, 2025, with total assets under administration
exceeding $1.375 billion. 
Capital City Investments 
We offer
our customers retail investment products through LPL Financial. LPL offers
a full line of retail securities products, 
including U.S. Government bonds, tax-free municipal bonds, stocks, mutual
funds, unit investment trusts, annuities, life 
insurance and long-term health care. Non-deposit investment and
insurance products are: (i) not FDIC insured; (ii) not deposits, 
obligations, or guarantees by any bank; and (iii) subject to investment risk,
including the possible loss of principal amount 
invested. The market value of total asset under administration exceeded
$1.541 billion at December 31, 2025.
7 
Capital City Strategic Wealth,
LLC. 
Capital City Strategic Wealth,
LLC provides
a multi-disciplinary strategic planning approach that requires examining all facets of 
our clients financial lives through our business, estate, financial, insurance
and business planning, tax planning, and asset 
protection advisory services.
Insurance sales within this division include life, health, disability,
long-term care, and annuity 
solutions. This subsidiary was sold in August 2025. Revenues were not
material to the Companys ongoing
operations or future 
financial results.
Lending Activities
One of our core goals is to support the communities in which we operate. 
We 
seek loans from within our primary market area, 
which is defined as the counties in which our banking offices are
located.
We 
will also originate loans within our secondary 
market area, defined as counties adjacent to those in which we have banking
offices.
There may also be occasions when we will 
have opportunities to make loans that are out of both the primary and
secondary market areas, including participation loans. 
These loans are only approved if the underwriting is consistent with our criteria and
generally the project or applicants
primary 
business is in or near our primary or secondary market areas. Approval of
all loans is subject to our policies and standards 
described in more detail below. 
We 
have adopted comprehensive lending policies, underwriting standards
and loan review procedures. Management and our 
Board of Directors reviews and approves these policies and procedures on
a regular basis (at least annually). 
Management has also implemented reporting systems designed
to monitor loan originations, loan quality,
concentrations of 
credit, loan delinquencies, nonperforming loans, and potential problem
loans. Our management and the Credit Risk Oversight 
Committee periodically review our lines of business to monitor asset quality
trends and the appropriateness of credit policies. In 
addition, we establish total borrower exposure limits and monitor concentration
risk. As part of this process, the overall 
composition of the portfolio is reviewed to gauge diversification of risk,
client concentrations, industry group, loan type, 
geographic area, or other relevant classifications of loans.
Specific segments of the portfolio are monitored and reported to our 
Board on a quarterly basis, and we have strategic plans in place to supplement
Board approved credit policies governing exposure 
limits and underwriting standards. 
We 
recognize that exceptions to the below-listed policy guidelines may occasionally
occur and 
have established procedures for approving exceptions to these policy guidelines. 
Residential Real Estate Loans 
We originate
1-4 family, owner-occupied
residential real estate loans for sale in the secondary market.
Historically, a vast 
majority of residential loan originations are fixed-rate loans which are sold
in the secondary market on a non-recourse basis.
We 
will frequently sell loans and retain the servicing rights.
Note 4 Mortgage Banking Activities in the Notes to Our Consolidated 
Financial Statements provides additional information on our servicing
portfolio.
We also maintain
a portfolio of residential loans held for investment and will periodically
originate new 1-4 family secured 
adjustable-rate loans for that portfolio. Residential loans held for
investment are generally underwritten in accordance with 
secondary market guidelines in effect at the time of origination,
including loan-to-value, or LTV,
and documentation 
requirements.
Residential real estate loans also include home equity lines of credit, or HELOCs, and
home equity loans. Our home equity 
portfolio includes revolving open-ended equity loans with interest-only
or minimal monthly principal payments and closed-end 
amortizing loans. Open-ended equity loans typically have an interest only
10-year draw period followed by a five-year repayment 
period of 0.75% of principal balance monthly and balloon payment at maturity.
As of December 31, 2025, approximately 47% of 
our residential home equity loan portfolio consisted of first mortgages.
Interest rates may be fixed or adjustable.
Adjustable-rate 
loans are tied to the Prime Rate with a typical margin of 1.0% or more.
Commercial Loans 
Our policy sets forth guidelines for debt service coverage ratios, LTV
ratios and documentation standards. Commercial loans are 
primarily made based on identified cash flows of the borrower with consideration
given to underlying collateral and personal or 
other guarantees. 
We 
have established debt service coverage ratio limits that require a borrowers
cash flow to be sufficient to 
cover principal and interest payments on all new and existing debt. The
majority of our commercial loans are secured by the 
assets being financed or other business assets such as accounts receivable or
inventory.
Many of the loans in the commercial 
portfolio have variable interest rates tied to the Prime Rate or U.S. Treasury
indices. 
8 
Commercial Real Estate Loans 
We 
have adopted guidelines for debt service coverage ratios, LTV
ratios and documentation standards for commercial real estate 
loans. These loans are primarily made based on identified cash flows of
the borrower with consideration given to underlying real 
estate collateral and personal guarantees. Our policy establishes a maximum
LTV specific to
property type and minimum debt 
service coverage ratio limits that require a borrowers cash flow to
be sufficient to cover principal and interest payments on all 
new and existing debt. Commercial real estate loans may be fixed
or variable-rate loans with interest rates tied to the Prime Rate 
or U.S. Treasury indices. 
We 
require appraisals for loans in excess of $500,000 that are secured by real property
unless we deem 
the real property used as security to be a complex property type, in
which case we require appraisals for loans in excess of 
$250,000. For loans secured by real property that fall beneath the
applicable thresholds above, we will generally use a third-party 
evaluation to assess the value of the real property used as security.
Consumer Loans 
Our consumer loan portfolio includes personal installment loans, direct
and indirect automobile financing, and overdraft lines of 
credit. The majority of the consumer loan portfolio consists of indirect
and direct automobile loans. The majority of our consumer 
loans are short-term and have fixed rates of interest that are priced
based on current market interest rates and the financial 
strength of the borrower. Our policy
establishes maximum debt-to-income ratios, minimum credit scores, and includes
guidelines 
for verification of applicants income and receipt of credit reports. 
Expansion of Business 
See Item 7.
Managements Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations under the section captioned 
Business Overview for discussion related to the expansion of our
Business. 
Competition 
We face significant
competition in our market areas. We
compete against a wide range of banking and nonbanking institutions 
including banks, savings and loan associations, credit unions, money market
funds, mutual fund advisory companies, mortgage 
banking companies, investment banking companies, insurance agencies and
companies, securities firms, brokerage firms, 
financial technology firms, personal and commercial finance companies
,
peer-to-peer lending businesses and other types of 
financial institutions. In addition to traditional competitors, we also face increasing
competition from a rapidly expanding group 
of nontraditional financial service providers. These include established and
emerging wealth technology companies 
(wealthtechs), financial technology companies (fintechs), technology
-enabled lenders, digital-only banks, crowdfunding 
platforms, and mobile-based payment applications. These firms often
leverage advanced technologies, agile product development 
cycles, and streamlined digital interfaces that allow them to deliver certain
financial products and servicessuch as unsecured 
consumer loans, small business working-capital loans, digital wallets, and peer-to-peer
paymentsmore quickly or conveniently 
than traditional banking institutions. Some fintech competitors operate
with lower overhead and, in some cases, are subject to 
fewer regulatory requirements than banks and bank holding companies.
This can allow them to offer competitive pricing, faster 
decision making or funding, and simplified user experiences. Some
of our competitors are larger financial institutions with greater 
resources and, as such, may have higher lending limits and may offer
other services that are not provided by us. Industry 
consolidation also intensifies competition in our markets. Mergers
among financial institutions have created larger, 
better-capitalized, and more geographically diverse
competitors with expanded digital capabilities and broader product sets. These 
institutions may be better positioned to make significant investments in technology,
marketing, and infrastructure, which can 
enhance their ability to compete for both clients and talent.
However, we believe that the larger
financial institutions are less 
familiar with the markets in which we operate and typically target
a different client base. We
also believe clients who bank at 
community banks tend to prefer the relationship style service of community
banks compared to larger banks and financial 
services companies. 
As a result, we expect to be able to effectively compete in our markets
with larger financial institutions through providing 
superior client service and leveraging our knowledge and experience
in providing banking products and services in our market 
areas. See Item 1A. Risk Factors under the section captioned Our future success is dependent
on our ability to compete 
effectively in the highly competitive banking and financial
services industry for further discussion related to the competitive 
environment in which we operate. 
Our primary market area consists of 21 counties in Florida, six counties in Georgia,
and one county in Alabama. Most of Floridas 
major banking concerns have a presence in Leon County,
where our main office is located.
Our Leon County deposits totaled 
$1.195 billion, or 32.6% of our consolidated deposits at December
31, 2025. 
9 
The table below depicts our market share percentage within each county,
based on commercial bank deposits within the county. 
Market Share as of June 30,
(1)
County 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Florida 
Alachua 
4.8% 
4.9% 
5.1% 
Bay 
0.4% 
0.2% 
0.3% 
Bradford 
37.0% 
34.3% 
37.1% 
Citrus 
3.7% 
4.3% 
4.4% 
Clay 
2.8% 
2.2% 
2.4% 
Dixie 
22.6% 
21.5% 
17.5% 
Gadsden 
82.3% 
81.8% 
81.9% 
Gilchrist 
41.1% 
41.6% 
42.2% 
Gulf 
11.2% 
11.2% 
12.4% 
Hernando 
5.2% 
5.2% 
4.9% 
Jefferson 
27.2% 
24.6% 
28.3% 
Leon 
16.8% 
15.5% 
16.9% 
Levy 
24.3% 
26.4% 
26.4% 
Madison 
13.3% 
13.5% 
13.5% 
Putnam 
22.7% 
28.3% 
34.4% 
St. Johns 
0.7% 
0.7% 
0.8% 
Suwannee 
6.0% 
6.4% 
6.6% 
Taylor 
69.4% 
73.7% 
75.0% 
Wakulla 
14.7% 
8.4% 
8.4% 
Walton 
0.7% 
0.6% 
0.3% 
Washington 
7.0% 
7.8% 
9.2% 
Georgia 
Bibb 
3.2% 
3.1% 
2.9% 
Cobb 
0.1% 
0.1% 
0.1% 
Gwinnett
(2)
0.1% 
0.0% 
0.0% 
Grady 
15.0% 
14.0% 
13.8% 
Laurens 
6.3% 
6.0% 
6.7% 
Troup 
5.2% 
5.4% 
5.6% 
Alabama 
Chambers 
8.2% 
9.0% 
8.6% 
(1)
Obtained from the FDIC Summary of Deposits Report for the year indicated.
(2)
Bank office opened in the second quarter of 2023.
Seasonality 
We believe our
commercial banking operations are not generally seasonal in nature; however,
public deposits tend to increase 
with tax collections in the fourth and first quarters of each year and decline
as a result of governmental spending thereafter. 
Human Capital Matters
Our culture distinguishes us from our competitors and is the driving force
behind our continued success. Our leadership is 
committed to a culture that values people alongside results.
Our brand promise (More than your bank. Your
banker.)
and purpose (We
empower our clients financial wellness and help 
them build secure futures), together with our core values statement (Do
the Right Thing, Build Relationships & Loyalty, 
Embrace Individuality & Value
Others, Promote Career Growth, Be Committed to Community,
and Represent the Star (our bank) 
Proudly), are the foundation on which our culture is built. 
10 
The bank has grown significantly since its beginnings in 1895. Our commitment
to fostering a culture that values our associates 
across our entire footprint remains unwavering. We
have a Chief Culture Officer and a Chief Inclusion Officer
who make it a 
priority to ensure our culture is maintained and associates exemplify our values.
We reinforce these
cultural priorities through 
ongoing communication, leadership engagement across our markets,
and programs designed to strengthen associate connection, 
belonging, and service to our clients and communities. 
At December 31, 2025, we had approximately 902 full-time associates and approximately
25 part-time associates. At December 
31, 2025, approximately 68% of our workforce was female, 32% was male, and
approximately 22% was ethnic minorities. None 
of our associates are represented by a labor union or covered by a collective bargaining
agreement.
All of our associates are hired 
on the basis of their individual skills, qualifications, merit,
and in accordance with applicable law. 
Our commitment to people and being an employer with integrity and heart has
earned us numerous accolades including: one of 
the Best Companies to Work
for in Florida by Florida Trend for 14 consecutive
years, a Best Bank to Work
For by American 
Banker for 13 consecutive years and being named Worlds
Best Banks, Americas Best Banks (ranked
#13) and Americas Best-
in-State Banks (Ranked #5 in Florida and Ranked #4 in Georgia)
by Forbes in 2025, a selection made from direct consumer 
feedback and online reviews. 
The average tenure of our associates is approximately 9.8 years, and
the average tenure of our management team is 24.3 years. 
Tenure statistics support
these accolades and further demonstrate that associates enjoy working
for CCBG.
Compensation and Benefits Program
. To attract and retain experienced
associates we offer a competitive compensation and 
benefits program, foster a culture where everyone feels included and empowered
to do to their best work, and give associates the 
opportunity to give back to their communities and make a social impact. 
Our compensation program is designed to attract and reward talented individuals
who possess the skills necessary to support our 
business objectives, assist in the achievement of our strategic goals and
create long-term value for our shareowners. We
provide 
our associates with compensation packages that include base salary and
annual incentive bonuses, and certain associates can 
receive equity awards tied to the Companys
performance.
Experience has taught us that a compensation program with both
short-
and long-term awards provides fair and competitive 
compensation and aligns associate and shareowner interests by incentivizing
business and individual performance. This dual 
approach also encourages long-term company performance and integrates compensation
with our business plans.
In addition to cash and equity compensation, we offer associates benefits
including life and health (medical, dental & vision) 
insurance, paid time off, an associate stock purchase plan, and a
401(k) plan. Associates hired prior to 2020 are eligible to 
participate in a pension plan.
We periodically
evaluate our benefits and total rewards offerings to ensure
they remain competitive 
within our industry and responsive to the evolving needs of our workforce.
A core value is providing associates the ability to grow a career.
To that end, we support and encourage
associates to develop a 
life-long habit of continuous learning that focuses on personal and professional
development through higher education. We
offer 
an educational Tuition Assistance Plan to help eligible
associates continue or begin post-high school education, develop skills, 
increase knowledge and aid in career development. 
We have invested
in tools and capabilities that allow our team members to work remotely as appropriate.
These tools also 
support flexible work arrangements, increased collaboration, and the ability
to maintain continuity while meeting the needs of 
associates and clients.
Talent
Acquisition, Development, Retention and Culture
. Our culture emphasizes our longstanding dedication to being respectful 
to others and having a workforce that is representative of the communities we serve.
We believe in attracting,
retaining and 
promoting quality talent. Our success depends on our ability to attract,
retain and develop employees, and our talent acquisition 
teams partner with hiring managers in sourcing and presenting a slate of qualified
candidates to strengthen our organization. 
Professional development is a key priority,
which is facilitated through our many corporate development initiatives including 
extensive training programs, corporate mentoring, leadership programs,
educational reimbursement and professional speaker 
series. Our talent acquisition, development and retention focuses on rewarding
merit and achievement while nurturing and 
progressing skilled talent across various business segments.
Integral to our culture and values is a commitment to an equal-opportunity
and inclusive work environment whereby respect, 
acceptance and belonging are practiced and experienced by all. 
Our associates are our most valuable assets, and our differences make
us stronger, produce more creative solutions,
offer better 
client service and are vital to attracting and retaining talent. The individual
perspectives, life experiences, capabilities and talents, 
which our associates invest in their work, represent a significant part of our
culture, reputation and collective achievements.
11 
Health and Safety
. Our business success is fundamentally connected to our associates well-being.
We make available to our 
associates a voluntary wellness program,
StarFit, that provides associates with resources and good-health opportunities through 
exercise, diet and preventive care.
We continue
to evaluate and enhance our well-being programs to support physical, emotional, 
and financial wellness across our workforce. 
In response to emerging workplace practices, we made changes to our
flexwork program to assist our associates in maintaining a 
work/life balance consistent with their professional and personal goals.
We remain committed to
providing tools, support and 
flexibility that enable associates to perform their roles effectively
while managing personal commitments.
Social Matters 
Community Involvement. 
We aim to give back
to the communities where we live and work and believe that this commitment 
helps in our efforts to attract and retain associates. Our commitment
to help our community starts with our associates. Community 
involvement is a hallmark for our organization, and it comes naturally
to our associates. We encourage
our associates to volunteer 
their hours with service organizations and philanthropic groups in
the communities we serve. 
We recorded
7,914 community service hours in 2025, and 9,542, and 10,526 hours in 202
4
and 2023, respectively.
Additionally, 
the CCBG Foundation donated approximately $0.3 million in 2025,
2024 and 2023 to various non-profit organizations in the 
communities we serve.
Since 2015, we have annually supported the United Way
of the Big Bend in analyzing financial information for its annual grant 
review process. Many of these grants are provided to low-moderate income
communities in the Big Bend area. 
Access, affordability,
and financial inclusion. 
Our community commitment to further financial literacy in the markets we service 
remains an ongoing focus. In 2025, the CCBG Foundation made grants totaling
$173,000 to Community Reinvestment Act of 
1977 (CRA) eligible organizations in our market
area. We are committed
to providing educational outreach regarding home 
ownership and financial access for minorities. We
are a long-time supporter of Habitat for Humanity,
with our associates 
providing volunteer hours on home builds.
Further, we continue to originate loans under the
Habitat for Humanity loan program 
and community development loans under various affordable
housing, community service, and revitalization projects.
During tax season, we provide locations for community residents to access Volunteer
Income Tax Assistance (VITA)
services. 
VITA is a nationwide
IRS program that offers free tax preparation assistance to people who generally
make $60,000 or less, 
persons with disabilities, the elderly,
and limited English-speaking taxpayers who need assistance in preparing their
own tax 
returns.
Regulatory Considerations 
We 
must comply with state and federal banking laws and regulations
that control virtually all aspects of our operations.
These 
laws and regulations generally aim to
protect our depositors, not necessarily our shareowners
or our creditors. Any changes in 
applicable laws or regulations may materially
affect our business and prospects. Proposed
legislative or regulatory changes may 
also affect our operations. The following description summarizes some of the
laws and regulations to which we are
subject. 
References to applicable statutes and
regulations are brief summaries,
do not purport to be complete, and are qualified
in their 
entirety by reference
to such statutes and regulations.
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. 
We are extensively
regulated under federal and state law.
The following is a brief summary that does not purport to be a complete 
description of all regulations that affect us or all aspects of those regulations.
This discussion is qualified in its entirety by 
reference to the particular statutory and regulatory provisions described below
and is not intended to be an exhaustive description 
of the statutes or regulations applicable to the Companys
and the Banks business. In addition, proposals
to change the laws and 
regulations governing the banking industry are frequently raised at both
the state and federal levels. The likelihood and timing of 
any changes in these laws and regulations, and the impact such changes may
have on us and the Bank, are difficult to predict. 
Regulatory agencies may issue enforcement actions, policy statements, interpretive
letters, and similar written guidance 
applicable to us or to the Bank. Changes in applicable laws, regulations, or regulatory
guidance, or their interpretation by 
regulatory agencies or courts may have a material adverse effect on
our and the Banks business, operations,
and earnings.
12 
We and the Bank
must undergo regular examinations by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (the Federal 
Reserve), which will examine for adherence to a range of legal and regulatory
compliance responsibilities. A bank regulator 
conducting an examination has complete access to the books and records
of the examined institution. The results of the 
examination are confidential. Supervision and regulation of banks,
their holding companies, and affiliates is intended primarily 
for the protection of depositors and clients, the Deposit Insurance Fund
(DIF) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
(FDIC), and the U.S. banking and financial system rather than holders
of our securities.
We are registered
as a bank holding company with the Federal Reserve under the Bank Holding Company
Act (BHC Act) and 
have elected to be treated as a financial holding company.
As such, we are subject to comprehensive supervision and regulation 
by the Federal Reserve and are subject to its regulatory reporting requirements.
Federal law subjects bank holding companies, 
such as the Company, to
restrictions on the types of activities in which they may engage, and to a range of supervisory 
requirements produce more creative solutions, offer better
client service and are vital to attracting and retaining talent. In addition, 
the Florida Office of Financial Regulation (Florida OFR) regulates
bank holding companies that own Florida-chartered banks, 
such as us, under the bank holding company laws of the State of Florida. Various
federal and state bodies regulate and supervise 
our non-bank activities including our brokerage, investment advisory,
and insurance agency activities. These include, but are not 
limited to, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority,
federal and state 
banking regulators, and various state regulators of insurance and brokerage activities. 
Violations of laws and regulations,
or other unsafe and unsound practices, may result in regulatory agencies imposing
fines or 
penalties, cease and desist orders, or taking other enforcement actions. Under
certain circumstances, these agencies may enforce 
these remedies directly against officers, directors, employees, and
other parties participating in the affairs of a bank or bank 
holding company.
Like all bank holding companies, we are regulated extensively under federal and
state law. Under federal and 
state laws and regulations pertaining to the safety and soundness of insured depository
institutions, state banking regulators, the 
Federal Reserve, and separately the FDIC as the insurer of bank deposits have the
authority to compel or restrict certain actions 
on our part if they determine that we have insufficient capital or
other resources, or are otherwise operating in a manner that may 
be deemed to be inconsistent with safe and sound banking practices. Under
this authority, our regulators
can require us or our 
subsidiaries to enter into informal or formal supervisory agreements, including
board resolutions, memoranda of understanding, 
written agreements, and consent or cease and desist orders pursuant to which
we would be required to take identified corrective 
actions to address cited concerns and to refrain from taking certain actions. 
If we become subject to and are unable to comply with the terms of any regulatory
actions or directives, supervisory agreements 
or orders, then we could become subject to additional, heightened supervisory
actions and orders, possibly including prompt 
corrective action restrictions and/or other regulatory actions, including
prohibitions on the payment of dividends on our common 
stock and preferred stock. If our regulators were to take such supervisory actions,
then we could, among other things, become 
subject to significant restrictions on our ability to develop any new business, as well as restrictions
on our existing business, and 
we could be required to raise additional capital, dispose of certain assets and liabilities within
a prescribed period of time, or both. 
The terms of any such action could have a material negative effect
on our business, reputation, operating flexibility,
financial 
condition, and the value of our capital stock. 
13 
Permitted Activities 
As a financial holding company,
we are permitted to engage directly or indirectly in a broader range of activities than
those 
permitted for a bank holding company that has not elected to be a financial holding
company. Bank holding companies
are 
generally restricted to engaging in the business of banking, managing,
or controlling banks and certain other activities determined 
by the Federal Reserve to be closely related to banking. Financial holding companies
may also engage in activities that are 
considered to be financial in nature, as well as those incidental or,
if determined by the Federal Reserve, complementary to 
financial activities. If the Bank ceases to be well capitalized or well managed
under applicable regulatory standards, or if the 
Bank receives a rating of less than satisfactory under the CRA, the Federal
Reserve may, among other
things, place limitations on 
our ability to conduct these broader financial activities or,
if the deficiencies persist, require us to divest the banking subsidiary or 
the businesses engaged in activities permissible only for financial holding
companies. 
In addition, the Federal Reserve has the power to order a bank holding
company or its subsidiaries to terminate any nonbanking 
activity or terminate its ownership or control of any nonbank subsidiary
when it has reasonable cause to believe that continuation 
of such activity or such ownership or control constitutes a serious risk to the financial
safety, soundness, or stability of
any bank 
subsidiary of that bank holding company.
As further described below, each of
the Company and the Bank is well-capitalized 
under applicable regulatory standards as of December 31, 2025,
and the Bank has an overall rating of Satisfactory in its most 
recent CRA evaluation. 
Source of Strength Obligations 
A bank holding company,
such as us, is required to act as a source of financial and managerial strength to its subsidiary bank.
The 
term source of financial strength means the ability of a company,
such as us, that directly or indirectly owns or controls an 
insured depository institution, such as the Bank, to provide financial
assistance to such insured depository institution in the event 
of financial distress. The appropriate federal banking agency for
the depository institution (in the case of the Bank, this agency is 
the Federal Reserve) may require reports from us to assess our ability
to serve as a source of strength and to enforce compliance 
with the source of strength requirements by requiring us to provide financial
assistance to the Bank in the event of financial 
distress. If we were to enter bankruptcy or become subject to the orderly
liquidation process established by the Dodd-Frank Wall 
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act),
any commitment by us to a federal bank regulatory agency to 
maintain the capital of the Bank would be assumed by the bankruptcy
trustee or the FDIC, as appropriate, and entitled to a 
priority of payment. In addition, the FDIC provides that any insured
depository institution generally will be liable for any loss 
incurred by the FDIC in connection with the default of, or any assistance provided
by the FDIC to, a commonly controlled insured 
depository institution. The Bank is an FDIC-insured depository institution
and thus subject to these requirements. 
Acquisitions 
The BHC Act permits acquisitions of banks by bank holding companies,
such that we and any other bank holding company, 
whether located in Florida or elsewhere, may acquire a bank located in
any other state, subject to certain deposit-percentage, age 
of bank charter requirements, and other restrictions. The BHC Act requires that
a bank holding company obtain the prior approval 
of the Federal Reserve before (i) acquiring direct or indirect ownership
or control of more than 5% of the voting shares of any 
additional bank or bank holding company,
(ii) taking any action that causes an additional bank or bank holding company
to 
become a subsidiary of the bank holding company,
or (iii) merging or consolidating with any other bank
holding company. The 
Federal Reserve may not approve any such transaction that would result
in a monopoly or would be in furtherance of any 
combination or conspiracy to monopolize or attempt to monopolize the business
of banking in any section of the United States, or 
the effect of which may be substantially to lessen competition
or to tend to create a monopoly in any section of the country,
or 
that in any other manner would be in restraint of trade unless the anticompetitive
effects of the proposed transaction are clearly 
outweighed in the public interest by the probable effect of the transaction
in meeting the convenience and needs of the community 
to be served. The Federal Reserve is also required to consider: (i) the financial and managerial
resources of the companies 
involved, including pro forma capital ratios; (ii) the risk to the stability of
the United States banking or financial system; (iii) the 
convenience and needs of the communities to be served, including performance
under the CRA; and (iv) the effectiveness of the 
company in combatting money laundering. 
Change in Control 
Federal law restricts the amount of voting stock of a bank holding company
or a bank that a person may acquire without the prior 
approval of banking regulators. Under the Change in Bank Control
Act and the regulations thereunder, a person or group
must 
give advance notice to the Federal Reserve before acquiring control
of any bank holding company,
such as the Company, or 
before acquiring control of any FDIC-insured bank, such as the Bank.
Upon receipt of such notice, the Federal Reserve may 
approve or disapprove the acquisition. The Change in Bank Control Act creates
a rebuttable presumption of control if a person or 
group acquires the power to vote 10% or more of our outstanding
common stock.
14 
Under Florida law,
a person or entity proposing to directly or indirectly acquire control of a Florida chartered
bank must also 
obtain permission from the Florida Office of Financial
Regulation (the Florida OFR). The Florida Statutes define control
as 
either (i) indirectly or directly owning, controlling or having power
to vote 25% or more of the voting securities of a bank; (ii) 
controlling the election of a majority of directors of a bank; (iii) owning,
controlling, or having power to vote 10% or more of the 
voting securities as well as directly or indirectly exercising a controlling
influence over management or policies of a bank; or (iv) 
as determined by the
Florida OFR. These requirements will affect us because the Bank is chartered
under Florida law and 
changes in control of the Company are indirect changes in control
of the Bank. 
The overall effect of such laws is to make it more difficult
to acquire a bank holding company and a bank by tender offer or 
similar means than it might be to acquire control of another type of corporation.
Consequently, shareholders
of the Company may 
be less likely to benefit from the rapid increases in stock prices that may result
from tender offers or similar efforts to acquire 
control of other companies. Investors should be aware of these requirements
when acquiring shares of our stock. 
Incentive Compensation 
The Dodd-Frank Act required the federal banking agencies and
the SEC to establish joint rules or guidelines for financial 
institutions with more than $1 billion in assets, such as us and the Bank,
which prohibit incentive compensation arrangements that 
the agencies determine to encourage inappropriate risks by the institution.
The federal banking agencies issued proposed rules in 
2011 and previously issued guidance
on sound incentive compensation policies. In 2016, the federal banking
agencies and the 
SEC proposed rules that would, depending upon the assets of the institution, directly
regulate incentive compensation 
arrangements and would require enhanced oversight and recordkeeping.
As of December 31, 2025, these rules have not been 
implemented, although the SEC did adopt final rules implementing
the clawback provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act in 2022. 
We 
and the Bank have undertaken efforts to ensure that our
incentive compensation plans do not encourage inappropriate risks, 
consistent with three key principles - that incentive compensation arrangements
should appropriately balance risk and financial 
rewards, be compatible with effective controls and risk management,
and be supported by strong corporate governance. 
Source of Strength Obligations 
A bank holding company,
such as us, is required to act as a source of financial and managerial strength to its subsidiary bank.
The 
term source of financial strength means the ability of a company,
such as us, that directly or indirectly owns or controls an 
insured depository institution, such as the Bank, to provide financial
assistance to such insured depository institution in the event 
of financial distress. The appropriate federal banking agency for
the depository institution (in the case of the Bank, this agency is 
the Federal Reserve) may require reports from us to assess our ability
to serve as a source of strength and to enforce compliance 
with the source of strength requirements by requiring us to provide financial
assistance to the Bank in the event of financial 
distress. If we were to enter bankruptcy or become subject to the orderly
liquidation process established by the Dodd-Frank Act, 
any commitment by us to a federal bank regulatory agency to maintain
the capital of the Bank would be assumed by the 
bankruptcy trustee or the FDIC, as appropriate, and entitled to a priority
of payment. In addition, the FDIC provides that any 
insured depository institution generally will be liable for any loss incurred
by the FDIC in connection with the default of, or any 
assistance provided by the FDIC to, a commonly controlled insured
depository institution. The Bank is an FDIC-insured 
depository institution and thus subject to these requirements. 
Capital Requirements
We 
and the Bank are required under federal law to maintain certain minimum
capital levels based on ratios of capital to total 
assets and capital to risk-weighted assets. The required capital ratios are minimums,
and the Federal Reserve may determine that a 
banking organization based on its size, complexity,
or risk profile must maintain a higher level of capital in order to operate in a 
safe and sound manner.
Risks such as concentration of credit risks and the risk arising from nontraditional activities,
as well as the 
institutions exposure
to a decline in the economic value of its capital due to changes in interest rates, and an
institutions ability 
to manage those risks, are important factors that are to be taken into account
in assessing an institutions overall
capital adequacy. 
The following is a brief description of the relevant provisions of these capital
rules and their potential impact on our capital levels. 
We 
and the Bank are subject to the following risk-based capital ratios: a CET1 risk-based
capital ratio, a Tier 1 risk-based capital 
ratio, which includes CET1 and additional Tier
1 capital, and a total risk-based capital ratio, which includes Tier
1 and Tier 2 
capital. CET1 is primarily comprised of the sum of common stock instruments
and related surplus net of treasury stock plus 
retained earnings less certain adjustments and deductions, including
with respect to goodwill, intangible assets, mortgage 
servicing assets, and deferred tax assets subject to temporary timing differences.
Additional Tier 1 capital is primarily comprised 
of noncumulative perpetual preferred stock. Tier
2 capital consists of instruments disqualified from Tier
1 capital, including 
qualifying subordinated debt and a limited amount of loan loss reserves up
to a maximum of 1.25% of risk-weighted assets, 
subject to certain eligibility criteria. The capital rules also define the
risk-weights assigned to assets and off-balance sheet items to 
determine the risk-weighted asset components of the risk-based capital
rules, including, for example, certain high volatility 
commercial real estate, past due assets, structured securities, and equity
holdings. 
15 
The leverage capital ratio, which serves as a minimum capital standard,
is the ratio of Tier 1 capital to quarterly average
total 
consolidated assets net of goodwill, certain other intangible assets, and certain
required deduction items. The required minimum 
leverage ratio for all banks and bank holding companies is 4%. 
In addition, effective January 1, 2019, the capital rules required
a capital conservation buffer of 2.5% above each of the minimum 
risk-based capital ratio requirements (CET1, Tier
1, and total capital), which is designed to absorb losses during periods of 
economic stress. These buffer requirements must be
met for a bank or bank holding company to be able to pay dividends, engage 
in share buybacks, or make discretionary bonus payments to executive
management without restriction. 
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act (FDICIA),
among other things, requires the federal bank 
regulatory agencies to take prompt corrective action regarding depository
institutions that do not meet minimum capital 
requirements. FDICIA establishes five regulatory capital tiers: well capitalized,
adequately capitalized, undercapitalized, 
significantly undercapitalized, and critically undercapitalized. A depository
institutions capital tier will depend
upon how its 
capital levels compare to various relevant capital measures and certain
other factors, as established by regulation. FDICIA 
generally prohibits a depository institution from making any capital distribution
(including payment of a dividend) or paying any 
management fee to its holding company if the depository institution would
thereafter be undercapitalized. The FDICIA imposes 
progressively more restrictive restraints on operations, management,
and capital distributions depending on the category in which 
an institution is classified. Undercapitalized depository institutions are
subject to restrictions on borrowing from the Federal 
Reserve System. In addition, undercapitalized depository institutions
may not accept brokered deposits absent a waiver from the 
FDIC, are subject to growth limitations, and are required to submit capital
restoration plans for regulatory approval. A depository 
institution's holding company must guarantee any required capital restoration
plan up to an amount equal to the lesser of 5% of 
the depository institution's assets at the time it becomes undercapitalized
or the amount of the capital deficiency when the 
institution fails to comply with the plan. Federal banking agencies may not
accept a capital plan without determining, among 
other things, that the plan is based on realistic assumptions and is likely to
succeed in restoring the depository institution's capital. 
If a depository institution fails to submit an acceptable plan, it is treated as if it is significantly
undercapitalized. 
To be well-capitalized,
the Bank must maintain at least the following capital ratios: 
6.5% CET1 to risk-weighted assets; 
8.0% Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets; 
10.0% Total capital to
risk-weighted assets; and 
5.0% leverage ratio. 
The Federal Reserve has not yet revised the well-capitalized standard
for bank holding companies to reflect the higher capital 
requirements imposed under the current capital rules applicable to
banks. For purposes of the Federal Reserves
Regulation 
Y, 
including determining whether a bank holding company meets the requirements
to be a financial holding company,
bank holding 
companies, such as the Company,
must maintain a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 6.0%
or greater and a total risk-based capital 
ratio of 10.0% or greater to be well-capitalized. Also, the Federal Reserve
may require bank holding companies, including the 
Company, to maintain
capital ratios substantially in excess of mandated minimum levels depending
upon general economic 
conditions and a bank holding companys
particular condition, risk profile, and growth plans. 
Failure to be well-capitalized or to meet minimum capital requirements
could result in certain mandatory and possible additional 
discretionary actions by regulators that, if undertaken, could have an adverse
material effect on our operations or financial 
condition. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements could also result
in restrictions on the Companys
or the Banks ability 
to pay dividends or otherwise distribute capital or to receive regulatory
approval of applications or other restrictions on its growth. 
In 2025, the Companys and
the Banks regulatory capital ratios were above
the applicable well-capitalized standards and met the 
capital conservation buffer.
Based on current estimates, we expect the Company and the Bank to exceed
all applicable well-
capitalized regulatory capital requirements and the capital conservation
buffer in 2026. 
Payment of Dividends 
We 
are a legal entity separate and distinct from the Bank and our other subsidiaries.
Under the laws of the State of Florida, we, as 
a business corporation, may declare and pay dividends in cash or property
unless the payment or declaration would be contrary to 
restrictions contained in our Articles of Incorporation, or unless, after
payment of the dividend, we would not be able to pay our 
debts when they become due in the usual course of our business or our
total assets would be less than the sum of our total 
liabilities. In addition, we are also subject to federal regulatory capital requirements
that effectively limit the amount of cash 
dividends that we may pay. 
16 
Under a Federal Reserve policy adopted in 2009, the board of directors
of a bank holding company must consider different factors 
to ensure that its dividend level is prudent relative to maintaining a strong
financial position and is not based on overly optimistic 
earnings scenarios, such as potential events that could affect its ability
to pay, while still maintaining
a strong financial position. 
As a general matter, the Federal Reserve has indicated
that the board of directors of a bank holding company should consult with 
the Federal Reserve and eliminate, defer,
or significantly reduce the bank holding companys
dividends if: 
its net income available to shareholders for the past four quarters, net
of dividends previously paid during that period, is 
not sufficient to fully fund the dividends; 
its prospective rate of earnings retention is not consistent with its capital needs and
overall current and prospective 
financial condition; or 
it will not meet, or is in danger of not meeting, its minimum regulatory capital
adequacy ratios. 
The primary sources of funds for our payment of dividends to our shareholders
are cash on hand and dividends from the Bank and 
our non-bank subsidiaries. The Bank is subject to legal limitations on
the frequency and amount of dividends that can be paid to 
the Company. The
Federal Reserve may restrict the ability of the Bank to pay dividends if such payments would
constitute an 
unsafe or unsound banking practice.
In addition, Florida law and Federal regulation place restrictions on the declaration
of dividends from state-chartered banks to 
their holding companies. Under the Florida Financial Institutions Code,
the board of directors of a state-chartered bank, after it 
charges off bad debts, depreciation and other
worthless assets, if any, and makes provisions
for reasonably anticipated future 
losses on loans and other assets, may quarterly,
semi-annually or annually declare a dividend of up to the aggregate net profits of 
that period combined with the banks
retained net profits for the preceding two years. In addition, with the approval of the Florida 
OFR and Federal Reserve, the banks
board of directors may declare a dividend from retained net profits which
accrued prior to 
the preceding two years. Before declaring such dividends, 20% of the net profits for
the preceding period as is covered by the 
dividend must be transferred to the surplus fund of the bank until this fund becomes
equal to the amount of the banks common 
stock then issued and outstanding. However,
a Florida state-chartered bank may not declare any dividend if (i) its net income 
(loss) from the current year combined with the retained net income (loss) for
the preceding two years aggregates a loss or (ii) the 
payment of such dividend would cause the capital account of the bank
to fall below the minimum amount required by law, 
regulation, order or any written agreement with the Florida OFR or a federal
regulatory agency. Under
Federal Reserve 
regulations, a state member bank may,
without the prior approval of the Federal Reserve, pay a dividend in an amount that, when 
taken together with all dividends declared during the calendar year,
does not exceed the sum of the banks net
income during the 
current calendar year and the retained net income of the prior two calendar years.
The Federal Reserve may approve greater 
amounts. 
In addition, we and the Bank are subject to various general regulatory policies
and requirements relating to the payment of 
dividends, including requirements to maintain adequate capital above
regulatory minimums. The Federal Reserve has indicated 
that paying dividends that deplete a banks
capital base to an inadequate level would be an unsafe and unsound banking
practice. 
The Federal Reserve has indicated that depository institutions and their
holding companies should generally pay dividends only 
out of current operating earnings. 
Safe and Sound Banking Practices 
Bank holding companies and their nonbanking subsidiaries are prohibited
from engaging in activities that represent unsafe and 
unsound banking practices or that constitute a violation of law or regulations.
Under certain conditions the Federal Reserve may 
conclude that some actions of a bank holding company,
such as a payment of a cash dividend, would constitute an unsafe and 
unsound banking practice. The Federal Reserve also has the authority
to regulate the debt of bank holding companies, including 
the authority to impose interest rate ceilings and reserve requirements on
such debt. The Federal Reserve may also require a bank 
holding company to file written notice and obtain its approval prior to purchasing
or redeeming its equity securities, unless certain 
conditions are met.
Capital City Bank 
Capital City Bank is a state-chartered commercial banking institution that is chartered
by and headquartered in the State of Florida 
and is subject to supervision and regulation by the Florida OFR. The Florida OFR supervises and
regulates all areas of our 
operations including, without limitation, the making of loans, the issuance of
securities, the conduct of our corporate affairs, the 
satisfaction of capital adequacy requirements, the payment of dividends,
and the establishment or closing of banking centers. We 
are also a member bank of the Federal Reserve System, which makes our operations
subject to broad federal regulation and 
oversight by the Federal Reserve. In addition, our deposit accounts are insured
by the FDIC up to the maximum extent permitted 
by law, and the FDIC has certain
supervisory enforcement powers over us.
17 
As a Florida state-chartered bank, we are empowered by statute, subject to
the limitations contained in those statutes, to take and 
pay interest on savings and time deposits, to accept demand deposits, to
make loans on residential and other real estate, to make 
consumer and commercial loans, to invest (with certain limitations) in equity securities
and in debt obligations of banks and 
corporations and to provide various other banking services for the benefit
of our clients. Various
consumer laws and regulations 
also affect our operations, including state usury laws, laws relating to
fiduciaries, consumer credit and equal credit opportunity 
laws, and fair credit reporting. In addition, FDICIA prohibits insured state-chartered
institutions from conducting activities as 
principal that are not permitted for national banks. A bank, however,
may engage in certain otherwise prohibited activity if it 
meets its minimum capital requirements and the FDIC determines that the
activity does not present a significant risk to the DIF. 
Safety and Soundness Standards / Risk Management 
The Federal Deposit Insurance Act requires the federal bank regulatory
agencies to prescribe, by regulation or guideline, 
operational and managerial standards for all insured depository institutions
relating to: (i) internal controls; (ii) information 
systems and audit systems; (iii) loan documentation; (iv) credit underwriting;
(v) interest rate risk exposure; and (vi) asset quality. 
The federal banking agencies have adopted regulations and Interagency
Guidelines Establishing Standards for Safety and 
Soundness to implement these required standards. These guidelines set forth
the safety and soundness standards used to identify 
and address problems at insured depository institutions before capital
becomes impaired. Under the regulations, if a regulator 
determines that a bank fails to meet any standards prescribed by
the guidelines, the regulator may require the bank to submit an 
acceptable plan to achieve compliance, consistent with deadlines for
the submission and review of such safety and soundness 
compliance plans. 
The bank regulatory agencies have increasingly emphasized the importance
of sound risk management processes and strong 
internal controls when evaluating the activities of the financial institutions they
supervise. Properly managing risks has been 
identified as critical to the conduct of safe and sound banking activities and has
become even more important as new 
technologies, product innovation and the size and speed of financial transactions have
changed the nature of banking markets. The 
agencies have identified a spectrum of risks facing a banking institution including,
but not limited to, credit, market, liquidity, 
operational, legal and reputational risk. A particular area of focus for regulators
has been operational risk, which arises from the 
potential that inadequate information systems, operational problems,
breaches in internal controls, fraud or unforeseen 
catastrophes will result in unexpected losses. New products and services, third
party risk management and cybersecurity are 
critical sources of operational risk that financial institutions are expected
to address in the current environment. The Bank is 
expected to have active board and senior management oversight; adequate
policies, procedures and limits; adequate risk 
measurement, monitoring and management information systems; and
comprehensive internal controls. 
Insurance of Accounts and Other Assessments
The Banks deposits are insured
by the FDICs DIF up to the limits under
applicable law, which currently
are set at $250,000 per 
depositor, per insured bank, for each account
ownership category. The Bank
is subject to FDIC assessments for its deposit 
insurance. The FDIC calculates quarterly deposit insurance assessments based
on an institutions average
total consolidated assets 
less its average tangible equity and applies one of four risk categories determined
by reference to its capital levels, supervisory 
ratings, and certain other factors. The assessment rate schedule can change
from time to time, at the discretion of the FDIC, 
subject to certain limits.
As of June 30, 2020, the DIF reserve ratio fell to 1.30%, below the statutory
minimum of 1.35%. The FDIC, as required under the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, established a plan on September 15, 2020
to restore the DIF reserve ratio to meet or exceed the 
statutory minimum of 1.35% within eight years. On October 18, 2022,
the FDIC adopted an amended restoration plan to increase 
the likelihood that the reserve ratio would be restored to at least 1.35% by September
30, 2028. The FDIC's amended restoration 
plan increased the initial base deposit insurance assessment rate schedules
uniformly by 2 bps, beginning with the first quarterly 
assessment period of 2023. The FDIC could further increase the deposit
insurance assessments for certain insured depository 
institutions, including the Bank, if the DIF reserve ratio is not restored as projected.
In November 2023, the FDIC approved a final rule to implement a special assessment to
recover the loss to the DIF associated 
with several bank failures that occurred during the first half of 2023. The assessment base
for the special assessment is equal to a 
bank's uninsured deposits reported as of December 31, 2022, adjusted
to exclude the first $5 billion, to be collected at an annual 
rate of approximately 13.4 bps for an anticipated total of eight quarterly
assessment periods, beginning with the first quarterly 
assessment period of 2024. The final rule does not apply to any banking organization
with less than $5 billion in total 
consolidated assets and therefore the special assessment did not directly
impact the Bank. 
18 
Insurance of deposits may be terminated by the FDIC upon a finding that the
institution has engaged in unsafe and unsound 
practices, is in an unsafe or unsound condition to continue operations, or has violated
any applicable law, regulation,
rule, order, 
or condition imposed by a banks federal
regulatory agency. In addition,
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act provides that, in the 
event of the liquidation or other resolution of an insured depository institution,
the claims of depositors of the institution, 
including the claims of the FDIC as subrogee of insured depositors, and certain
claims for administrative expenses of the FDIC as 
a receiver, will have priority over other general
unsecured claims against the institution, including those of the parent bank 
holding company. 
Transactions with Affiliates and
Insiders 
The Bank is subject to restrictions on extensions of credit and certain
other transactions between the Bank and the Company or 
any nonbank affiliate. Generally,
these covered transactions with either the Company or any affiliate
are limited to 10% of the 
Banks capital and surplus, and all such
transactions between the Bank and the Company and all of its nonbank affiliates 
combined are limited to 20% of the Banks
capital and surplus. Loans and other extensions of credit from the Bank to the 
Company or any affiliate generally are required
to be secured by eligible collateral in specified amounts. In addition, any 
transaction between the Bank and the Company or any affiliate are
required to be on an arms length
basis. Federal banking laws 
also place similar restrictions on certain extensions of credit by insured banks,
such as the Bank, to their directors, executive 
officers, and principal shareholders. 
Anti-Tying Restrictions
In general, a bank may not extend credit, lease, sell property,
or furnish any services or fix or vary the consideration for them on 
the condition that (i) the client obtain or provide some additional credit, property,
or services from or to the bank or bank holding 
company or their subsidiaries or (ii) the client not obtain some other credit, property,
or services from a competitor, except to the 
extent reasonable conditions are imposed to assure the soundness of
the credit extended. A bank may,
however, offer combined-
balance products and may otherwise offer more favorable
terms if a client obtains two or more traditional bank products. The law 
also expressly permits banks to engage in other forms of tying and authorizes
the Federal Reserve Board to grant additional 
exceptions by regulation or order.
Also, certain foreign transactions are exempt from the general rule. 
Community Reinvestment Act 
The Bank is subject to the provisions of the CRA, which imposes a continuing and affirmative
obligation, consistent with safe and 
sound operation, to help meet the credit needs of entire communities where the
bank accepts deposits, including low- and 
moderate-income neighborhoods. The Federal Reserves
assessment of the Banks CRA record
is made available to the public. 
CRA agreements with private parties must be disclosed and annual
CRA reports must be made to the Federal Reserve. A bank 
holding company will not be permitted to become or remain a financial
holding company and no new activities authorized under 
GLB may be commenced by a holding company or by a bank financial subsidiary
if any of its bank subsidiaries received less than 
a satisfactory CRA rating in its latest CRA examination. Federal CRA regulations
require, among other things, that evidence of 
discrimination against applicants on a prohibited basis and illegal or abusive lending
practices be considered in the CRA 
evaluation. The Bank has a rating of Satisfactory in its most recent CRA evaluation. 
In 2023 the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC issued a final rule to modernize their
respective CRA regulations. The revised rules 
would substantially alter the methodology for assessing compliance with
the CRA, with material aspects taking effect January
1, 
2026 and revised data reporting requirements taking effect
January 1, 2027. The revised CRA regulations have been subject to an 
injunction since March 29, 2024. On July 16, 2025, the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC
issued a joint proposal to rescind the 
2023 modernization rule. The agencies continue to apply the CRA rules as they existed
before the 2023 modernization, 
considering the injunction and pending finalization of the recission of the modernization
rule. 
Commercial Real Estate Concentration Guidelines
The federal banking regulators have implemented guidelines to address
increased concentrations in commercial real estate loans. 
These guidelines describe the criteria regulatory agencies will use as indicators
to identify institutions potentially exposed to 
commercial real estate concentration risk. An institution that has (i) experienced
rapid growth in commercial real estate lending, 
(ii) notable exposure to a specific type of
commercial real estate, (iii) total reported loans for construction, land development,
and 
other land representing 100% or more of total risk-based capital, or (iv)
total commercial real estate (including construction) loans 
representing 300% or more of total risk-based capital and the outstanding
balance of the institutions commercial real estate 
portfolio has increased by 50% or more in the prior 36 months, may be identified
for further supervisory analysis of a potential 
concentration risk.
19 
At December 31, 2025, CCBs ratio
of construction, land development and other land loans to total tier 1 risk-based
capital was 
49%, its ratio of commercial real estate loans to total tier 1 risk-based capital was 119%
and, therefore, CCB was under the 100% 
and 300% thresholds, respectively,
set forth in clauses (iii) and (iv) above.
As a result, we are not deemed to have a concentration 
in commercial real estate lending under applicable regulatory guidelines. 
Interstate Banking and Branching 
The Dodd-Frank Act relaxed interstate branching restrictions by modifying
the federal statute governing de novo interstate 
branching by state member banks. Consequently,
a state member bank may open its initial branch in a state outside of the banks 
home state by way of an interstate bank branch, so long as a bank chartered under
the laws of that state would be permitted to 
open a branch at that location.
Anti-money Laundering 
A continued focus of governmental policy relating to financial institutions in recent
years has been combating money laundering 
and terrorist financing. The USA PATRIOT
Act broadened the application of anti-money laundering
regulations to apply to 
additional types of financial institutions such as broker-dealers, investment advisors,
and insurance companies, and strengthened 
the ability of the U.S. government to help prevent, detect, and prosecute
international money laundering and the financing of 
terrorism. The principal provisions of Title
III of the USA PATRIOT
Act require that regulated financial institutions, including 
state member banks: (i) establish an anti-money laundering program
that includes training and audit components; (ii) comply with 
regulations regarding the verification of the identity of any person seeking
to open an account; (iii) take additional required 
precautions with non-U.S. owned accounts; and (iv) perform certain
verification and certification of money laundering risk for 
their foreign correspondent banking relationships. Failure of a
financial institution to comply with the USA PATRIOT
Acts 
requirements could have serious legal and reputational consequences
for the institution. The Bank has augmented its systems and 
procedures to meet the requirements of these regulations and will continue
to revise and update its policies, procedures, and 
controls to reflect changes required by law. 
FinCEN has adopted rules that require financial institutions to obtain beneficial
ownership information with respect to legal 
entities with which such institutions conduct business, subject to certain exclusions
and exemptions. Bank regulators are focusing 
their examinations on anti-money laundering compliance, and we continue
to monitor and augment, where necessary,
our anti-
money laundering compliance programs. Banking regulators will consider
compliance with the USA PATRIOT
Acts money 
laundering provisions in acting upon merger and acquisition
proposals. Bank regulators routinely examine institutions for 
compliance with these obligations and have been active in imposing
cease and desist and other regulatory orders and civil money 
penalties against institutions found to be violating these obligations.
Sanctions for violations of the USA PATRIOT
Act can be 
imposed in an amount equal to twice the sum involved in the violating transaction
up to $1 million. The Anti-Money Laundering 
Act (AMLA), which amends the BSA, was enacted in early 2021. The AMLA
is intended to be a comprehensive reform and 
modernization of U.S. bank secrecy and anti-money laundering
laws. In particular, it codifies a risk-based approach
to anti-money 
laundering compliance for financial institutions, requires the U.S. Department
of the Treasury to promulgate priorities for anti-
money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism policy,
requires the development of standards for testing technology 
and internal processes for BSA compliance, expands enforcement
-
and investigation-related authority (including increasing 
available sanctions for certain BSA violations), and expands BSA whistleblower
incentives and protections. 
Many AMLA provisions require additional rulemakings, reports,
and other measures, and the impact of the AMLA will depend 
on, among other things, rulemaking and implementation
guidance. In June 2021, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, a 
bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury,
issued the priorities for anti-money laundering and countering the financing of 
terrorism policy required under the AMLA. The priorities include corruption,
cybercrime, terrorist financing, fraud, transnational 
crime, drug trafficking, human trafficking
and proliferation financing. 
Economic Sanctions 
OFAC is responsible
for helping to ensure that U.S. entities do not engage in transactions with certain
prohibited parties, as 
defined by various executive orders and acts of Congress. OFAC
publishes, and routinely updates, lists of names of persons and 
organizations suspected of aiding, harboring, or engaging
in terrorist acts, including the Specially Designated Nationals and 
Blocked Persons List. If we find a name on any transaction, account, or wire transfer
that is on an OFAC list, we must undertake 
certain specified activities, which could include blocking or freezing
the account or transaction requested, and we must notify the 
appropriate authorities. 
20 
Privacy, Credit Reporting, and Data Security 
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB) generally prohibits disclosure
of non-public consumer information to non-affiliated third 
parties unless the consumer has been given the opportunity to object and
has not objected to such disclosure. Financial institutions 
are further required to disclose their privacy policies to clients annually.
Financial institutions, however, will be required
to 
comply with state law if it is more protective of consumer privacy than the
GLB. The GLB also directed federal regulators to 
prescribe standards for the security of consumer information. The
Bank is subject to such standards, as well as standards for 
notifying clients in the event of a security breach. The Bank utilizes credit bureau
data in underwriting activities. Use of such data 
is regulated under the Fair Credit Reporting Act and Regulation V on
a uniform, nationwide basis, including credit reporting, 
prescreening, and sharing of information between affiliates
and the use of credit data. The Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions 
Act, which amended the Fair Credit Reporting Act, permits states to enact identity
theft laws that are not inconsistent with the 
conduct required by the provisions of that Act. Clients must be notified
when unauthorized disclosure involves sensitive client 
information that may be misused. On November 18, 2021, the federal
banking agencies issued a new rule effective in 2022 that 
requires banks to notify their primary federal regulator within 36
hours of a computer-security incident that rises to the level of 
a notification incident. In addition, effective in December 2023,
the SEC issued a new rule that generally requires SEC 
registrants to disclose on Form 8-K certain information about a material
cybersecurity incident within four business days of 
determining it is material, with periodic updates as to the status of the incident in
subsequent filings, as necessary.
The SEC rule 
also requires registrants to disclose certain information concerning
cybersecurity risk management, strategy and governance on 
Form 10-K. 
The federal banking regulators regularly issue guidance regarding
cybersecurity intended to enhance cyber risk management 
standards among financial institutions. As a result, financial institutions, like the
Company and the Bank, are expected to establish 
multiple lines of defense and to ensure their risk management processes address
the risk posed by potential threats to the 
institution. A financial institutions
management is expected to maintain sufficient processes to effectively
respond and recover 
the institutions operations after
a cyber-attack. A financial institution is also expected to develop
appropriate processes to enable 
recovery of data and business operations if a critical service provider
of the institution falls victim to this type of cyber-attack. In 
addition, effective in December 2023, the SEC enhanced and standardized
the disclosure obligations related to a registrant's 
cybersecurity risk management, strategy,
and governance. Our information security protocols are designed in part to adhere to
the 
requirements of bank regulatory guidance and these enhanced SEC disclosure requirements.
See "Part I - Item 1C. Cybersecurity" 
of this Report for additional information on cybersecurity. 
State regulators have also been increasingly active in implementing privacy
and cybersecurity standards and regulations. 
Recently, several states have
adopted regulations requiring certain financial institutions to implement
cybersecurity programs and 
providing detailed requirements with respect to these programs, including data
encryption requirements. Many states have also 
recently implemented or modified their data breach notification and data
privacy requirements. We
expect this trend of state-level 
activity in those areas to continue and are continually monitoring developments in
the states in which our clients are located. 
See Item 1A. Risk Factors for a further discussion of risks related to cybersecurity
and Item 1C. Cybersecurity for a further 
discussion of risk management strategies and governance processes related to
cybersecurity. 
21 
Consumer Laws and Regulations 
Activities of the Bank are subject to a variety of statutes and regulations designed
to protect consumers. These laws and 
regulations include, among numerous other things, provisions that: 
limit the interest and other charges collected or contracted for by
the Bank, including rules respecting the terms of credit 
cards and of debit card overdrafts; 
govern the Banks disclosures of
credit terms to consumer borrowers; 
require the Bank to provide information to enable the public and public officials
to determine whether it is fulfilling its 
obligation to help meet the housing needs of the communities it serves; 
prohibit the Bank from discriminating on the basis of race, creed, or other prohibited
factors when it makes decisions to 
extend credit; 
govern the manner in which the Bank may collect consumer debts; and 
prohibit unfair, deceptive, or abusive
acts or practices in the provision of consumer financial products and services. 
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) adopted a rule
that implements the ability-to-repay and qualified mortgage 
provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act (the ATR/QM
rule), which requires lenders to consider,
among other things, income, 
employment status, assets, payment amounts, and credit history before
approving a mortgage, and provides a compliance safe 
harbor for lenders that issue certain qualified mortgages. The ATR/QM
rule defines a qualified mortgage to have certain 
specified characteristics and generally prohibits loans with negative amortization,
interest-only payments, balloon payments, or 
terms exceeding 30 years from being qualified mortgages. The
rule also establishes general underwriting criteria for qualified 
mortgages, including that monthly payments be calculated based on the highest
payment that will apply in the first five years of 
the loan and that the borrower have a total debt-to-income ratio that is less than or
equal to 43%. While qualified mortgages will 
generally be afforded safe harbor status, a rebuttable presumption
of compliance with the ability-to-repay requirements will attach 
to qualified mortgages that are higher priced mortgages (which are generally
subprime loans). In addition, the securitizer of 
asset-backed securities must retain not less than 5% of the credit risk of the assets collateralizing
the asset-backed securities, 
unless subject to an exemption for asset-backed securities that are collateralized
exclusively by residential mortgages that qualify 
as qualified residential mortgages. 
The CFPB has also issued rules to implement requirements of the Dodd-Frank
Act pertaining to mortgage loan origination 
(including with respect to loan originator compensation and loan originator qualifications)
as well as integrated mortgage 
disclosure rules. In addition, the CFPB has issued rules that require servicers
to comply with certain standards and practices with 
regard to error correction; information disclosure; force-placement
of insurance; information management policies and 
procedures; requiring information about mortgage loss mitigation options be
provided to delinquent borrowers; providing 
delinquent borrowers access to servicer personnel with continuity of contact
about the borrowers mortgage loan account; and 
evaluating borrowers applications for available loss mitigation options. These
rules also address initial rate adjustment notices for 
adjustable-rate mortgages, periodic statements for residential mortgage
loans, and prompt crediting of mortgage payments and 
response to requests for payoff amounts. 
Future Legislative Developments 
Various
bills are from time to time introduced in the U.S. Congress and the Florida legislature.
This legislation may change 
banking and tax statutes and the environment in which our banking subsidiary
and we operate in substantial and unpredictable 
ways. We cannot
determine the ultimate effect that potential legislation, if enacted, or
implementing regulations with respect 
thereto, would have upon our financial condition or results of operations or
that of our banking subsidiary. 
Effect of Governmental Monetary Policies 
The commercial banking business is affected not only by general
economic conditions, but also by the monetary policies of the 
Federal Reserve. Changes in the discount rate on member bank borrowing,
availability of borrowing at the discount window, 
open market operations, changes in the Fed Funds target
interest rate, changes in interest rates payable on reserve accounts, the 
imposition of changes in reserve requirements against member banks deposits
and assets of foreign banking centers and the 
imposition of and changes in reserve requirements against certain borrowings
by banks and their affiliates are some of the 
instruments of monetary policy available to the Federal Reserve. These monetary
policies are used in varying combinations to 
influence overall growth and distributions of bank loans, investments and deposits,
which may affect interest rates charged on 
loans or paid on deposits. The monetary policies of the Federal Reserve have
had a significant effect on the operating results of 
commercial banks and are expected to continue to do so in the future. The
Federal Reserves policies are primarily
influenced by 
its dual mandate of price stability and full employment, and, to a lesser degree by
short-term and long-term changes in the 
international trade balance and in the fiscal policies of the U.S. Government. Future
changes in monetary policy and the effect of 
such changes on our business and earnings in the future cannot be predicted. 
22 
Website Access to Companys
Reports 
Our Internet website is www.ccbg.com.
Our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q,
current reports on 
Form 8-K, including any amendments to those reports filed or furnished pursuant
to section 13(a) or 15(d), and reports filed 
pursuant to Section 16, 13(d), and 13(g) of the Exchange Act are available
free of charge through our website as soon as 
reasonably practicable after they are electronically filed with, or furnished
to, the SEC.
The information on our website is not 
incorporated by reference into this report. 
23 
Item 1A.
Risk Factors 
An investment in our common stock contains a high degree
of risk. You should
consider carefully the following risk factors before 
deciding whether to invest in our common stock. Our business, including
our operating results and financial condition, could be 
harmed by any of these risks. Additional risks and uncertainties not currently
known to us or that we currently deem to be 
immaterial also may materially and adversely affect our business. The trading
price of our common stock could decline due to 
any of these risks, and you may lose all or part of your investment. In assessing these risks,
you should also refer to the other 
information contained in our filings with the SEC, including our financial
statements and related notes.
Market Risks 
We may incur losses if we are
unable to successfully manage interest rate risk. 
Our profitability depends to a large extent on Capital City Banks
net interest income, which is the difference between income on 
interest-earning assets, such as loans and investment securities, and
expense on interest-bearing liabilities such as deposits and 
borrowings. We
are unable to predict changes in market interest rates, which are affected
by many factors beyond our control, 
including inflation, changes in trade policies by the United States or other
countries, such as tariffs or retaliatory tariffs, recession, 
unemployment, federal funds target rate, money supply,
domestic and international events and changes in the United States and 
other financial markets. Our net interest income may be reduced if: (i) more
interest-earning assets than interest-bearing liabilities 
reprice or mature during a time when interest rates are declining or (ii) more interest-bearing
liabilities than interest-earning assets 
reprice or mature during a time when interest rates are rising.
Changes in the difference between short-term
and long-term interest rates may also harm our business. We
generally use short-
term deposits to fund longer-term assets. When interest rates change,
assets and liabilities with shorter terms reprice more quickly 
than those with longer terms, which could have a material adverse effect
on our net interest margin. During 2022 and 2023, the 
Federal Reserve raised the federal funds rate 11
times for a cumulative increase of 5.25%. In 2024, the Federal Reserve began 
lowering the federal funds rate and lowered it three times during the year for a cumulative
decrease of 1.00%. We
are currently 
operating in an environment in which the Federal Reserve has shifted toward reducing
interest rates, although modestly,
with cuts 
implemented in September, October
and December 2025.
However, the inflationary outlook remains uncertain
and if the Federal 
Reserve were to further decrease interest rates, this may constrain our interest
rate spread due to our asset sensitivity and may 
adversely affect our business forecasts. On the other hand,
rapid increases in the target federal funds rate may result in a change
in 
the mix of noninterest and interest-bearing accounts and effect
our interest rate spread. New appointments to the Board of 
Governors at the Federal Reserve could result in a change in monetary policy
and interest rates, and the potential erosion of 
Federal Reserve independence could negatively impact financial markets
and impact our profitability.
We are unable to
predict 
changes in interest rates, which are affected by factors beyond
our control, including inflation, deflation, recession, 
unemployment, money supply and other changes in financial markets. 
Although we continuously monitor interest rates and have a number
of tools to manage our interest rate risk exposure, changes in 
market assumptions regarding future interest rates could significantly impact our
interest rate risk strategy, our financial
position 
and results of operations. If we do not properly monitor our interest rate risk management
strategies, these activities may not 
effectively mitigate our interest rate sensitivity or have the desired
impact on our results of operations or financial condition. 
Interest rates and economic conditions affect consumer
demand for housing and can create volatility in the mortgage industry.
These risks can have a material impact on the volume of mortgage originations
and refinancings, adversely affecting mortgage 
banking revenues and the profitability of our mortgage banking business.
See Item 7.
Managements Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations under the section captioned 
Net Interest Income and Market Risk and Interest Rate Sensitivity elsewhere
in this report for further discussion related to 
interest rate sensitivity and our management of interest rate risk. 
The impact of interest rates on our mortgage banking business can
have a significant impact on revenues.
Changes in interest rates can impact our mortgage-related revenues and net revenues
associated with our mortgage activities.
A 
decline in mortgage rates generally increases the demand for mortgage loans
as borrowers refinance, but also generally leads to 
accelerated payoffs. Conversely,
in a constant or increasing rate environment, we would expect fewer loans to be refinanced
and a 
decline in payoffs. Although we use models to assess the impact
of interest rates on mortgage-related revenues, the estimates of 
revenues produced by these models are dependent on estimates and assumptions
of future loan demand, prepayment speeds and 
other factors which may differ from actual subsequent
experience. 
24 
Inflationary pressures and rising prices may
affect our results of operations and financial condition. 
Small to medium-sized businesses may be impacted more during periods
of high inflation as they are not able to leverage 
economies of scale to mitigate cost pressures compared to larger
businesses. Consequently, the
ability of our business customers 
to repay their loans may deteriorate, and in some cases this deterioration may occur
quickly, which would adversely impact
our 
results of operations and financial condition. Furthermore, a prolonged
period of inflation could cause wages and other costs to 
further increase which could adversely affect our results of
operations and financial condition. Sustained higher interest rates by 
the Federal Reserve may be needed to tame persistent inflationary price
pressures, which could push down asset prices and 
weaken economic activity.
A deterioration in economic conditions in the United States and our markets could result in
an increase 
in loan delinquencies and non-performing assets, decreases in loan collateral
values and a decrease in demand for our products 
and services, all of which, in turn, would adversely affect our business,
financial condition and results of operations. 
Our profitability depends significantly on economic
conditions in the States of Florida and Georgia. 
Our profitability and the success of our business depends substantially on the general
economic conditions of the States of Florida 
and, to a lesser extent, Georgia, as well as the specific local markets in
which we operate. Unlike larger national or other regional 
banks that are more geographically diversified, we provide banking
and financial services primarily to customers across northern 
Florida and Georgia. The local economic conditions in
these areas have a significant impact on the demand for our products and 
services as well as the ability of our customers to repay loans, the value of the
collateral securing loans and the stability of our 
deposit funding sources. As a result, a significant decline in general economic
conditions in Florida or Georgia, whether caused 
by recession, inflation, unemployment, in-flows and out-flows of residents,
shifts in political landscape, changes in securities 
markets, acts of terrorism, pandemics, natural disasters, climate change,
outbreak of hostilities or other occurrences or other 
factors could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial
condition and results of operations. 
Changes in customer behavior may have a negative impact on our business, financial
condition, and results of operations.
Individual,
economic,
political, industry
-specific
conditions and
other factors
outside of
our
control,
such as
fuel prices,
energy 
costs,
real
estate
values,
inflation,
tariffs
and
trade
wars,
taxes
or
other
factors
that
affect
customer
income
levels,
could
alter 
anticipated
customer
behavior,
including
borrowing,
repayment,
investment
and
deposit
practices.
Such
a
change
in
these 
practices
could
materially
adversely
affect
our
ability
to
anticipate
business
needs
and
meet
regulatory
requirements.
Further, 
difficult economic conditions may
negatively affect consumer confidence
levels. A decrease in consumer confidence
levels would 
likely aggravate the adverse effects of these difficult
market conditions on us and our customers.
The fair value of our investments could decline, which would cause a reduction
in shareowners equity. 
A portion of our investment securities portfolio (62.9%) at December
31, 2025 has been designated as available-for-sale pursuant 
to U.S. generally accepted accounting principles relating to accounting for
investments. Such principles require that unrealized 
gains and losses in the estimated value of the available-for-sale
portfolio be marked to market and reflected as a separate item in 
shareowners equity (net of tax) as accumulated other comprehensive
income/losses. Shareowners equity will continue to reflect 
the unrealized gains and losses (net of tax) of these investments. The fair value
of our investment portfolio may decline, causing a 
corresponding decline in shareowners equity. 
Management believes that several factors will affect the
fair values of our investment portfolio. These include, but are not limited 
to, changes in interest rates or expectations of changes in interest rates, the degree
of volatility in the securities markets, inflation 
rates or expectations of inflation and the slope of the interest rate yield curve
(the yield curve refers to the differences between 
short-term and long-term interest rates; a positively sloped yield curve means short
-term rates are lower than long-term rates). 
These and other factors may impact specific categories of the portfolio differently,
and we cannot predict the effect these factors 
may have on any specific category. 
Shares of our common stock are not an insured
deposit and may lose value.
The shares of our common stock are not a bank deposit and will not be insured or guaranteed
by the FDIC or any other 
government agency.
Your
investment will be subject to investment risk, and you must be capable of affording the
loss of your 
entire investment. 
Limited trading activity for shares of our common stock may
contribute to price volatility. 
While our common stock is listed and traded on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, there
has historically been limited trading 
activity in our common stock.
The average daily trading volume of our common stock over the 12-month
period ending 
December 31, 2025 was approximately 37,371 shares. Due to the limited
trading activity of our common stock, relativity small 
trades may have a significant impact on the price of our common stock. Similarly,
significant sales of our common stock, or the 
expectation of these sales, could cause our stock prices to fall. 
25 
Securities analysts may not initiate coverage or continue to cover our common
stock, and this may have a negative impact 
on its market price. 
The trading market for our common stock will depend in part on the research
and reports that securities analysts publish about us 
and our business. We do
not have any control over securities analysts, and they may not initiate coverage
or continue to cover our 
common stock. If any securities analysts covering our common stock publishes
an unfavorable report, our stock price would 
likely decline. If one or more of analysts covering our common stock ceases to cover
our Company or fails to publish regular 
reports on us, the lack of research coverage and lose of visibility in the financial
markets may cause our stock price or trading 
volume to decline. 
Credit Risks 
Our loan portfolio includes loans with a higher risk of loss which could lead to higher loan losses and nonperforming 
assets.
We originate
commercial real estate loans, commercial loans, construction loans, vacant land
loans, consumer loans, and 
residential mortgage loans primarily within our market area. Commercial
real estate, commercial, construction, vacant land, and 
consumer loans may expose a lender to greater credit risk than traditional
fixed-rate fully amortizing loans secured by residential 
real estate because the collateral securing these loans may not be sold as easily as residential
real estate. In addition, these loan 
types tend to involve larger loan balances to a single borrower or
groups of related borrowers and are more susceptible to a risk of 
loss during a downturn in the business cycle. These loans also have historically
had greater credit risk than other loans for the 
following reasons: 
Commercial Real Estate Loans
. Repayment is dependent on income being generated in amounts sufficient
to cover 
operating expenses and debt service. These loans also involve greater risk because
they are generally not fully amortizing 
over the loan period, but rather have a balloon payment due at maturity.
A borrowers ability to make a balloon payment 
typically will depend on the borrowers ability to either refinance
the loan or timely sell the underlying property.
Further, 
these loans generally are more affected by adverse conditions in the
economy. Because payments
on loans secured by 
commercial real estate often depend upon the successful operation and
management of the properties and the businesses 
which operate from within them, repayment of such loans may be affected
by factors outside the borrowers control, 
such as adverse conditions in the real estate market or the economy or changes
in government regulations.
At December 
31, 2025, commercial mortgage loans comprised approximately
30.2% of our total loan portfolio.
Commercial Loans
. Repayment is generally dependent upon the successful operation of the borrowers
business. In 
addition, the collateral securing the loans may depreciate over time, be
difficult to appraise, be illiquid, or fluctuate in 
value based on the success of the business. These loans are also sensitive to broader
economic conditions, competitive 
pressures, and industry-specific trends, any of which may disproportionately
impact certain segments during periods of 
stress and increase the likelihood of credit deterioration.
At December 31, 2025, commercial loans comprised 
approximately 7.1% of our total loan portfolio. 
Construction Loans
. The risk of loss is largely dependent on our initial estimate of whether
the propertys value at 
completion equals or exceeds the cost of property construction and the availability
of take-out financing. During the 
construction phase, a number of factors can result in delays or cost overruns. If
our estimate is inaccurate or if actual 
construction costs exceed estimates,
which could be impacted by factors outside of our control, including
tariff, trade, 
and immigration policies, the value of the property securing our
loan may be insufficient to ensure full repayment when 
completed through a permanent loan, sale of the property,
or by seizure of collateral.
At December 31, 2025, 
construction loans comprised approximately 5.8% of our total loan
portfolio. 
Vacant
Land Loans
. Because vacant or unimproved land is generally held by the borrower
for investment purposes or 
future use, payments on loans secured by vacant or unimproved land will typically
rank lower in priority to the borrower 
than a loan the borrower may have on their primary residence or business. These loans
are susceptible to adverse 
conditions in the real estate market and local economy.
At December 31, 2025, vacant land loans comprised 
approximately 3.8% of our total loan portfolio. 
HELOCs
. Our open-ended home equity loans have an interest-only draw period
followed by a five-year repayment 
period of 0.75% of the principal balance monthly and a balloon payment
at maturity. Upon the commencement
of the 
repayment period, the monthly payment can increase significantly,
thus, there is a heightened risk that the borrower will 
be unable to pay the increased payment. Further,
these loans also involve greater risk because they are generally not fully 
amortizing over the loan period but rather have a balloon payment due at maturity.
A borrowers ability to make a 
balloon payment may depend on the borrowers ability
to either refinance the loan or timely sell the underlying property.
At December 31, 2025, HELOCs comprised approximately 9.5% of
our total loan portfolio. 
26 
Consumer Loans
. Consumer loans (such as automobile loans and personal lines of
credit) are collateralized, if at all, 
with assets that may not provide an adequate source of payment of the loan due
to depreciation, damage, or loss. At 
December 31, 2025, consumer loans comprised approximately 7.2%
of our total loan portfolio, with indirect auto loans 
making up a majority of this portfolio at approximately 85.9% of the total balance. 
The increased risks associated with these types of loans result in a correspondingly
higher probability of default on such loans (as 
compared to fixed-rate fully amortizing single-family real estate loans).
Loan defaults would likely increase our loan losses and 
nonperforming assets and could adversely affect our allowance
for credit losses and our results of operations.
In addition, credit 
risk may be elevated by borrower or third party fraud, inaccuracies in financial
information, or misrepresentations in loan 
documentation. As seen across the banking industry,
evolving fraud schemes and greater digitization of financial transactions can 
increase the risk that loans are underwritten based on incomplete, inaccurate,
or falsified information, which may heighten the risk 
of unexpected credit losses. 
Our loan portfolio is heavily concentrated in mortgage loans secured
by properties in Florida and Georgia which causes 
our risk of loss to be higher than if we had a more geographically diversified
portfolio.
Our interest-earning assets are heavily concentrated in mortgage loans secured
by real estate, particularly real estate located in 
Florida and Georgia.
At December 31, 2025, approximately 85.7% of our loans included real estate as a primary,
secondary, or 
tertiary component of collateral. The real estate collateral in each case provides
an alternate source of repayment in the event of 
default by the borrower; however, the value
of the collateral may decline during the time the credit is extended. If we are required 
to liquidate the collateral securing a loan during a period of reduced real estate values
to satisfy the debt, our earnings and capital 
could be adversely affected. 
Additionally, at December
31, 2025, a significant number of our loans secured by real estate are secured by commercial and 
residential properties located in Florida and Georgia. The
concentration of our loans in these areas subjects us to risk that a 
downturn in the economy or recession in these areas could result in a decrease in
loan originations and increases in delinquencies 
and foreclosures, which would more greatly affect us than
if our lending were more geographically diversified. In addition, since 
a large portion of our portfolio is secured by properties located
in Florida and Georgia, the occurrence of a natural disaster,
such 
as a hurricane, or a man-made disaster could result in a decline in loan originations,
a decline in the value or destruction of 
mortgaged properties and an increase in the risk of delinquencies, foreclosures
or loss on loans originated by us. Severe weather 
events, catastrophic natural disasters, or other large-scale
disruptions may also rapidly impair collateral values and borrower 
repayment capacity across an entire geographic market, increasing both
credit losses and required credit-loss reserves. We
may 
suffer further losses due to the decline in the value of the properties underlying
our mortgage loans, which would have an adverse 
impact on our results of operations and financial condition. 
Our concentration in loans secured by real estate
may increase our credit losses, which would negatively
affect our 
financial results.
Due to the lack of diversified industry within some of the markets served by CCB and the relatively
close proximity of our 
geographic markets, we have both geographic concentrations as well as concentrations
in the types of loans funded. Specifically, 
due to the nature of our markets, a significant portion of the portfolio has historically
been secured with real estate. At December 
31, 2025, approximately 31.5% and 54.2% of our $2.546 billion loan
portfolio was secured by commercial real estate and 
residential real estate, respectively.
As of this same date, approximately 5.8% was secured by property under construction.
Due to 
the exposure in these concentrations, disruptions in markets, economic
conditions, changes in laws or regulations or other events 
could cause a significant impact on the ability of borrowers to repay and may
have a material adverse effect on our business, 
financial condition and results of operations. 
In weak economies, or in areas where real estate market conditions are distressed,
we may experience a higher than normal level 
of nonperforming real estate loans. The collateral value of the portfolio and the revenue stream
from those loans could come 
under stress, and additional provisions for the allowance for credit losses could
be necessitated. In the event we are required to 
foreclose on a property securing one of our mortgage loans or otherwise pursue
our remedies in order to protect our investment, 
we may be unable to recover funds in an amount equal to our projected return
on our investment or in an amount sufficient to 
prevent a loss to us due to prevailing economic conditions, real estate values and
other factors associated with the ownership of 
real property. As a result,
the market value of the real estate or other collateral underlying our loans may not, at any given
time, be 
sufficient to satisfy the outstanding principal amount of the
loans, and consequently, we would
sustain loan losses. 
27 
An inadequate allowance for credit losses would reduce our
earnings. 
We are exposed
to the risk that our clients may be unable to repay their loans according to their terms and
that any collateral 
securing the payment of their loans may not be sufficient
to assure full repayment. This could result in credit losses that are 
inherent in the lending business. We
evaluate the collectability of our loan portfolio and provide an allowance
for credit losses 
that we believe is adequate based upon such factors as: the risk characteristics of various
classifications of loans; previous loan 
loss experience; specific loans that have loss potential; delinquency trends;
estimated fair market value of the collateral; current 
and future economic conditions; and geographic and industry loan
concentrations. 
At December 31, 2025, our allowance for credit losses for loans held for investment
was $31.0 million, which represented 
approximately 1.22% of our total loans held for investment.
We had $8.6
million in nonaccruing loans at December 31, 2025.
We cannot provide
any assurance that our monitoring procedures and policies will reduce certain lending
risks, and while the 
allowance is based on managements
reasonable estimate and may not prove sufficient to cover future
loan losses.
Although 
management uses the best information available to make determinations
with respect to the allowance for credit losses, future 
adjustments may be necessary if economic conditions differ substantially
from the assumptions used or adverse developments 
arise with respect to our nonperforming or performing loans.
In addition, regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their 
examination process, periodically review our estimated losses on loans.
Our regulators may require us to recognize additional 
losses based on their judgments about information available to them at the time of
their examination.
Accordingly, the allowance 
for credit losses may not be adequate to cover all future loan losses and significant increases
to the allowance may be required in 
the future if, for example, economic conditions worsen.
A material increase in our allowance for credit losses would adversely 
impact our net income and capital in future periods, while having the effect
of overstating our current period earnings. 
Failures in the analytical
and forecasting models
relied upon for our
accounting estimates and risk
management processes
could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results
of operations.
The processes
we use
to estimate
our expected
credit losses and
to measure
the fair value
of financial
instruments, as
well as
the 
processes used
to estimate
the effects
of changing
interest rates
and other
market measures
on our
financial condition
and results 
of
operations,
depends
upon
the
use
of
analytical
and
forecasting
models.
These
models
reflect
assumptions
that
may
not
be 
accurate,
particularly
in
times
of
market
stress
or
other
unforeseen
circumstances.
Even
if
these
assumptions
are
adequate,
the 
models may
prove to
be inadequate
or inaccurate
because of
other flaws
in their
design or
their implementation,
including flaws 
caused by failures in controls, data management, human error
or from the reliance on technology.
If the models we use for interest 
rate
risk
and
asset-liability
management
are
inadequate,
we
may
incur
increased
or
unexpected
losses
upon
changes
in
market 
interest
rates
or
other
market
measures.
If
the
models
we
use
for
estimating
our
expected
credit
losses
are
inadequate,
the 
allowance for
credit losses
may not
be sufficient
to support
future charge-offs.
If the
models we
use to
measure the
fair value
of 
financial
instruments
are
inadequate,
the
fair
value
of
such
financial
instruments
may
fluctuate
unexpectedly
or
may
not 
accurately reflect
what we
could realize
upon sale
or settlement
of such
financial instruments.
Any such
failure in
our analytical 
or forecasting models could have a material adverse effect
on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.
We may incur significant costs associated
with the ownership of real property as a
result of foreclosures, which could 
reduce our net income. 
Since we originate loans secured by real estate, we may have to foreclose on the
collateral property to protect our investment and 
may thereafter own and operate such property,
in which case we would be exposed to the risks inherent in the ownership of real 
estate. 
The amount that we, as a mortgagee, may realize after a foreclosure is dependent
upon factors outside of our control, including, 
but not limited to: general or local economic conditions; environmental
cleanup liability; neighborhood values; interest rates; real 
estate tax rates; operating expenses of the mortgaged properties; supply of
and demand for rental units or properties; ability to 
obtain and maintain adequate occupancy of the properties; zoning
laws; governmental rules, regulations and fiscal policies; and 
acts of God. 
Certain expenditures associated with the ownership of real estate, including
real estate taxes, insurance and maintenance costs, 
may adversely affect the income from the real estate. Furthermore,
we may need to advance funds to continue to operate or to 
protect these assets. As a result, the cost of operating real property
assets may exceed the rental income earned from such 
properties or we may be required to dispose of the real property at a loss.
28 
Reliance on inaccurate or misleading financial statements, credit
reports, or other financial information could have a 
material adverse impact on our business, financial condition,
and results of operations. 
In deciding whether to extend credit or enter into other transactions, we rely
on information furnished by or on behalf of 
customers and counterparties, including financial statements, credit
reports, and other financial information. We
also rely on 
representations of those customers, counterparties, or other third parties, such
as independent auditors, as to the accuracy and 
completeness of that information. Reliance on inaccurate or misleading
financial statements, credit reports, or other financial 
information could have a material adverse impact on our business, financial condition,
and results of operations.
Liquidity and Capital Risks 
Liquidity risk could impair our ability to fund operations and jeopardize our financial
condition.
Effective liquidity management is essential for the operation of
our business. We require
sufficient liquidity to meet client loan 
requests, client deposit maturities and withdrawals, payments on our debt obligations
as they come due and other cash 
commitments under both normal operating conditions and other unpredictable
circumstances causing industry or general financial 
market stress. If we are unable to raise funds through deposits, borrowings,
earnings and other sources, it could have a substantial 
negative effect on our liquidity.
In particular, a majority of our liabilities during
2025 were checking accounts and other liquid 
deposits, which are generally payable on demand or upon short notice.
By comparison, a substantial majority of our assets were 
loans, which cannot generally be called or sold in the same time frame. Although
we have historically been able to replace 
maturing deposits and advances as necessary,
we might not be able to replace such funds in the future, especially if a large 
number of our depositors seek to withdraw their accounts at the same time, regardless
of the reason. Our access to funding 
sources in amounts adequate to finance our activities on terms that are acceptable
to us could be impaired by factors that affect us 
specifically or the financial services industry or economy in general.
Factors that could negatively impact our access to liquidity 
sources include a decrease in the level of our business activity as a result of a downturn
in the markets in which our loans are 
concentrated, adverse regulatory action against us, or our inability to attract and
retain deposits. Our access to deposits may be 
negatively impacted by,
among other factors, periods of low interest rates or high interest rates.
Periods of high interest rates 
could promote increased competition for deposits, including from new
financial technology competitors, or provide customers 
with alternative investment options.
Our ability to borrow could also be impaired by factors that are not specific to us, such
as a 
disruption in the financial markets or negative views and expectations about
the prospects for the financial services industry.
If we 
are unable to maintain adequate liquidity,
it could materially and adversely affect our business, results of operations
or financial 
condition. 
A
significant
decrease
in
our
public
fund
deposit
balances
as
a
result
of
increased
competition
in
the
current
higher 
interest-rate environment and seasonal nature
of these deposits could materially and adversely affect our liquidity.
The Company has many long-standing relationships with municipal entities
throughout its markets and the deposits held by these 
customers have provided a relatively attractive and stable (although seasonal)
funding source for the Company over an extended 
period of time. Public fund deposits from local government entities such as universities,
counties, school districts, and other 
municipalities generally have higher average balances and historically been
more volatile than nonpublic deposits because they 
are heavily impacted by the seasonality of tax collection, changes in competitive
and market forces, and fiscal spending patterns, 
as well as the longer-term financial position of local government entities, which
can change from year to year. Such public
fund 
deposits are often subject to competitive bidding and in many cases must be secured
by pledging a portion of our investment 
securities.
The Companys inability to
retain public fund deposit balances due to increased competition in the current higher 
interest-rate environment and seasonal nature of these deposits could materially
and adversely affect our liquidity or result in the 
use of higher-cost funding sources, which, in turn, could
materially and adversely affect our business, results of operations or 
financial condition.
29 
Unrealized losses in our securities portfolio could materially
and adversely affect our liquidity. 
We have experienced
significant unrealized losses on our available-for-sale securities portfolio
as a result of increases in market 
interest rates. Unrealized losses related to available-for-sale
securities are reflected in accumulated other comprehensive income 
in our consolidated statements of financial condition and reduce the level of our
book capital and tangible common equity. 
However, such unrealized losses do not
affect our regulatory capital ratios. We
actively monitor our available-for-sale securities 
portfolio and we do not currently anticipate the need to realize material losses from
the sale of securities for liquidity purposes. 
Furthermore, we believe it is unlikely that we would be required to sell any such securities
before recovery of their amortized cost 
bases, which may be at maturity.
Nonetheless, our access to liquidity sources could be affected by unrealized
losses if securities 
must be sold at a loss, tangible capital ratios decline from an increase in unrealized
losses or realized credit losses, the Federal 
Home Loan Bank of Atlanta (FHLB) or other funding sources reduce capacity,
or bank regulators impose restrictions on us that 
impact the level of interest rates we may pay on deposits or our ability to access federal
funds lines or brokered deposits. 
Additionally, significant
unrealized losses could negatively impact market and customer perceptions
of the Company, which 
could lead to a loss of depositor confidence and an increase in deposit withdrawals,
particularly among those with uninsured 
deposits.
We may need to raise additional capital
in the future, and such capital may not be available on acceptable terms or at all. 
We
may
need
to
raise
additional
capital
in
the
future
to
provide
us
with
sufficient
capital
resources
and
liquidity
to
meet
our 
commitments and business
needs, particularly if our
asset quality or earnings
were to deteriorate significantly.
Our ability to raise 
additional capital,
if needed, will
depend on, among
other things, conditions
in the capital
markets at that
time, which are
outside 
of our
control, and
our financial
condition. Economic
conditions and
the loss of
confidence in
financial institutions
may increase 
our
cost
of
funding
and
limit
access
to
certain
customary
sources
of
capital,
including
inter-bank
borrowings,
repurchase 
agreements and borrowings from the discount window of the Federal Reserve. 
As a result, we may be unable to raise capital on terms favorable to us, in a timely manner
or at all, which could materially and 
adversely affect our liquidity,
business, results of operations, or financial condition. Moreover,
if we need to raise capital in the 
future, we may have to do so when many other financial institutions are also seeking
to raise capital and would have to compete 
with those institutions for investors. 
We may be unable to pay dividends in the future. 
In 2025, our Board of Directors declared four quarterly cash dividends.
Declarations of any future dividends will be contingent on 
our ability to earn sufficient profits and to remain well capitalized, including
our ability to hold and generate sufficient capital to 
comply with the Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1)
Capital conservation buffer requirement. In addition,
due to our contractual 
obligations with the holders of our trust preferred securities, if we defer the payment of accrued
interest owed to the holders of our 
trust preferred securities, we may not make dividend payments to our
shareowners. 
Further, under applicable statutes and regulations,
CCBs board of directors,
after charging-off bad debts, depreciation and other 
worthless assets, if any,
and making provisions for reasonably anticipated future losses on loans and other assets, may
quarterly, 
semi-annually, or
annually declare and pay dividends to CCBG of up to the aggregate net income
of that period combined with 
the CCBs retained net income for
the preceding two years and, with the approval of the Florida OFR, declare a dividend from 
retained net income which accrued prior to the preceding two years. The prior
approval of the Federal Reserve is required if the 
total of all dividends declared by a state-chartered member bank in any calendar
year would exceed the sum of the banks net 
income for that year and its retained net income for the preceding two calendar
years, less any required transfers to surplus or to 
fund the retirement of preferred stock. Additional state laws generally
applicable to Florida corporations and guidelines of the 
Federal Reserve may also limit our ability to declare and pay dividends. Thus,
our ability to fund future dividends may be 
restricted by state and federal laws and regulations.
Regulatory and Compliance Risks
We are subject to
extensive regulation, which could restrict our activities
and impose financial requirements or limitations 
on the conduct of our business. 
We are subject to
extensive regulation, supervision and examination by our regulators, including
the Florida OFR, the Federal 
Reserve, and the FDIC. Our compliance with these industry regulations
is costly and restricts certain of our activities, including 
payment of dividends, mergers and acquisitions, investments,
lending and interest rates charged on loans, interest rates paid
on 
deposits, the fees we can charge for certain products or transactions, access to
capital and brokered deposits, and locations of 
banking offices. If we are unable to meet these regulatory requirements,
our financial condition, liquidity and results of operations 
would be materially and adversely affected. 
30 
Our activities are also regulated under consumer protection laws applicable to
our lending, deposit, and other activities. Many of 
these regulations are intended primarily for the protection of our
depositors, the DIF,
and the banking system as a whole, and not 
for the benefit of our shareowners. In addition to the regulations of the bank regulatory
agencies, as a member of the FHLB of 
Atlanta, we must also comply with applicable regulations of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency and the Federal Home Loan 
Bank. 
Regulators have continued to focus on compliance with AMLA and BSA obligations
and the rules enforced by OFAC.
If our 
policies, procedures and systems are deemed deficient or the policies, procedures
are deficient, we would be subject to liability, 
including fines and regulatory actions such as restrictions on our
ability to pay dividends and the necessity to obtain regulatory 
approvals to proceed with certain aspects of our business plan, including any acquisition
plans. 
Our failure to comply with these laws and regulations could subject us to the loss of
FDIC insurance, reputational damage, the 
revocation of our banking charter,
enforcement actions, sanctions, or other legal actions by regulatory agencies, restrictions
on our 
business activities, fines, and other penalties, any of which could adversely
affect our results of operations, capital base, and the 
price of our securities. Changes to any new laws, rules, regulations, policies,
and supervisory guidance (including changes in 
interpretation and implementation) have and could make compliance
more difficult or expensive and could otherwise adversely 
affect our business and financial condition.
Government authorities, including the bank regulatory agencies, are pursuing
aggressive enforcement actions with respect to 
compliance and other legal matters involving financial activities (including
new prohibitions on politicized debanking), which 
heightens the risks associated with actual and perceived compliance failures.
Directives issued to enforce such actions may be 
confidential and thus, in some instances, we are not permitted to publicly
disclose these actions. Litigation challenging actions or 
regulations by federal or state authorities could, depending on the outcome,
significantly affect the regulatory and supervisory 
framework affecting our operations. Any of the foregoing could
have a material adverse effect on our business, financial 
condition, and results of operations. 
In addition, we face increased regulatory scrutiny,
in the course of routine examinations and otherwise, and new regulations
in 
response to negative developments in the banking industry,
which may increase our cost of doing business and reduce our 
profitability. Among
other things, there may be increased focus by both regulators and investors on
deposit composition, the level 
of uninsured deposits, brokered deposits, unrealized losses in securities portfolios,
liquidity, commercial real estate loan 
composition and concentrations, and capital as well as general oversight
and control of the foregoing. We
could face increased 
scrutiny or be viewed as higher risk by regulators and the investor community,
which could have a material adverse effect on our 
business, financial condition, and results of operations. 
U.S. federal banking agencies may require us to increase
our regulatory capital, long-term debt or liquidity
requirements, 
which could result in the need to issue additional qualifying securities or to
take other actions, such as to sell company 
assets. 
We are subject to
U.S. regulatory capital and liquidity rules. These rules, among other things, establish minimum
requirements to 
qualify as a well-capitalized institution. If CCB fails to maintain its status as well capitalized
under the applicable regulatory 
capital rules, the Federal Reserve will require us to agree to bring the bank back to
well-capitalized status. For the duration of 
such an agreement, the Federal Reserve may impose restrictions on our
activities. If we were to fail to enter into or comply with 
such an agreement or fail to comply with the terms of such agreement, the Federal
Reserve may impose more severe restrictions 
on our activities, including requiring us to cease and desist activities permitted
under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956. 
Additionally, if our
CET1 to Risk Weighted Assets ratio
does not exceed the minimum required plus the additional CET1 
conservation buffer,
we may be restricted in our ability to pay dividends or make other distributions of capital to our shareowners. 
Capital and liquidity requirements are frequently introduced and amended.
It is possible that regulators may increase regulatory 
capital requirements, change how regulatory capital is calculated or increase liquidity
requirements. Requirements to maintain 
higher levels of capital may lower our return on equity. 
Further changes to and compliance with the regulatory capital and liquidity requirements
may impact our operations by requiring 
us to liquidate assets, increase borrowings, issue additional equity or other securities,
cease or alter certain operations, sell 
company assets or hold highly liquid assets, which may adversely affect
our results of operations. We
may be prohibited from 
taking capital actions such as paying or increasing dividends or repurchasing
securities. 
31 
Changes in accounting standards or assumptions in applying accounting policies
could adversely affect us. 
Our accounting policies and methods are fundamental to how we record and report
our financial condition and results of 
operations. Some of these policies require use of estimates and assumptions that
may affect the reported value of our assets or 
liabilities and results of operations and are critical because they require management
to make difficult, subjective and complex 
judgments about matters that are inherently uncertain. If those assumptions, estimates or
judgments were incorrectly made, we 
could be required to correct and restate prior-period financial statements. Accounting
standard-setters and those who interpret the 
accounting standards, the SEC, banking regulators and our independent registered
public accounting firm may also amend or even 
reverse their previous interpretations or positions on how various standards
should be applied. These changes may be difficult to 
predict and could impact how we prepare and report our financial statements. In
some cases, we could be required to apply a new 
or revised standard retrospectively,
resulting in us revising prior-period financial statements.
We are subject to
government regulation and oversight relating to
data and privacy protection. 
Our business requires the collection and retention of large
volumes of customer data, including personally identifiable information 
in various information systems that we maintain and in those maintained
by third parties with whom we contract. We
also 
maintain important internal company data such as personally identifiable information
about our associates and information 
relating to our operations. The integrity and protection of that customer and company
data is important to us.
We are subject to
complex and evolving laws and regulations relating to the privacy of the information
of our customers, 
associates and others, and any failure to comply with these laws and regulations,
or any misuse or mismanagement of such 
information, could expose us to liability and reputational damage, which could
adversely affect our financial condition and results 
of operations. As new privacy-related laws and regulations are implemented,
the time and resources needed for us to comply with 
such laws and regulations, as well as our potential liability for non-compliance
and reporting obligations in the case of data 
breaches, may significantly increase. It is possible that these laws may be interpreted
and applied by various jurisdictions in a 
manner inconsistent with our current or future practices, or that is inconsistent
with one another.
Operational Risks 
Many types of operational risks can affect our earnings negatively. 
We regularly
assess and monitor operational risk in our businesses. Despite our efforts to
assess and monitor operational risk, our 
risk management framework may not be effective in all cases.
Factors that can impact operations and expose us to risks varying
in 
size, scale and scope include: 
(1)
failures of technological systems or breaches of security measures, including, but not
limited to, those resulting from 
computer viruses or cyber-attacks; 
(2)
unsuccessful or difficult implementation of computer
systems upgrades; 
(3)
human errors or omissions, including failures to comply with applicable
laws or corporate policies and procedures; 
(4)
theft, fraud or misappropriation of assets, whether arising from the intentional
actions of internal personnel or external 
third parties; 
(5)
breakdowns in processes, breakdowns in internal controls or failures of
the systems and facilities that support our 
operations; 
(6)
deficiencies in services or service delivery; 
(7)
negative developments in relationships with key counterparties, third-party
vendors, or associates in our day-to-day 
operations; and 
(8)
external events that are wholly or partially beyond our control, such as pandemics,
geopolitical events, political unrest, 
natural disasters or acts of terrorism. 
Operational risks can also arise from increased reliance on digital platforms,
remotework technologies, cloudbased solutions, 
and other external service providers whose performance or resilience may be outside
of our direct control. These forms of reliance 
may increase the speed and breadth with which disruptions, control
failures, or cyberevents can affect our operations. 
While we have in place many controls and business continuity plans designed
to address these factors and others, these plans may 
not operate successfully to mitigate these risks effectively.
If our controls and business continuity plans do not mitigate the 
associated risks successfully,
such factors may have a negative impact on our business, financial condition or results
of 
operations. In addition, an important aspect of managing our operational
risk is creating a risk culture in which all associates fully 
understand that there is risk in every aspect of our business and the importance of
managing risk as it relates to their job functions. 
We continue
to enhance our risk management program to support our risk culture.
Nonetheless, if we fail to provide the 
appropriate environment that sensitizes all of our associates to managing
risk, our business could be impacted adversely. 
32 
We are subject to
certain operational risks, including, but not limited to
risk arising from failure or circumvention
of our 
controls and procedures. 
Our internal controls, including fraud detection and controls, disclosure controls
and procedures, and corporate governance 
procedures are based in part on certain assumptions and can provide only reasonable,
not absolute, assurances that the objectives 
of the controls and procedures are met. Notwithstanding the proliferation of
technology and technology-based risk and control 
systems, we rely on the ability of our associates and systems to process a high number
of transactions, and we are subject to the 
risk that our associates may make mistakes or engage in violations of applicable
policies, laws, rules, or procedures that in the 
past have not, and in the future may not, always be prevented by our technological
processes or by our controls and other 
procedures intended to prevent and detect such errors or violations. Any
failure or circumvention of our controls and procedures, 
failure to comply with regulations related to controls and procedures, failure to comply
with our corporate governance procedures, 
fraud by associates or persons outside our Company,
the execution of unauthorized transactions by associates, or errors relating to 
transaction processing and technology could have a material adverse effect
on our reputation, business, financial condition and 
results of operations, including subjecting us to litigation, customer attrition,
regulatory fines, penalties, or other sanctions. 
Insurance coverage may not be available for losses relating to such event,
or where available, such losses may exceed insurance 
limits.
In addition, evolving regulatory expectations regarding operational
resilience, business continuity,
vendor oversight, and 
internal control effectiveness may require additional investment
and may heighten supervisory scrutiny if deficiencies are 
identified.
We are subject to
credit and/or settlement risk arising from
the soundness of other financial institutions and 
counterparties which may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition,
and results of operations. 
Financial services institutions are interrelated as a result of trading,
clearing, counterparty, or other
relationships. We
have 
exposure to many different industries and counterparties,
and routinely execute transactions with counterparties in the financial 
services industry, including
commercial banks, brokers and dealers, investment banks, other institutional clients,
and certain 
vendors. Many of these transactions expose us to credit or settlement risk in the
event of a default or other failure to adhere to 
contractual obligations by a counterparty or client. In addition, our credit or
settlement risk may be exacerbated when any 
collateral held by us cannot be realized upon or is liquidated at prices not sufficient
to recover the full amount of the credit or 
derivative exposure due to us. Increased interconnectivity amongst
financial institutions also increases the risk of cyber-attacks 
and information system failures for financial institutions. Any such losses could
have a material adverse effect on our business, 
financial condition, and results of operations. 
Cybersecurity
incidents,
including
security
breaches
and
failures
of
our
information
systems
could
significantly
disrupt 
our
business,
result
in
the
unintended
disclosure
or
misuse
of
confidential
or
proprietary
information,
damage
our 
reputation, increase our costs, and cause losses.
In the ordinary course of business, we rely on electronic communications
and information systems to conduct our operations and 
to store sensitive data, including our proprietary business information
and that of our clients, and personal information of our 
clients and associates. The secure processing, maintenance, and transmission
of this information is critical to our operations.
Our 
systems, including those we maintain with our service providers, vendors,
or our clients, could be vulnerable to cybersecurity-
related incidents, which include compromises of information systems, attempts to
access information, including customer and 
company information, malicious code, computer viruses or other malware,
denial of service attacks, phishing attempts, brute 
force attacks, exploiting software vulnerabilities (including zero-day
attacks), ransomware, supply chain attacks, and other 
events that could result in unauthorized access, theft, misuse, loss, release, or
destruction of data (including confidential customer 
information), account takeovers, unavailability of service, or other events. These
types of threats may result from human error, 
fraud, or criminal activity on the part of external or internal parties, or may result from
the failure of technology or information 
systems. Further, these types of threats may
be exacerbated by recent developments in artificial intelligence and their increased 
use to produce sophisticated malware, phishing schemes, and other fraudulent
activities. Any failure, interruption, or compromise 
in security of these systems could result in significant disruption to our operations. 
Financial institutions and companies engaged in data processing have
increasingly reported compromises in the security of their 
websites or other systems, some of which have involved sophisticated and
targeted attacks intended to obtain unauthorized access 
to confidential information, destroy data, disrupt or degrade service, sabotage
systems, or cause other damage. Our technologies, 
systems, networks, and software have been and continue to be subject to cybersecurity
threats and attacks, which range from 
uncoordinated individual attempts to sophisticated and targeted
measures by criminal organizations directed at us. Our customers, 
associates, and third parties that we do business with have been, and will likely continue
to be, targeted in cybersecurity-related 
incidents by parties using fraudulent e-mails, artificial intelligence,
and other communications in attempts to misappropriate 
passwords, bank account information, or other personal information,
or to introduce viruses or other malware programs to our 
information systems, or the information systems and devices of our third-party
(or fourth-party) service providers and our 
customers that are beyond our security control systems. Although we try to mitigate
these threats through product improvements, 
use of encryption and authentication technology,
and customer and employee education, among other things, cybersecurity-
attacks against us, our third-party (or fourth-party) service providers
,
and our customers are a risk to our business. 
33 
We may be required
to spend significant capital and other resources to protect against the threat of
cybersecurity-related incidents 
or to alleviate problems caused by such incidents. Any failures related to upgrades
and maintenance of our technology and 
information systems could increase our information and system security
risk. Our increased use of cloud and other technologies, 
such as remote work technologies, and the increased connectivity of third parties
and electronic devices to our systems also 
increases our risk of being subject to a cybersecurity-related incident. The risk
of a cybersecurity-related incident has increased as 
the number, intensity,
and sophistication of attempted attacks and intrusions from around the world have
increased. A 
cybersecurity-related incident or other significant disruption of our information
systems or those of our customers or third-party 
service providers and vendors could (i) disrupt the proper functioning of
our networks and systems and, therefore, our operations 
and
those of our customers; (ii) result in the unauthorized access to, destruction, loss, theft, misappropriation,
or release of 
confidential, sensitive, or otherwise valuable information of ours or
our customers; (iii) result in a violation of applicable privacy, 
data protection, and other laws, subjecting us to additional regulatory
scrutiny and exposing us to civil litigation, enforcement 
actions, governmental fines, sanctions, or penalties (which may not be
covered by our insurance policies), and possible financial 
liability; (iv) require significant management attention and resources to remedy
the damages that result; (v) cause increased 
expenses and lost revenue; or (vi) cause negative publicity,
harm our reputation, or cause a decrease in the number of customers 
that choose to do business with us, damaging our ability to generate deposits. The
occurrence of any of the foregoing could have a 
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition,
and results of operations. Furthermore, in the event of a 
cybersecurity-related incident, we may be delayed in identifying or responding to
the incident, which could increase the negative 
impact of the incident on our business, financial condition, and results of
operations. While we maintain cybersecurity insurance 
coverage, which may apply in the event of certain cybersecurity-related
incidents, the amount of coverage may not be adequate 
depending on the magnitude of the incident. Furthermore, because cybersecurity
-related incidents are inherently difficult to 
predict and can take many forms, some incidents may not be covered under
our cyber insurance coverage. 
Increased fraudulent activity may cause losses to us or our clients, damage
to our brand, and increases in our costs, in 
turn, materially and adversely affecting our business, financial condition,
and results of operations. 
Additionally, fraud
losses have risen in recent years due in large part to growing and evolving schemes,
as well as the 
advancement of artificial intelligence.
Fraudulent activity has taken many forms, ranging from wire fraud, debit card fraud,
credit 
card fraud, check fraud, mechanical devices attached to ATMs,
social engineering, and phishing attacks to obtain personal 
information, business email compromise, or impersonation of clients through
the use of falsified or stolen credentials. Many 
financial institutions have suffered significant losses in recent years
due to the theft of cardholder data that has been illegally 
exploited for personal gain. The potential for debit and credit card fraud, as well as check
fraud, against us or our clients and our 
third-party service providers is a serious issue. Debit and credit card fraud
and check fraud are pervasive, and the risks of 
cybercrime are complex and continue to evolve. While we have policies and procedures,
as well as fraud detection tools, designed 
to prevent fraud losses, such policies, procedures, and tools may be insufficient
to accurately detect and prevent fraud. A 
significant increase in fraudulent activities could lead us to take additional
steps to reduce fraud risk, which could increase our 
costs. Fraud losses could cause losses to us or our clients, damage to our brand, and an
increase in our costs, in turn, materially 
and adversely affecting our business, financial condition,
and results of operations. 
The development and use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) presents risks
and challenges that may adversely impact our
business. 
The banking and financial services industry continually experiences technological
changes, with frequent introductions
of new 
technology-driven products and services, including recent and rapid developments
in AI, including with agentic AI. Our
future 
success will depend, in part, upon our ability to address the needs of our clients by using
technology to provide products
and 
services that will satisfy client demands for convenience, as well as to assess the proper
operation of AI models and
capabilities 
to create additional efficiencies in our operations. We
may not be able to effectively implement new technology- driven products 
and services or be successful in marketing these products and services to our
clients. In addition, the
implementation of 
technological changes and upgrades to maintain current systems and
integrate new ones may also create
service interruptions, 
transaction processing errors, and system conversion delays and
may cause us to fail to comply with
applicable laws. There can 
be no assurance that we will be able to successfully manage the risks associated with our
increased
dependency on technology. 
Failure to successfully keep pace with technological change affecting
the banking and financial
services industry could 
negatively affect our revenue and profitability. 
34 
We or our
third-party (or fourth party) vendors, customers or counterparties may develop or incorporate
AI technology
in certain 
business processes, services, or products. The development and use of AI
presents a number of risks and challenges to
our 
business. The legal and regulatory environment relating to AI is uncertain
and rapidly evolving, both in the U.S. and
internationally,
and includes regulatory schemes targeted specifically at AI as well as provisions in intellectual
property,
privacy, 
consumer protection, employment, and other laws applicable to the use of AI.
These evolving laws and regulations
could require 
changes in our implementation of AI technology and increase our compliance costs and
the risks to us of non- compliance. AI 
models, particularly generative or agentic AI models, may produce outputs or
take action that is incorrect, that
reflects biases 
included in the data on which they are trained, that results in the release of private,
confidential, or proprietary
information, that 
infringes on the intellectual property rights of others, or that is otherwise harmful.
In addition, the complexity
of many AI models 
makes it difficult to understand why they are generating particular
outputs. This limited transparency
increases the challenges 
associated with assessing the proper operation of AI models, understanding
and monitoring the
capabilities of the AI models, 
reducing erroneous output, eliminating bias, and complying with regulations
that require
documentation or explanation of the 
basis on which decisions are made. Further,
we may rely on AI models developed by third
parties, and, to that extent, would be 
dependent in part on the manner in which those third parties develop and train their
models, including risks arising from the 
inclusion of any unauthorized material in the training data for their models and
the
effectiveness of the steps these third parties 
have taken to limit the risks associated with the output of their models, matters over
which we may have limited visibility.
Any of 
these risks could expose us to liability or adverse legal or regulatory
consequences and harm our reputation and the public 
perception of our business or the effectiveness of our security
measures. 
We may not be able to attract and
retain skilled people, which may have a negative impact on
our business and 
operations. 
Our success depends, in large part, on our ability to attract and retain
key people. Competition for the best people in many 
activities engaged in by us is intense, including with respect to compensation
and emerging workplace practices and 
accommodations, and, as a result, we may not be able to sufficiently
hire or to retain key people. We
do not currently have 
employment agreements or non-competition agreements with any of our senior officers.
The unexpected loss of service of key 
personnel could have a material adverse impact on our business, financial
condition, and results of operations because of their 
customer relationships, skills, knowledge of our market, years of industry
experience, and the difficulty of promptly finding 
qualified replacement personnel. In addition, the scope and content of U.S. banking
regulators policies on incentive 
compensation, as well as changes to these policies, could adversely affect
our ability to hire, retain, and motivate our key 
associates. 
Issues we encounter with respect to external vendors upon which we rely
could have a material adverse effect on our 
business and, in turn, our financial condition and results of operations. 
We rely on
certain external vendors to provide products and services necessary to maintain our day-to-day
operations. These 
third-party vendors are sources of operational, cybersecurity and informational
security risk to us, including risks associated with 
operational errors, coding errors, information system failures, interruptions
or breaches, and unauthorized disclosures of sensitive 
or confidential client or customer information. If we encounter any of these
issues in connection with our external vendors, or if 
we have difficulty communicating with these vendors, we
could be exposed to disruption of operations, loss of service, or 
connectivity to customers, reputational damage, and litigation risk that could
have a material adverse effect on our business and, 
in turn, our financial condition and results of operations. 
In addition, our operations are exposed to risk that these vendors will not perform in
accordance with the contracted arrangements 
under service level agreements. Although we have selected these external vendors
carefully, we do not control their actions.
The 
failure of an external vendor to perform in accordance with the contracted
arrangements under service level agreements could be 
disruptive to our operations, which could have a material adverse effect
on our business and, in turn, our financial condition and 
results of operations. Replacing these external vendors could also entail
significant delay and expense. 
35 
Severe weather,
natural disasters, global climate change, widespread health emergencies
(including pandemics), acts of 
terrorism and global conflicts may have a negative impact
on our business and operations. 
Severe weather, natural disasters, global
climate change, widespread health emergencies (including pandemics),
acts of terrorism, 
global conflicts, or other similar events have in the past, and may in the future
have, a negative impact on our business and 
operations. These events impact us negatively to the extent that they result
in reduced capital markets activity,
lower asset price 
levels, or disruptions in general economic activity in the United States or abroad,
or in financial market settlement functions. In 
addition, such events could affect the stability of our deposit base,
impair the ability of borrowers to repay outstanding loans, 
impair the value of collateral securing loans, cause significant property damage,
result in loss of revenue, cause us to incur 
additional expenses, and impact economic growth negatively.
If any of these risks materialized, they could have an adverse effect 
on our business and operations and may have other adverse effects on
us in ways that we are unable to predict. 
Specifically, our market
areas in Florida are susceptible to hurricanes, tropical storms and related flooding
and wind damage and 
other similar weather events. Such weather events can disrupt operations,
result in damage to properties and negatively affect the 
local economies in the markets where we operate. We
cannot predict whether or to what extent damage that may be caused by 
future weather events will affect our operations or the economies in our
current or future market areas, but such events could 
result in a decline in loan originations, a decline in the value or destruction of properties securing
our loans and an increase in 
delinquencies, foreclosures or loan losses, negatively impacting our business and
results of operations. As a result of the potential 
for such weather events, many of our customers have incurred significantly
higher property and casualty insurance premiums on 
their properties located in our markets, which may adversely affect
real estate sales and values in our markets. 
Litigation may adversely affect our results. 
We are subject to
litigation in the ordinary course of business. Claims and legal actions, including
claims pertaining to our 
performance of our fiduciary responsibilities as well as supervisory actions
by our regulators, could involve large monetary 
claims and significant defense costs. The outcome of litigation and regulatory
matters as well as the timing of ultimate resolution 
are inherently difficult to predict. Actual legal and other costs of resolving
claims may be greater than our legal reserves. The 
ultimate resolution of a pending legal proceeding, depending on the remedy sought
and granted, could materially adversely affect 
our results of operations and financial condition. 
In addition, governmental authorities have, at times, sought criminal penalties
against companies in the financial services sector 
for violations, and, at times, have required an admission of wrongdoing from
financial institutions in connection with resolving 
such matters. Criminal convictions or admissions of wrongdoing in a settlement with
the government can lead to greater exposure 
in civil litigation and reputational harm. 
Substantial legal liability or significant regulatory action against us could have material
adverse financial effects or cause 
significant reputational harm, which adversely impact our business prospects. Further,
we may be exposed to substantial 
uninsured liabilities, which could adversely affect
our results of operations and financial condition. 
If
we
fail
to
maintain
an
effective
system
of
internal
control
over
financial
reporting,
we
may
not
be
able
to accurately 
report our
financial results,
prevent fraud,
or file
our periodic
reports in
a timely
manner,
which may
cause investors
to 
lose confidence in our reported financial information and may lead
to a decline in our stock price.
As a public
company,
we are required
to maintain internal
control over financial
reporting and to
report any material
weaknesses 
in such internal control.
Section 404 of the Sarbanes
-Oxley Act requires that
we furnish a report
by management on, among
other 
things,
the
effectiveness
of
our
internal
control
over
financial
reporting.
This
assessment
requires
disclosure
of
any
material 
weaknesses
identified
by
our
management
in
our
internal
control
over
financial
reporting.
Our
independent
registered
public 
accounting firm
also needs
to attest to
the effectiveness
of our
internal control
over financial
reporting. Effective
internal control 
over financial reporting is necessary for us to provide reliable financial
reports and, together with adequate disclosure controls and 
procedures,
is
designed
to
prevent
fraud.
Any
failure
to
maintain
or
implement
required
new
or
improved
controls
(as
we
had 
recently
discussed
in
Item
9A),
or
difficulties
encountered
in
implementation
could
cause
us
to
fail
to
meet
our
reporting 
obligations,
which
could
subject
the
Company
to
litigation,
investigations,
or
breach
of
contract
claims,
require
management 
resources, increase costs, negatively affect investor confidence,
and adversely impact its stock price.
36 
Strategic Risks
Our future success is dependent on our ability to compete effectively
in the highly competitive banking and financial 
services industry. 
We face vigorous
competition for deposits, loans and other financial services in our market area
from other banks and financial 
institutions, including savings and loan associations, savings banks,
finance companies and credit unions. A number of our 
competitors are significantly larger than we are and have greater access to
capital and other resources. Many of our competitors 
also have higher lending limits, more expansive branch networks, and offer
a wider array of financial products and services.
We also compete
with other non-bank providers of financial services, such as money market mutual
funds, brokerage firms, 
consumer finance companies, insurance companies, governmental
organizations, and non-bank financial technology and wealth 
technology providers, including digital asset service providers. Many of our
non-bank competitors are not subject to the same 
extensive regulations that govern our activities. As a result, these non-bank
competitors have advantages over us in providing 
certain services, including the ability to offer financial products and
services on more favorable terms than we are able to offer. 
Technology
and other changes have lowered barriers to entry and made it possible for non-banks to
offer products and services 
traditionally provided by banks. In particular,
the activity of financial technology companies has grown significantly over recent 
years and is expected to continue to grow.
The emergence, adoption and evolution of new technologies that do
not require 
intermediation, including distributed ledgers such as digital assets and blockchain,
as well as advances in robotic process 
automation, could significantly affect the competition
for financial services. Large technology companies offering
embedded 
financial services, digital wallets, and payment platforms have also increased
competitive pressures and may accelerate customer 
migration away from traditional banking products. Customer preferences
have also shifted toward digital channels and realtime, 
seamless financial experiences. Failure to meet evolving expectations for
convenience, speed, and personalized service may 
negatively impact our ability to retain and attract customers. 
Additionally the recently-enacted GENIUS Act establishes a regulatory
framework for payment stablecoins and their issuers, 
which consumers and businesses may view as a substitute for traditional bank
deposits, resulting in deposit withdrawals. 
Depending on consumer and business interest in payment stablecoins, and
the characteristics and utility of payment stablecoins, 
the passage of the GENIUS Act could result in increased competition with respect
to our deposit products. 
The effect of this competition may reduce or limit our net income,
margins or our market share and may adversely affect our 
results of operations and financial condition. Further,
the process of eliminating banks as intermediaries for financial transactions 
could result in the loss of fee income, as well as the loss of customer deposits and the related
income generated from those 
deposits. The foregoing could have a material adverse effect
on our financial condition and results of operations. Increased 
competition may negatively affect our earnings by creating
pressure to lower prices or credit standards on our products and 
services requiring additional investment to improve the quality and
delivery of our technology, reducing
our market share, or 
affecting the willingness of our clients to do business with us.
Our inability to adapt our business strategies, products, and services could
harm our business. 
We rely on
a diversified mix of financial products and services through multiple distribution channels.
Our success depends on 
our and our third-party providers of products and services abilities to adapt our
business strategies, products, and services and 
their respective features in a timely manner,
including available payment processing services and technology to rapidly
evolving 
industry standards and consumer preferences. 
The widespread adoption and rapid evolution of emerging
technologies in the financial services industry,
including artificial 
intelligence, analytic capabilities, cloud technologies, self-service
digital trading platforms and automated trading markets, 
internet services, and digital assets, such as central bank digital currencies,
cryptocurrencies (including stablecoins and 
memecoins), tokens, and other cryptoassets that utilize blockchain and distributed
ledger technology (DLT),
as well as DLT in 
payment, clearing, and settlement processes creates additional risks, could
negatively impact our ability to compete, and require 
substantial expenditures to the extent we were to modify or adapt our existing
products and services to keep pace with such new 
technologies.
37 
We may not
be timely or successful in developing or introducing new products and services, integrating
new products or services 
into our existing offerings, responding, managing, or adapting
to changes in consumer behavior, preferences, spending,
investing 
and saving habits, achieving market acceptance of our products and services,
or reducing costs in response to pressures to deliver 
products and services at lower prices. There are substantial risks and uncertainties
associated with these efforts, particularly in 
instances where the markets are not fully developed. In developing
and marketing new products and services, we invest 
significant time and resources. Initial timetables for the introduction and development
of new products or services may not be 
achieved, and price and profitability targets may not prove
feasible. External factors, such as compliance with regulations, 
competitive alternatives, and shifting market preferences, may also impact
the successful implementation of new products or 
services. Potential future actions such as the proposed consumer credit
card interest rate cap may lead to unprofitable products, 
especially for riskier borrowers, and could lead to cutting credit lines or eliminating
cards, increased reliance on fees and 
increased debt burdens for those needing credit most, thereby having the potential
to negatively impact bank asset quality.
The 
Companys, or its third-party providers,
inability or resistance to timely innovate or adapt its operations, products, and services to 
evolving industry standards and consumer preferences could result in service
disruptions and harm our business, and materially 
and adversely affect our results of operations, financial
condition, and reputation.
Furthermore, our implementation of new products, services, or technology
could have unintended negative consequences, 
including a significant impact on the effectiveness of
our system of internal controls. Failure to successfully manage these risks in 
the development and implementation of new products or services could
have a material adverse effect on our business, financial 
condition, and results of operations. 
Our directors, executive officers, and principal shareowners,
if acting together,
have substantial control over all matters 
requiring shareowner approval,
including changes of control. Because Mr.
William G. Smith, Jr.
is a principal 
shareowner and our Chairman, President, and Chief Executive
Officer and Chairman of CCB, he has substantial control 
over all matters on a day-to-day basis. 
Our directors, executive officers, and principal shareowners beneficially
owned approximately 19.3% of the outstanding shares of 
our common stock at December 31, 2025.
William G. Smith, Jr.,
our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer beneficially owned 
17.3% of our shares as of that date.
Accordingly, these directors, executive
officers, and principal shareowners, if acting together, 
may be able to influence or control matters requiring approval by our shareowners,
including the election of directors and the 
approval of mergers, acquisitions or other extraordinary
transactions. Moreover, because William
G. Smith, Jr. is the Chairman 
and Chief Executive Officer of CCBG, he has substantial control
over all matters on a day-to-day basis, including the nomination 
and election of directors. 
These directors, executive officers, and principal shareowners may
also have interests that differ from yours and may vote in a 
way with which you disagree, and which may be adverse to your interests. The concentration
of ownership may have the effect of 
delaying, preventing or deterring a change of control of our Company,
could deprive our shareowners of an opportunity to receive 
a premium for their common stock as part of a sale of our Company and might ultimately
affect the market price of our common 
stock. You
may also have difficulty changing management, the composition of
the Board of Directors, or the general direction of 
our Company. 
Our Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, and certain laws and regulations
may prevent or delay transactions you might 
favor,
including a sale or merger of CCBG. 
CCBG is registered with the Federal Reserve as a financial holding
company under the Bank Holding Company Act, or BHC Act. 
As a result, we are subject to supervisory regulation and examination by the
Federal Reserve. The GLBA, the Dodd-Frank Act, 
the BHC Act, and other federal laws subject financial holding companies to
restrictions on the types of activities in which they 
may engage, and to a range of supervisory requirements and activities, including
regulatory enforcement actions for violations of 
laws and regulations. 
Provisions of our Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, certain laws and regulations
and various other factors may make it more 
difficult and expensive for companies or persons to acquire control
of us without the consent of our Board of Directors. It is 
possible, however, that you would want a
takeover attempt to succeed because, for example, a potential buyer could offer
a 
premium over the then prevailing price of our common stock. 
For example, our Articles of Incorporation permit our Board of Directors
to issue preferred stock without shareowner action. The 
ability to issue preferred stock could discourage a company from attempting
to obtain control of us by means of a tender offer, 
merger, proxy contest or
otherwise. We are also subject to
certain provisions of the Florida Business Corporation Act and our 
Articles of Incorporation that relate to business combinations with interested
shareowners. Other provisions in our Articles of 
Incorporation or Bylaws that may discourage takeover attempts or make them
more difficult include: Supermajority voting 
requirements to remove a director from office; Provisions
regarding the timing and content of shareowner proposals and 
nominations; Supermajority voting requirements to amend Articles of Incorporation
unless approval is received by a majority of 
disinterested directors; Absence of cumulative voting; and Inability
for shareowners to take action by written consent. 
38 
Potential acquisitions and other strategic transactions by us, or our inability to
complete acquisitions or strategic 
transactions, may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial
condition, and results of operations. 
We may seek to
strategically dispose of assets or acquire other banks, businesses, or branches, which
involves various risks, 
including, among other things, (i) potential exposure to unknown or
contingent liabilities of the target company; (ii) exposure to 
potential asset quality issues of the target company; (iii) potential disruption
to our business; (iv) potential diversion of our 
managements time and attention;
(v) the possible loss of key employees and customers of the target company;
(vi) difficulty in 
estimating the value of the target company or assets to be sold; and
(vii) potential changes in banking or tax laws or regulations 
that may affect the target company. 
Acquisitions by financial institutions, including us, are subject to approval by a variety
of regulatory agencies and, therefore, 
dependent on the regulators' views at the time as to, among other things, our capital
levels, quality of management, compliance 
with laws, and overall condition, in addition to their assessment of a variety of
other factors. Regulatory approvals could be 
delayed, impeded, restrictively conditioned, or denied due to existing or new
regulatory issues we have, or may have, with 
regulatory agencies. We
may fail to pursue, evaluate or complete strategic and competitively significant
acquisition opportunities 
as a result of our inability, or perceived
or anticipated inability, to obtain
regulatory approvals in a timely manner,
under 
reasonable conditions or at all.
Accordingly, any acquisition,
disposition or other strategic transaction may not be successful, may not benefit
our business 
strategy or may not otherwise result in the intended benefits. It also may take us longer
than expected to fully realize the 
anticipated benefits and synergies of these transactions,
and those benefits and synergies may ultimately be smaller than 
anticipated or may not be realized at all, which could adversely affect
our business and operating results. Acquisitions typically 
involve the payment of a premium over book and market values, and, therefore,
some dilution of our tangible book value and net 
income per common share may occur in connection with any future transaction.
Acquisitions may also result in potential dilution 
to existing shareowners of our earnings per share if we issue common stock in connection with
the acquisition. Furthermore, 
failure to realize the expected revenue increases, cost savings, increases in geographic
or product presence, and/or other projected 
benefits from an acquisition, as well as the difficulties associated with potential
acquisitions or dispositions discussed herein 
could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition
and results of operations. 
Reputational Risks 
Damage to our reputation could harm our businesses, including our
competitive position and business prospects. 
Reputation risk, or the risk to our earnings, liquidity,
and capital from negative public opinion, is inherent in our business. 
Negative public opinion could adversely affect our ability to attract
and retain customers, clients, investors and associates and 
expose us to adverse legal and regulatory consequences. Negative public
opinion could result from our actual or alleged conduct 
and can arise from various sources, including (1) officer,
director or associate fraud, misconduct, and unethical behavior; (2) 
security breaches; (3) litigation or regulatory outcomes; (4) compensation practices;
(5) lending practices; (6) branching strategy; 
(7) the suitability or reasonableness of recommending particular trading or
investment strategies, including the reliability of our 
research and models; (8) prohibiting clients from engaging in certain transactions
or actions taken to debank certain clients; (h) 
associate sales practices; (9) failure to deliver products and services; (10) subpar
standards of service and quality expected by our 
customers, clients, and the community; (11
)
compliance failures; (12) mergers and acquisitions; (13)
the inability to manage 
technology change or maintain effective data management; (14)
cyber incidents; (15) internal and external fraud (including check 
fraud and debit card and credit card fraud); (16) inadequacy of responsiveness
to internal controls; (17) unintended disclosure of 
personal, proprietary or confidential information; (18) failure (or
perceived failure) to identify and manage actual and potential 
conflicts of interest; (19) breach of fiduciary obligations; (20) the handling of health
emergencies or pandemics, (21) the activities 
of our clients, customers, counterparties, and third parties, including vendors;
(22) our environmental, social, and governance 
practices and disclosures, including practices and disclosures related to
climate change; (23) our response (or lack of response) to 
social and sustainability concerns; and (24) actions by the financial services industry
generally or by certain members or 
individuals in the industry. 
Reputation risk may be amplified by the speed and reach of social media, which can rapidly 
disseminate accurate or inaccurate information and significantly influence public
perception before we have time to respond. 
Negative coverage, regardless of accuracy,
may lead to rapid customer reactions, including deposit withdrawals, heightened 
regulatory attention, or community criticism. 
Tax Risks 
Changes in the Federal, State or Local Tax
Laws May Negatively Impact Our Financial Performance and We
are Subject 
to Examinations and Challenges by Tax
Authorities
39 
We are subject to
federal and applicable state tax laws and regulations. Changes in these tax laws and
regulations, some of which 
may be retroactive to previous periods, could increase our effective
tax rates and, as a result, could negatively affect our current 
and future financial performance. Furthermore, tax laws and regulations are often
complex and require interpretation. In the 
normal course of business, we are routinely subject to examinations and challenges
from federal and applicable state tax 
authorities regarding the amount of taxes due in connection with investments we
have made and the businesses in which we have 
engaged. Recently,
federal and state taxing authorities have become increasingly been aggressive in challenging
tax positions 
taken by financial institutions. These tax positions may relate to tax compliance,
sales and use, franchise, gross receipts, payroll, 
property and income tax issues, including tax base, apportionment and tax
credit planning. The challenges made by tax authorities 
may result in adjustments to the timing or amount of taxable income or deductions
or the allocation of income among tax 
jurisdictions. If any such challenges are made and are not resolved in our
favor, they could have a material adverse effect
on our 
business, financial condition and results of operations. 
Item 1B.
Unresolved Staff Comments
None. 
Item 1C.
Cybersecurity
Risk Management
and Strategy 
Our enterprise risk management program is designed to identify,
assess, and mitigate risks across various aspects of our 
Company, including
financial, operational, market, regulatory,
technology, legal, and reputational.
Cybersecurity is a critical risk 
area given the increasing reliance on technology and potential of cyber
risk threats.
Our Chief Information Security Officer 
(CISO) reports to the CCB President who provides oversight of the information
security program and its activities, along with 
our management-level Enterprise Risk Oversight Committee
(ROC) and our Board of Directors. 
Our objective for managing cybersecurity risk is to avoid or minimize the impacts
of external threat events or other efforts to 
penetrate, disrupt or misuse systems or information.
Our cybersecurity risk management program is designed around the National 
Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) Cybersecurity Framework, regulatory guidance, and other industry
standards, 
although we cannot guarantee that we meet all technical specifications, or
requirements under NIST.
Our CISO and Information 
Security Officers (ISOs) along with key members of
the information security team collaborate with peer banks, industry groups, 
and policymakers to discuss cybersecurity trends and issues and identify best practices.
Our information security program, 
including our cyber risk management policies and procedures and
our incident response program, are periodically reviewed by
the 
CISO with the goal of addressing changing threats and conditions.
The parts of our information security program relating to cybersecurity are built
on a multi-layered and integrated defense model 
and include the following processes: 
Risk-based controls for information systems and information
on our networks:
We maintain risk
management 
processes designed to identify,
assess, and manage cybersecurity risks associated with external service
providers and the 
services we provide to our clients. We
leverage people, processes, and technology as part of our efforts
to manage and 
maintain cybersecurity controls. We
also employ a variety of preventative and detective tools designed
to monitor, block, 
and provide alerts regarding suspicious activity,
as well as to report on suspected advanced persistent threats. We
seek to 
maintain a risk management infrastructure that implements physical, administrative
and technical controls that are 
designed, based on risk, to protect our information systems and the information
stored on our networks, including personal 
information, intellectual property and proprietary information of our
Company and our clients. 
Incident response program: 
We have an
incident response program and dedicated teams to respond to cybersecurity 
incidents. When a cybersecurity incident occurs, we have cross-functional
teams that are responsible for leading the initial 
assessment of priority and severity and communicating potentially material
cybersecurity incidents to the appropriate 
members of management and the Board of Directors. 
Training and testing: 
We have
established processes and systems designed to mitigate cybersecurity risk, including 
regular education and training for associates, preparedness simulations and
tabletop exercises, and recovery and resilience 
tests. We also monitor
our email gateways for malicious phishing email campaigns and monitor remote
connections.
Internal and external risk assessments:
We engage
in ongoing assessments of our infrastructure, software systems,
and 
network architecture using internal experts and 
third-party
specialists, including to identify material risks from 
cybersecurity threats.
Our internal auditor and other independent external partners will periodically 
review
our processes, 
systems, and controls, including with respect to our information security program,
to assess their design and operating 
effectiveness and make recommendations to strengthen
our risk management processes.
40 
Notwithstanding our defensive measures and processes, threats posed
by cyberattacks are severe.
Our internal systems, 
processes, and controls are designed to mitigate loss from cyber-attacks
and, while we have experienced cybersecurity incidents 
in the past, to date, risks from cybersecurity threats have 
not materially
affected, and are not reasonably likely to materially affect, 
the Company, including
its business strategy, results of
operations or financial condition. Despite the Companys
efforts, there 
can be no assurance that its cybersecurity risk management processes and
measures described will be fully implemented, 
complied with, or effective in protecting its systems and information.
The company faces risks from certain cybersecurity threats 
that, if realized, are reasonably likely to materially affect
its business strategy, results of
operations or financial condition.
For 
further discussion of risks from cybersecurity threats, see Item 1A. Risk Factors under
the section captioned Cybersecurity 
incidents, including security breaches and failures of our information
systems could significantly disrupt our business, result in 
the unintended disclosure or misuse of confidential or proprietary information,
damage our reputation, increase our costs, and 
cause losses.
Governance 
Managements
Role 
Our 
CISO
is responsible for managing our Corporate Security Department
and overseeing our information security program, 
including cybersecurity risks.
The responsibilities of this department include cybersecurity risk assessment, defense
operations, 
incident response, vulnerability assessment, threat intelligence, third-party
risk management, information governance risk and 
compliance and business resilience. The foregoing responsibilities are covered
on a day-to-day basis with oversight and guidance 
provided by our CISO, the ISOs and key members of the information security
team. 
The department, as a whole, consists of 
information security professionals with varying degrees of education and
experience. Associates within the department are 
generally subject to professional education and certification requirements.
In particular, our CISO has over 15 years of substantial 
relevant expertise and formal training in the areas of information security and cybersecurity
risk management and also serves on 
several advisory boards and committees within the financial sector.
Our CISO regularly 
reports
on the status of the information 
security program to the CCB President. 
On a quarterly basis, and as needed, the CISO reports the status of the information 
security program, notable threats or incidents, and other developments related
to information security and cybersecurity risks to 
our ROC.
Board Oversight of Cybersecurity 
The Board of Directors oversee cybersecurity risk and the information security
program which includes overseeing managements 
actions to identify, assess, mitigate
and remediate or prevent material cybersecurity risks. The CISO provides
reports to the Board 
of Directors annually on the status of the information security program and risks, notable
threats and incidents, and other 
developments related to cybersecurity of the information security program
.
An appropriate committee of the Board of Directors 
may also receive from the CISO periodic reports on these activities, as well as the status of
any incident response and remediation 
efforts the Company may undertake.
Item 2.
Properties
We are headquartered
in Tallahassee, Florida.
Our executive office is in the Capital City Bank building located
on the corner of 
Tennessee and Monroe
Streets in downtown Tallahassee.
The building is owned by CCB, but is located on land leased under a 
long-term agreement. 
At December 31, 2025, Capital City Bank had 62 banking offices.
Of these locations, we lease the land, buildings, or both at 18 
locations and own the land and buildings at the remaining 44. CCHL had
28 loan production offices, 27 of which were leased. 
Capital City Strategic Wealth,
LLC (CCSW) maintained five offices, all of which were leased and
subsequently sold with the 
divestiture of CCSW in the third quarter of 2025.
Item 3.
Legal Proceedings
We are party
to lawsuits and claims arising out of the normal course of business. In managements
opinion, there are no known 
pending claims or litigation, the outcome of which would, individually or
in the aggregate, have a material effect on our 
consolidated results of operations, financial position, or cash flows. 
Item 4
. 
Mine Safety Disclosure
Not applicable. 
41 
PART
II
Item 5.
Market for the Registrants
Common Equity, Related Shareowner Matters,
and Issuer Purchases of Equity 
Securities
Common Stock Market Prices and Dividends
Our common stock trades on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under
the symbol CCBG.
We had a total of
951 shareowners of 
record at January 31, 2025. 
The following table presents the range of high and low closing sales prices reported
on the Nasdaq Global Select Market and cash 
dividends declared for each quarter during the past two years.
2025 
2024 
Fourth 
Quarter 
Third 
Quarter 
Second 
Quarter 
First 
Quarter 
Fourth 
Quarter 
Third 
Quarter 
Second 
Quarter 
First 
Quarter 
Common stock price: 
High
$ 
45.63 
$ 
44.69 
$ 
39.82 
$ 
38.27 
$ 
40.86 
$ 
36.67 
$ 
28.58 
$ 
31.34 
Low
38.27 
38.00 
32.38 
33.00 
33.00 
26.72 
25.45 
26.59 
Close
42.57 
41.79 
39.35 
35.96 
36.65 
35.29 
28.44 
27.7 
Cash dividends per share
0.26 
0.26 
0.24 
0.24 
0.23 
0.23 
0.21 
0.21 
Florida law and Federal regulations impose restrictions on our ability
to pay dividends and limitations on the amount of dividends 
that the Bank can pay annually to us.
See Item 1. Capital; Dividends; Sources of Strength and Dividends in the Business 
section on page 14 and 16, Item 1A. Market Risks in the Risk Factors section on
page 23, Item 7. Liquidity and Capital 
Resources Dividends in Managements
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Operating Results on page
67 
and Note 17 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. 
Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans 
See the information included under Part III, Item 12, which is incorporated
in response to this item by reference, for information 
with respect to shares of common stock that are authorized for issuance under
the Company's equity compensation plans as of 
December 31, 2025. 
Issuer Purchase of Equity Securities 
In January 2024, our Board of Directors authorized the Capital City Bank Group,
Inc. Share Repurchase Program (the 
Program), effective February 1, 2024, which authorizes
the repurchase of up to 750,000 shares of our outstanding common stock 
over a five-year period.
Repurchases under Program may be made from time to time through open
market purchases, privately 
negotiated transactions or such other manners as will comply with applicable
laws and regulations. The timing and actual number 
of shares repurchased will depend on a variety of factors including price,
corporate and regulatory requirements, market 
conditions and other corporate liquidity requirements and priorities. The
Program does not obligate the Company to purchase any 
particular number of shares and there is no guarantee as to the exact number
of shares that will be repurchased by the Company.
We repurchased
(i) 73,349 shares under the Program in 2024 at an average price of $28.03 per share
and (ii) 9,101 shares in 
January 2024 at an average price of $29.47 per share under a substantially similar repurchase
plan that was authorized in 2019 
and expired in 2024. There are 676,561 shares remaining for purchase under
the Program. 
We did not
repurchase any shares under the Program in the year ending December 31, 2025. 
42 
Performance Graph
This performance graph compares the cumulative total shareowner
return on our common stock with the cumulative total 
shareowner return of the Nasdaq Composite Index and the S&P U.S. Small Cap Banks Index
for the past five years.
The graph 
assumes that $100 was invested on December 31, 2020 in our common stock and each of
the above indices, and that all dividends 
were reinvested.
The shareowner return shown below represents past performance and should not
be considered indicative of 
future performance. 
Period Ending 
Index 
12/31/20 
12/31/21 
12/31/22 
12/31/23 
12/31/24 
12/31/25 
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
$ 
100.00 
$ 
110.03 
$ 
138.43 
$ 
128.54 
$ 
164.61 
$ 
196.09 
Nasdaq Composite Index 
100.00 
122.18 
82.43 
119.22 
154.48 
187.14 
S&P U.S. SmallCap Banks Index 
100.00 
139.21 
122.74 
123.35 
145.82 
160.37 
43 
Item 6.
Selected Financial Data
(Dollars in Thousands, Except Per Share Data) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Interest Income 
$ 
204,387 
$ 
194,657 
$ 
181,068 
Net Interest Income 
171,648 
158,938 
158,988 
Provision for Credit Losses 
5,264 
4,031 
9,714 
Noninterest Income 
82,355 
75,976 
71,610 
Noninterest Expense
(1)
167,022 
165,315 
157,023 
Pre-Tax Loss Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests
(2)
- 
1,271 
1,437 
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
61,557 
52,915 
52,258 
Per Common Share: 
Basic Net Income 
$ 
3.61 
$ 
3.12 
$ 
3.08 
Diluted Net Income 
3.60 
3.12 
3.07 
Cash Dividends Declared 
1.00 
0.88 
0.76 
Diluted Book Value 
32.23 
29.11 
25.92 
Diluted Tangible Book Value
(3)
27.03 
23.65 
20.45 
Performance Ratios: 
Return on Average Assets 
1.42 
% 
1.25 
% 
1.22 
% 
Return on Average Equity 
11.51 
11.18 
12.40 
Net Interest Margin (FTE) 
4.28 
4.08 
4.05 
Noninterest Income as % of Operating Revenues 
32.42 
32.34 
31.05 
Efficiency Ratio 
65.71 
70.30 
67.99 
Asset Quality: 
Allowance for Credit Losses ("ACL") 
$ 
31,001 
$ 
29,251 
$ 
29,941 
ACL to Loans Held for Investment ("HFI") 
1.22 
% 
1.10 
% 
1.10 
% 
Nonperforming Assets ("NPAs") 
10,531 
6,669 
6,243 
NPAs to Total
Assets 
0.24 
0.15 
0.15 
NPAs to Loans HFI plus OREO 
0.41 
0.25 
0.23 
ACL to Non-Performing Loans 
360.69 
464.14 
479.70 
Net Charge-Offs to Average Loans HFI 
0.14 
0.21 
0.18 
Capital Ratios: 
Tier 1 Capital 
20.20 
% 
17.46 
% 
15.37 
% 
Total Capital 
21.45 
18.64 
16.57 
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital 
18.56 
15.54 
13.52 
Tangible Common Equity
(3)
10.79 
9.51 
8.26 
Leverage 
11.77 
11.05 
10.30 
Equity to Assets 
12.61 
11.45 
10.24 
Dividend Pay-Out 
27.70 
28.21 
24.76 
Averages for the Year: 
Loans Held for Investment 
$ 
2,622,877 
$ 
2,706,461 
$ 
2,656,394 
Earning Assets 
4,010,875 
3,897,580 
3,933,800 
Total Assets 
4,347,577 
4,234,603 
4,278,686 
Deposits 
3,651,351 
3,597,438 
3,669,612 
Shareowners Equity 
534,962 
473,216 
421,482 
Year
-End Balances: 
Loans Held for Investment 
$ 
2,546,118 
$ 
2,651,550 
$ 
2,733,918 
Earning Assets 
4,059,032 
3,974,431 
3,957,452 
Total Assets 
4,385,765 
4,324,932 
4,304,477 
Deposits 
3,662,312 
3,671,977 
3,701,822 
Shareowners Equity 
552,851 
495,317 
440,625 
Other Data: 
Basic Average Shares Outstanding 
17,055,328 
16,942,788 
16,987,167 
Diluted Average Shares Outstanding 
17,102,269 
16,968,623 
17,022,922 
Shareowners of Record
(4)
951 
1,027 
1,080 
Banking Locations
(4)
62 
63 
63 
Headcount
(5)
927 
940 
970 
(1) 
For 2025 and 2023, includes pension settlement gains of $1.5
million and $0.3 million, respectively. 
(2) 
In 2023 and 2024, we owned 51% of Capital City Home Loans,
LLC, a consolidated entity. We
acquired the remaining 49% interest
on January 1, 2025. 
(3) 
Diluted tangible book value and tangible common equity ratio are
non-GAAP financial measures. For additional information,
including a reconciliation 
to GAAP, refer
to page 44. 
(4) 
As of January 31st of the following year. 
(5) 
As of December 31, 2025.
44 
NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES 
We present a tangible
common equity ratio and a tangible book value per diluted share that, in each case,
removes the effect of 
goodwill that resulted from merger and acquisition activity.
We believe these
measures
are useful to investors because they allow 
investors to more easily compare our capital adequacy to other companies in
the industry.
The generally accepted accounting 
principles (GAAP) to non-GAAP reconciliation for selected year-to-date
financial data is provided below. 
Non-GAAP Reconciliation - Selected Financial Data 
(Dollars in Thousands, except per share data) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Shareowners' Equity (GAAP) 
$ 
552,851 
$ 
495,317 
$ 
440,625 
Less: Goodwill and Other Intangibles (GAAP) 
89,095 
92,773 
92,933 
Tangible Shareowners' Equity (non-GAAP) 
A 
463,756 
402,544 
347,692 
Total Assets (GAAP) 
4,385,765 
4,324,932 
4,304,477 
Less: Goodwill and Other Intangibles (GAAP) 
89,095 
92,773 
92,933 
Tangible Assets (non-GAAP) 
B 
$ 
4,296,670 
$ 
4,232,159 
$ 
4,211,544 
Tangible Common Equity Ratio (non-GAAP) 
A/B 
10.79% 
9.51% 
8.26% 
Actual Diluted Shares Outstanding (GAAP) 
C 
17,154,586 
17,018,122 
17,000,758 
Tangible Book Value
per Diluted Share (non-GAAP) 
A/C 
27.03 
23.65 
20.45 
45 
Item 7.
Managements
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Managements discussion
and analysis (MD&A) provides supplemental information, which sets forth
the major factors that 
have affected our financial condition and results of operations and
should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial 
Statements and related notes included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K.
The MD&A is divided into subsections entitled 
Business Overview, Executive
Overview, Results of Operations,
Financial Condition, Liquidity and Capital Resources, 
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements, and Accounting Policies.
The following information should provide a better understanding 
of the major factors and trends that affect our earnings performance
and financial condition, and how our performance during 
2025 compares with prior years.
Throughout this section, Capital City Bank Group, Inc., and its subsidiaries,
collectively, are 
referred to as CCBG, Company,
we, us, or our. 
CAUTION CONCERNING FORWARD
-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Annual Report on Form 10-K, including this MD&A section, contains forward
-looking statements within the meaning of 
the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
These forward-looking statements include, among others, statements about 
our beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, expectations, estimates and
intentions that are subject to significant risks and uncertainties 
and are subject to change based on various factors, many of which are beyond
our control. The words may,
could, should, 
would, believe, anticipate, estimate, expect, intend, plan,
target, vision, goal, and similar expressions are 
intended to identify forward-looking statements. 
All forward-looking statements, by their nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties.
Our actual future results may differ 
materially from those set forth in our forward-looking statements.
Please see the Introductory Note and 
Item 1A Risk Factors
of 
this Annual Report for a discussion of factors that could cause our actual results to differ
materially from those in the forward-
looking statements. 
However, other factors besides those listed in 
Item 1A Risk Factors
or discussed in this Annual Report also could adversely affect 
our results, and you should not consider any such list of factors to be a complete
set of all potential risks or uncertainties.
Any 
forward-looking statements made by us or on our behalf speak only as of the date they
are made.
We do not undertake
to update 
any forward-looking statement, except as required by applicable law. 
BUSINESS OVERVIEW 
Our Business 
We are a financial
holding company headquartered in Tallahassee,
Florida, and we are the parent of our wholly owned subsidiary, 
Capital City Bank (the Bank or CCB).
We 
provide a full range of banking services, including traditional deposit and credit 
services, mortgage banking, asset management, trust, merchant services,
bankcards, securities brokerage services and financial 
advisory services.
The Bank has 62 banking offices and 108 ATMs/ITMs
in Florida, Georgia and Alabama.
Through Capital City 
Home Loans, LLC (CCHL), we have 28 additional offices
in the Southeast for our mortgage banking business.
Please see the 
section captioned About Us beginning on page 5 for more detailed information
about our business. 
Our profitability, like
most financial institutions, is dependent,
to a large extent upon net interest income, which is the difference 
between the interest and fees received on interest earning assets, such as loans and
securities, and the interest paid on interest-
bearing liabilities, principally deposits and borrowings.
Results of operations are also affected by the provision for
credit losses, 
operating expenses such as salaries and employee benefits, occupancy
,
and other operating expenses including income taxes, and 
noninterest income such as mortgage banking revenues, wealth management
fees, deposit fees, and bank card fees.
46 
Strategic Review 
Operating Philosophy
.
Our philosophy is to build long-term client relationships based on quality
service, high ethical standards, 
and safe and sound banking practices.
We maintain a locally
oriented, community-based focus, which is augmented by 
experienced, centralized support in select specialized areas.
Our local market orientation is reflected in our network of banking 
office locations, experienced community executives with
a dedicated President for each market, and community boards which 
support our focus on responding to local banking needs.
We strive to offer
a broad array of sophisticated products and to provide 
quality service by empowering associates to make decisions in their local
markets.
Strategic Initiatives
.
Our strategic plan guides us in the areas of client experience, channel optimization, market
expansion, and 
culture.
As part of the strategic plan, we aim to take our brand of relationship banking to the next
level, further deepen 
relationships within our communities, expand into new higher growth
markets, diversify our revenue sources, invest in new 
technology that will support the expansion of client relationships, scale within
our lines of business, and drive higher profitability.
We have implemented
initiatives in support of the strategic plan, including the implementation of an integrated marketing 
software aimed at deepening client relationships, the continuation of
our comprehensive review of our banking office network, 
and expansion into new markets and further diversification of revenues by
expanding our residential mortgage banking and 
wealth businesses.
Markets
.
We maintain a blend
of large and small markets in Florida and Georgia,
all in close proximity to major interstate 
thoroughfares such as Interstates 10 and 75.
Our larger markets include Tallahassee
(Leon County, Florida),
Gainesville 
(Alachua County, Florida),
Macon (Bibb County,
Georgia), and Suncoast (Hernando/Pasco/Citrus Counties, Florida).
The larger 
employers in these markets are state and local governments, healthcare
providers, educational institutions, and small businesses, 
providing stability and good growth dynamics that have historically grown
in excess of the national average.
We serve an 
additional 15 smaller, less competitive,
rural markets located on the outskirts of, and centered between, our larger
markets where 
we are positioned as a market leader.
In 7 of 12 markets in Florida and one of three Georgia markets (excluding
Northern Arc of 
Atlanta markets entered into in 2022 and 2023),
we frequently rank within the top three banks in terms of deposit market share.
Furthermore, in the counties in which we operate, we maintain an 8.0% deposit
market share in the Florida counties and 5.0% in 
the Georgia counties (excluding Northern Arc of
Atlanta).
Our markets provide for a strong core deposit funding base, a key 
differentiator and driver of our profitability and franchise
value.
These markets also benefit from favorable demographic trends, 
including population growth, state government stability,
and expanding healthcare and education sectors, which support our long-
term relationship banking strategy and contribute to the resilience of our
deposit base.
Recent Acquisition/Expansion Activity
.
We expanded
into the Northern Arc of Atlanta, Georgia by opening full-service offices
in 
Marietta (Cobb County) in the fourth quarter of 2022 and Duluth (Gwinnett
County) in the second quarter of 2023.
Additionally, 
we expanded our presence in the Florida Panhandle by opening a full-service office
s
in Watersound,
Florida in the first quarter of 
2023, Panama City, Florida
(Lynn Haven) in the first quarter of 2024, and
Panama City, Florida (West
Bay) in the first quarter of 
2025.
To expand our presence and
commitment to our Gainesville market, we opened a third full-service banking
office in the 
area in early 2023.
During 2022 and 2023, we hired leadership and banking teams in the Northern
Arc and Walton County
office 
markets, including commercial bankers, retail delivery support, private banking,
wealth advisors, and treasury professionals.
Further, CCHL loan originators reside in the Northern
Arc and Walton County
offices. 
On March 1, 2020, CCB acquired from BMGBMG, LLC (BMG) an initial 51% membership
interest in CCHL (formerly 
known as Brand Mortgage Group, LLC), which became a consolidated entity
in the Companys financial statements. On 
November 15, 2024, CCB entered into an agreement with BMG to transfer
the 49% Interest to CCB, which closed on January 1, 
2025.
EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW
For 2025, net income attributable to common shareowners totaled $61.6
million, or $3.60 per diluted share, compared to net 
income of $52.9 million, or $3.12 per diluted share, for 2024, and $52.3
million, or $3.07 per diluted share, for 2023. 
For 2025, the increase in net income attributable to common shareowners
reflected a $12.7 million increase in net interest income 
and a $6.4 million increase in noninterest income, that were partially
offset by a $6.2 million increase in income taxes, a $1.7 
million increase in noninterest expense,
and a $1.2 million increase in provision for credit losses.
Net income attributable to 
common shareowners included a $1.3 million decrease in the deduction
to record the non-controlling interest in the earnings of 
CCHL.
For 2024, the increase in net income attributable to common shareowners
reflected a $5.7 million decrease in provision for credit 
losses and a $4.4 million increase in noninterest income, that were partially
offset by a $8.3 million increase in noninterest 
expense, a $0.9 million increase in income taxes, and a $0.1 million decrease
in net interest income.
Net income attributable to 
common shareowners included a $0.2 million decrease in the deduction
to record the non-controlling interest in the earnings of 
CCHL.
47 
Below are 
Summary Highlights
of our 2025
financial performance: 
Income Statement 
Tax-equivalent
net interest income totaled $171.8 million compared
to $159.2 million for 2024 
-
Net interest margin increased
by 20 basis points to 4.28% (increase in earning asset yield
of 10 basis points and decrease 
in cost of funds of 10 basis points) 
Credit quality metrics remained
strong throughout
the year allowance coverage ratio increased to 1.22%
in 2025 
compared to 1.10% in 2024 - net loan
charge-offs were 14 basis points of
average loans for 2025 compared to 21 basis 
points for 2024 
Noninterest income increased
by $6.4 million, or 8.4%, due to higher mortgage banking revenues
of $2.6 million, wealth 
management fees of $1.6 million, other income of $1.5 million, and deposit fees of $0.7
million 
Noninterest expense increased
$1.7 million, or 1.0%, primarily due to higher compensation expense (primarily performance-
based pay and health care cost) partially offset by lower pension
expense and higher gains from the sale of banking
facilities
Balance Sheet 
Loan balances decreased by $83.6 million, or 3.1%
(average), and decreased by $105.4 million, or 4.0%
(end of period) 
Average deposit balances increased
by $53.9 million, or 1.5% driven by strong core
deposit growth 
Tangible
book value per diluted share (non-GAAP financial measure)
increased by $3.38, or 14.3% 
For more detailed information, refer to the following additional sections of the
MD&A Results of Operations and Financial 
Condition. 
48 
RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS
A condensed earnings summary for the last three fiscal years is presented
in Table 1 below: 
Table 1 
CONDENSED SUMMARY OF EARNINGS 
(Dollars in Thousands, Except Per Share
Data) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Interest Income 
$ 
204,387 
$ 
194,657 
$ 
181,068 
Taxable Equivalent
Adjustments 
177 
241 
367 
Total Interest Income
(FTE) 
204,564 
194,898 
181,435 
Interest Expense 
32,739 
35,719 
22,080 
Net Interest Income (FTE) 
171,825 
159,179 
159,355 
Provision for Credit Losses 
5,264 
4,031 
9,714 
Taxable Equivalent
Adjustments 
177 
241 
367 
Net Interest Income After Provision for Credit Losses 
166,384 
154,907 
149,274 
Noninterest Income 
82,355 
75,976 
71,610 
Noninterest Expense 
167,022 
165,315 
157,023 
Income Before Income Taxes 
81,717 
65,568 
63,861 
Income Tax Expense
20,160 
13,924 
13,040 
Pre-Tax Loss Attributable
to Noncontrolling Interests 
- 
1,271 
1,437 
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
$ 
61,557 
$ 
52,915 
$ 
52,258 
Basic Net Income Per Share 
$ 
3.61 
$ 
3.12 
$ 
3.08 
Diluted Net Income Per Share 
$ 
3.60 
$ 
3.12 
$ 
3.07 
Net Interest Income and Margin
Net interest income represents our single largest source of earnings
and is equal to interest income and fees generated by earning 
assets, less interest expense paid on interest bearing liabilities.
We provide
an analysis of our net interest income, including 
average yields and rates in Tables
2 and 3 below.
We provide this information
on a taxable equivalent basis to reflect the tax-
exempt status of income earned on certain loans and investments. 
For 2025, our taxable equivalent net interest income totaled $171.8
million compared to $159.2
million for 2024 and $159.4 
million for 2023.
The $12.6 million, or 7.9%, increase in 2025 was primarily attributable to an
increase in investment securities 
income and to a lesser extent an increase in overnight funds income and lower deposit
interest expense, partially offset by lower 
loan income.
The $0.2 million, or 0.1%, decrease in 2024 was driven by higher deposit interest expense
that was substantially 
offset by higher loan income and to a lesser extent higher overnight
funds income.
We discuss these variances in more
detail 
below.
For 2025, our taxable equivalent interest income totaled $204.6
million compared to $194.9 million in 2024
and $181.4 million in 
2023.
The $9.7 million, or 5.0%, increase in 2025 was primarily attributable to a $10.3
million increase in investment securities 
income due to growth in the portfolio and favorable repricing.
A $3.7 million decrease in loan income was partially offset by a 
$3.1 million increase in overnight funds income.
The $13.5 million, or 7.4%, increase in 2024 was primarily attributable to
a 
$13.0 million increase in loan income driven by loan growth and favorable loan
repricing.
For 2025, interest expense totaled $32.7 million compared to $35.7 million for 2024
and $22.1 million for 2023.
The $3.0 million 
decrease in 2025 was primarily due to decreased deposit interest expense,
including a $1.4 million decrease in NOW account 
expense and a $1.4 million decrease in money market account expense
,
partially offset by a $0.2 million increase in certificates of 
deposit expense.
The decreases for NOW and money market accounts reflected adjustments
to our board and managed rates for 
these products, as interest rates declined over the year.
The $13.6 million increase in 2024 compared to 2023 was primarily 
attributable to increased deposit interest expense,
including a $6.3 million increase attributable to money market accounts,
a $4.5 
million increase attributable to NOW accounts, and a $3.7 million increase
attributable to certificates of deposit,
all reflective of a 
shift in balances from noninterest bearing to interest bearing products
driven by the higher interest rate environment and clients 
seeking higher yield deposit products.
49 
Our cost of interest bearing deposits was 127 basis points for 2025, 142 basis points
for 2024, and 81 basis points for 2023.
Our 
total cost of deposits (including noninterest bearing accounts) was 81
basis points for 2025, 89 basis points for 2024, and 48 basis 
points for 2023.
Our total cost of funds (interest expense/average earning assets) was 82 basis points for 2025,
92 basis points for 
2024, and 56 basis points for 2023.
Our net interest margin (defined as taxable-equivalent interest income
less interest expense divided by average earning assets) 
was 4.28% for 2025, 4.08% for 2024, and 4.05% for 2023.
The increase in the net interest margin for 2025 was primarily due
to a 
higher yield for investment securities driven by new purchases at higher
yields, favorable loan repricing, and lower deposit costs.
The increase in the net interest margin for 2024
reflected a combination of earning assets repricing at higher interest rates and an 
improved earning asset mix driven by loan growth, partially offset
by a higher, but well controlled cost of deposits.
The Federal Open Market Committee decreased the Federal Funds Rate during
2025.
The Federal Funds Rate is currently in a 
target range of 3.50% to 3.75%, with the Effective
Federal Funds Rate at 3.64%
at December 31, 2025, and 4.33% at 
December 31, 2024. Management actively manages its balance sheet
mix and volume and will make loan and deposit product 
pricing changes to help mitigate interest rate risk.
See section titled Financial Condition - Market Risk and Interest Rate 
Sensitivity in Managements Discussion
and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations for additional 
information regarding this risk.
50 
Table 2 
AVERAGE
BALANCES AND INTEREST RATES 
2025 
2024 
2023 
(Taxable Equivalent Basis - Dollars 
in Thousands) 
Average 
Balance 
Interest 
Average 
Rate 
Average 
Balance 
Interest 
Average 
Rate 
Average 
Balance 
Interest 
Average 
Rate 
ASSETS 
Loans Held for Sale 
$ 
24,234 
$ 
1,764 
7.28 
% 
$ 
27,306 
$ 
2,776 
6.72 
% 
$
55,510 
$ 
3,232 
5.82 
% 
Loans Held for Investment
(1)(2)
2,622,877 
159,589 
6.08 
2,706,461 
162,385 
6.03 
2,656,394 
149,366 
5.62 
Investment Securities 
Taxable Investment Securities 
996,222 
27,399 
2.75 
923,253 
17,073 
1.85 
1,016,550 
18,652 
1.83 
Tax-Exempt Investment Securities
(2)
1,391 
61 
4.39 
848 
37 
4.34 
2,199 
59 
2.68 
Total Investment Securities 
997,613 
27,460 
2.75 
924,101 
17,110 
1.85 
1,018,749 
18,711 
1.83 
Fed Funds Sold & Int Bearing Dep 
366,151 
15,751 
4.30 
239,712 
12,627 
5.27 
203,147 
10,126 
4.98 
Total Earning Assets 
4,010,875 
204,564 
5.10 
% 
3,897,580 
194,898 
5.00 
% 
3,933,800 
181,435 
4.61 
% 
Cash & Due From Banks 
67,876 
73,881 
75,786 
Allowance for Credit Losses 
(30,443) 
(29,902) 
(28,190) 
Other Assets 
299,269 
293,044 
297,290 
TOTAL ASSETS 
$ 
4,347,577 
$ 
4,234,603 
$ 
4,278,686 
LIABILITIES 
Noninterest Bearing Deposits 
$ 
1,319,336 
$ 
1,336,601 
$ 
1,507,657 
NOW Accounts 
1,227,316 
15,441 
1.26 
% 
1,183,962 
16,835 
1.42 
% 
1,172,861 
12,375 
1.06 
% 
Money Market Accounts 
420,992 
8,594 
2.04 
400,664 
9,957 
2.49 
299,581 
3,670 
1.22 
Savings Accounts 
504,951 
666 
0.13 
518,869 
723 
0.14 
592,033 
598 
0.10 
Time Deposits 
178,756 
4,896 
2.74 
157,342 
4,647 
2.95 
97,480 
939 
0.96 
Total Interest Bearing Deposits 
2,332,015 
29,597 
1.27 
% 
2,260,837 
32,162 
1.42 
% 
2,161,955 
17,582 
0.81 
% 
Total Deposits 
3,651,351 
29,597 
0.81 
3,597,438 
32,162 
0.89 
3,669,612 
17,582 
0.48 
Repurchase Agreements 
23,728 
612 
2.58 
26,970 
838 
3.11 
19,917 
513 
2.57 
Short-Term Borrowings 
12,949 
571 
4.40 
4,882 
242 
4.94 
24,146 
1,538 
6.37 
Subordinated Notes Payable 
47,466 
1,924 
4.00 
52,887 
2,449 
4.56 
52,887 
2,427 
4.53 
Other Long-Term Borrowings 
736 
35 
4.74 
534 
28 
5.31 
408 
20 
4.77 
Total Interest Bearing Liabilities 
2,416,894 
32,739 
1.35 
% 
2,346,110 
35,719 
1.52 
% 
2,259,313 
22,080 
0.98 
% 
Other Liabilities 
76,385 
71,964 
81,842 
TOTAL LIABILITIES 
3,812,615 
3,754,675 
3,848,812 
Temporary Equity 
- 
6,712 
8,392 
TOTAL SHAREOWNERS 
EQUITY 
534,962 
473,216 
421,482 
TOTAL LIABILITIES, 
TEMPORARY EQUITY AND 
SHAREOWNERS EQUITY 
$ 
4,347,577 
$ 
4,234,603 
$ 
4,278,686 
Interest Rate Spread 
3.74 
% 
3.47 
% 
3.63 
% 
Net Interest Income 
$ 
171,825 
$ 
159,179 
$ 
159,355 
Net Interest Margin
(3)
4.28 
% 
4.08 
% 
4.05 
% 
(1)
Average balances include net loan fees, discounts and premiums, and nonaccrual loans.
Interest income includes net loan cost of $1.4 million for 2025 
and $0.7 million for 2024 and net loan fees of $0.05 million
for 2023.
(2)
Interest income includes the effects of taxable equivalent adjustments using
a 21% tax rate. 
(3)
Taxable equivalent net interest income divided by average earning assets. 
51 
Table 3 
RATE/VOLUME
ANALYSIS 
(1)
2025 vs. 2024 
2024 vs. 2023 
(Taxable Equivalent Basis - 
Dollars in Thousands) 
Increase (Decrease) Due to Change In 
Increase (Decrease) Due to Change In 
Total 
Calendar
(3)
Volume 
Rate 
Total 
Calendar
(3)
Volume 
Rate 
Earnings Assets: 
Loans Held for Sale
(2)
$ 
(1,012) 
(8) 
$ 
(304) 
$ 
(700) 
$ 
(456) 
$ 
9 
$ 
(1,651) 
$ 
1,186 
Loans Held for Investment
(2)
(2,796) 
(444) 
(4,571) 
2,219 
13,019 
409 
2,406 
10,204 
Taxable Investment Securities 
10,326 
(47) 
1,396 
8,977 
(1,579) 
51 
(1,763) 
133 
Tax-Exempt Investment 
Securities
(2)
24 
- 
24 
- 
(22) 
- 
(36) 
14 
Funds Sold 
3,124 
(35) 
6,695 
(3,536) 
2,501 
28 
1,795 
678 
Total 
$ 
9,666 
(534) 
$ 
3,240 
$ 
6,960 
13,463 
$ 
497 
$ 
751 
$ 
12,215 
Interest Bearing Liabilities: 
NOW Accounts 
$ 
(1,394) 
(46) 
$ 
662 
$ 
(2,010) 
4,460 
$ 
34 
$ 
83 
$ 
4,343 
Money Market Accounts 
(1,363) 
(27) 
532 
(1,868) 
6,287 
10 
1,228 
5,049 
Savings Accounts 
(57) 
(2.00) 
(17) 
(38) 
125 
2 
(76) 
199 
Time Deposits 
249 
(13) 
645 
(383) 
3,708 
3 
574 
3,131 
Short-Term Borrowings 
103 
(3) 
167 
(61) 
(971) 
6 
(574) 
(403) 
Subordinated Notes Payable 
(525) 
(7) 
(244) 
(274) 
22 
7 
(7.00) 
22 
Other Long-Term Borrowings 
7 
- 
11 
(4) 
8 
- 
6 
2 
Total 
$ 
(2,980) 
(98) 
$ 
1,756 
$ 
(4,638) 
13,639 
$ 
62 
$ 
1,234 
$ 
12,343 
Changes in Net Interest Income 
$ 
12,646 
(436) 
$ 
1,484 
$ 
11,598 
$ 
(176) 
$ 
435 
$ 
(483) 
$ 
(128) 
(1)
This table shows the change in taxable equivalent net interest income for comparative periods based on either changes in 
average volume or changes in average rates for interest earning assets and interest bearing liabilities. Changes which 
are not solely due to volume changes or solely due to rate changes have been attributed to rate changes.
(2)
Interest income includes the effects of taxable equivalent adjustments using a 21% tax rate to adjust on tax-exempt loans and 
and securities to a taxable equivalent basis. 
(3)
Reflects one extra calendar day in 2024. 
Provision for Credit Losses
For 2025, we recorded a provision for credit loss expense of $5.3 million ($5.3
million expense for loans held for investment 
(HFI)) compared to provision expense of $4.0 million for 2024 ($5.0
million expense for loans HFI and $1.0 million benefit for 
unfunded loan commitments) and provision expense of $9.7 million for
2023 ($9.5 million expense for loans HFI and $0.2 
million expense for unfunded loan commitments).
We discuss the various
factors that impacted our provision expense for Loans 
HFI in further detail below under the heading Allowance for Credit Losses. 
52 
Noninterest Income
For 2025, noninterest income totaled $82.4 million, a $6.4 million, or 8.4%,
increase over 2024, attributable to increases in 
mortgage banking revenues of $2.6 million, wealth management fees of $1.6
million, other income of $1.5 million, and deposit 
fees of $0.7 million.
Higher secondary market production volume and gain on sale margin
drove the improvement in mortgage 
banking revenues.
The increase in wealth management fees was due to higher trust fees and reflected
a combination of new 
business, higher account valuations, and fee adjustments.
The increase in other income reflected the aforementioned $0.7 million 
gain from the sale of our insurance subsidiary,
CCSW,
in 2025.
Fee adjustments implemented in mid-2025 contributed to the 
increase in deposit fees and other income.
For 2024, noninterest income totaled $76.0 million, a $4.4 million, or 6.1%
,
increase over 2023, primarily attributable to a $3.9 
million increase in mortgage banking revenues and a $2.8 million increase in
wealth management fees, partially offset by a $2.2 
million decrease in other income.
The increase in mortgage banking revenues was due to a higher gain on sale margin.
The 
increase in wealth management fees was primarily driven by higher retail brokerage
fees and to a lesser extent trust fees, 
primarily attributable to both new account growth and higher account
values driven by higher market returns.
The decrease in 
other income was primarily attributable to a $1.4 million gain from the
sale of mortgage servicing rights in 2023, and to a lesser 
extent a decrease in vendor bonus income and miscellaneous income.
Noninterest income as a percentage of total operating revenues (net interest income
plus noninterest income) was 32.42% in 2025, 
32.34% in 2024, and 31.05% in 2023.
The variance in 2024 was primarily attributable to higher mortgage banking revenues and 
wealth management fees.
The table below reflects the major components of noninterest income. 
Table 4 
NONINTEREST INCOME 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Deposit Fees 
$ 
22,069 
$ 
21,346 
$ 
21,325 
Bank Card Fees 
14,705 
14,707 
14,918 
Wealth Management
Fees 
20,667 
19,113 
16,337 
Mortgage Banking Revenues 
16,959 
14,343 
10,400 
Other 
7,955 
6,467 
8,630 
Total Noninterest
Income 
$ 
82,355 
$ 
75,976 
$ 
71,610 
Significant components of noninterest income are discussed in more
detail below. 
Deposit Fees
.
For 2025, deposit fees (service charge fees, insufficient
fund/overdraft fees, and business account analysis fees) 
totaled $22.1 million compared to $21.3 million in 2024
and $21.3 million in 2023.
The increase in 2025 was primarily due to 
service charge fee adjustments made late in the second quarter of
2025.
Deposit fees for 2024 reflected a $0.2 million increase in 
commercial account analysis fees that was offset by a $0.2 million
decrease in overdraft fees.
Bank Card Fees
.
Bank card fees totaled $14.7 million in 2025 compared to $14.7 million in 2024
and $14.9 million in 2023.
The 
decrease in 2024 was generally due to lower card volume reflective of
overall slower consumer spending.
Wealth
Management Fees
.
Wealth management fees
include
trust fees through Capital City Trust (i.e., managed
accounts and 
trusts/estates) and retail brokerage fees through Capital City Investments (i.e.,
investment, insurance products, and retirement 
accounts).
In September 2025, we sold our subsidiary,
Capital City Strategic Wealth, which
provided the sale of life insurance, 
risk management and asset protection services, and whose insurance commission
and retail brokerage fees were included in 
wealth management fees.
Wealth management
fees for 2025 totaled $20.7 million compared to $19.1 million in 2024 and $16.3
million in 2023.
The 
increase in 2025 reflected a $1.4 million increase in trust fees and a $0.2 million
increase in retail brokerage fees.
The increase in 
trust fees reflected new account growth and a fee increase in the first quarter of 2025.
The increase in 2024 was attributable to a 
$2.1 million increase in retail brokerage fees and a $0.9 million increase
in trust fees, which were partially offset by a $0.3 million 
decrease in insurance commission revenue.
The increase in retail brokerage fees was driven by increased fixed income and 
annuity product sales and new account growth, and the increase in trust fees reflected
new account growth, higher account values 
reflective of improved market returns, and a mid-year fee increase.
Capital City Strategic Wealth
insurance commission revenues were $1.1
million for 2025, $1.1 million for 2024 and $1.3 million 
for 2023, and retail brokerage fees were $1.3 million, $2.4 million,
and $1.0 million for those respective years, and resulted in 
nominal impact on consolidated operating profit of $0.2 million, $0.4
million, and ($0.3
million) in each respective year.
53 
At December 31, 2025, total assets under management (AUM)
were approximately $2.867 billion compared to $3.049 billion at 
December 31, 2024, and $2.588 billion at December 31, 2023.
The slight decline in 2025 was primarily attributable to lower 
retail brokerage assets related to the sale of Capital City Strategic Wealth.
The increase in AUM in 2024 reflected a combination 
of new account growth and higher account values due to improved market returns.
Mortgage Banking Revenues
.
Mortgage banking revenues totaled $17.0 million in 2025 compared
to $14.3 million in 2024 and 
$10.4 million in 2023.
The increase in both 2025 and 2024 was attributable to a higher gain on sale margin
which reflected a 
higher percentage of secondary market/mandatory delivery loan sales.
We provide
a detailed overview of our mortgage banking 
operation,
including a detailed break-down of mortgage banking revenues, mortgage
servicing activity, and warehouse
funding 
within Note 4 - Mortgage Banking Activities in the Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Other
.
Other noninterest income totaled $8.0 million in 2025 compared to $6.5 million
in 2024 and $8.6 million in 2023.
The 
increase in 2025 was primarily due to a $0.7 million gain from the sale of our
insurance subsidiary (Capital City Strategic Wealth) 
in the third quarter of 2025 and to a lesser extent higher miscellaneous income
,
primarily other fees and commissions which 
reflected a mid-year fee increase.
The decrease in 2024 was attributable to lower miscellaneous income,
primarily a $1.4 million 
gain from the sale of mortgage servicing rights realized in 2023, and to a lesser extent
a decrease in vendor bonus income and 
miscellaneous income.
Noninterest Expense
For 2025, noninterest expense totaled $167.0 million compared to $165.3
million for 2024 with the $1.7 million, or 1.0%, 
increase primarily due to a $6.5 million increase in compensation expense
that was partially offset by a $4.7 million decrease in 
other expense.
The increase in compensation was driven by higher performance-based
pay and health insurance cost, and to a 
lesser extent an increase in 401k matching expense.
The decrease in other expense was primarily due to a $3.4 million decrease 
in other real estate expense due to higher gains from the sale of banking facilities in 2025
and a $3.7 million decrease in pension 
expense (non-service component), partially offset by
increases in processing expense of $1.2 million (outsource of core 
processing system) and charitable contribution expense of $0.9 million.
The variance in pension expense included a $1.5 million 
pension settlement gain that occurred in the fourth quarter of 2025.
For 2024, noninterest expense totaled $165.3 million, an $8.3 million,
or 5.3%, increase over 2023, primarily attributable to 
increases in compensation expense of $6.9 million, occupancy expense of
$0.3 million, and other expense of $1.1 million.
The 
increase in compensation reflected a $5.3 million increase in salary expense
and a $1.6 million increase in other associate benefit 
expense.
The increase in salary expense was primarily due to a decrease of $3.1 million in realized loan
cost (credit offset to 
salary expense - lower new loan volume in 2024), a $2.2 million increase
in base salary expense (primarily annual merit raises), 
and a $1.2 million increase in cash incentive compensation that were
partially offset by a decrease of $1.4 million in commission 
expense (lower residential mortgage volume).
The unfavorable variance in other associate benefit expense was due to a $0.9 
million increase in associate insurance cost and a $0.6 million increase in stock compensation
expense.
The increase in 
occupancy expense was attributable to increases in software license and
maintenance agreement expenses.
The increase in other 
expense was driven by a $1.1 million increase in other real estate expense and
a $1.4 million increase in processing expense that 
were partially offset by a $1.4 million decrease in miscellaneous
expense.
The increase in other real estate expense reflected a 
lower level of gains from the sale of banking offices in 2024.
The increase in processing expense reflected both inflationary 
increases on contract renewals and the outsourcing of our core processing
system.
The decrease in miscellaneous expense was 
attributable to lower pension plan expense for the non-service related component
of the plan.
Our operating efficiency ratio (expressed as noninterest
expense as a percentage of taxable equivalent net interest income plus 
noninterest
income) was 65.71%, 70.30% and 67.99% in 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
The improvement in this metric for 
2025 was driven by higher taxable equivalent net interest income (refer to caption
headed Net Interest Income and Margin).
The 
decline in this metric for 2024 was attributable to a higher level of noninterest
expense.
Expense management is an important 
part of our culture and strategic focus.
We will continue
to review and evaluate opportunities to optimize our delivery operations 
and invest in technology that provides
favorable returns/scale and/or mitigates
risk.
The table below reflects the major 
components of noninterest expense.
54 
Table 5 
NONINTEREST EXPENSE 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Salaries 
$ 
88,689 
$ 
84,639 
$ 
79,278 
Associate Benefits 
18,489 
16,082 
14,509 
Total Compensation 
107,178 
100,721 
93,787 
Premises 
12,694 
12,593 
13,033 
Equipment 
15,259 
15,389 
14,627 
Total Occupancy,
net 
27,953 
27,982 
27,660 
Legal Fees 
1,867 
1,724 
1,721 
Professional Fees 
5,816 
6,311 
6,245 
Processing Services 
9,580 
8,411 
6,984 
Advertising 
3,190 
3,111 
3,349 
Travel and Entertainment 
1,747 
1,795 
1,896 
Telephone 
3,030 
2,857 
2,729 
Insurance Other 
2,990 
3,137 
3,120 
Pension - Other 
(3,489) 
(1,675) 
76 
Pension Settlement Gain 
(1,552) 
- 
(291) 
Other Real Estate, Net 
(4,308) 
(868) 
(1,969) 
Miscellaneous 
13,020 
11,809 
11,716 
Total Other Expense 
31,891 
36,612 
35,576 
Total Noninterest
Expense 
$ 
167,022 
$ 
165,315 
$ 
157,023 
Significant components of noninterest expense are discussed in more detail
below. 
Compensation
.
Compensation expense totaled $107.2 million in 2025 compared to $100.7 million
in 2024, and $93.8 million in 
2023. For 2025, the $6.5 million, or 6.4%, net increase reflected a $4.1 million
increase in salary expense and a $2.4 million 
increase in associate benefit expense.
The increase in salary expense was driven by a $2.6 million increase in incentive
plan 
expense, a $0.7 million increase in base salary expense, and a $0.6 million
increase in 401k matching expense.
Improved 
company performance drove the increase in incentive plan expense.
Annual merit raises drove the increase in base salary 
expense.
The increase in 401k plan expense was primarily due to the addition of CCHL associates in 2025
to the companys 401k 
plan.
The unfavorable variance in associate benefit expense was primarily attributable
to a $2.1
million increase in associate 
insurance cost due to higher health insurance cost and a $0.4 million increase in
stock compensation expense attributable to a 
higher incentive pay-out.
For 2024, the $6.9 million, or 7.4%, net increase reflected a $5.3
million increase in salary expense and a $1.6 million increase in 
associate benefit expense.
The increase in salary expense was primarily due to a $3.1 million decrease in realized
loan cost which 
is a credit offset to salary expense and reflected lower new loan volume and a
$2.2 million increase in base salary expense, 
primarily annual merit raises, which were partially offset
by a $1.4 million decrease in commission expense driven by lower 
residential mortgage volume.
The unfavorable variance in other associate benefit expense was due to a $0.9
million increase in 
associate insurance cost due to higher health insurance cost and a $0.6 million increase
in stock compensation expense 
attributable to a higher incentive pay-out.
Occupancy
.
Occupancy expense (including premises and equipment) totaled $28.0 million for
2025
compared to $28.0 million 
for 2024, and $27.7 million for 2023.
For 2025, higher premises rent expense of $0.8 million related to a new banking office 
opening in late 2024 was offset by lower expenses for our
operations center building that was sold in early 2025, and to a lesser 
extent lower building/FF&E insurance cost due to a lower premium in 2025.
For 2024, the $0.3 million, or 1.2%, increase was 
attributable to an increase in maintenance agreement expense, primarily
for security upgrades and addition of interactive teller 
machines.
55 
Other
.
Other noninterest expense totaled $31.9 million in 2025 compared
to $36.6 million in 2024
and $35.6 million in 2023.
For 2025, the $4.7 million decrease was primarily due to a $3.4
million decrease in other real estate expense due to higher gains 
from the sale of banking facilities in 2025 and a $3.7 million decrease in pension
expense (non-service component), partially 
offset by increases in processing expense of $1.2 million
and charitable contribution expense of $0.9 million.
The outsourcing of 
our core processing system in mid-2024 drove the increase in processing
expense.
The variance in pension expense was due to 
the aforementioned $1.5 million pension settlement gain
in 2025,
and strong asset returns in the plan.
For 2024, the $1.0 million variance in other expense was driven by a $1.1
million increase in other real estate expense and a $1.4 
million increase in processing expense that were partially offset by
a $1.4 million decrease in miscellaneous expense.
The 
increase in other real estate expense reflected a lower level of gains from the sale of banking
offices in 2024.
The increase in 
processing expense reflected both inflationary increases on contract renewals
and the outsourcing of our core processing system.
The decrease in miscellaneous expense was attributable to lower pension
plan expense for the non-service related component of 
the plan. 
Income Taxes
For 2025, we realized income tax expense of $20.2 million (effective
rate of 24.7%) compared to $13.9 million (effective rate of 
21.2%) for 2024 and $13.0 million (effective rate of 20.4%)
for 2023.
A lower level of tax benefit accrued from a solar tax credit 
equity fund drove the increase in our effective tax rate compared
to 2024 and to a lesser extent a higher than projected Internal 
Revenue Code (IRC) Section 162(m) limitation related to current
and future compensation.
The increase in our effective tax 
rate in 2024 was due to a higher than projected Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m)
limitation and lower tax-exempt interest 
income.
Absent discrete items or new tax credit investments, we expect our annual effective
tax rate to approximate 24% for 2026. 
FINANCIAL CONDITION
Average assets totaled
approximately $4.348 billion for 2025, an increase
of $113.0 million, or 2.7%, over 2024.
Average 
earning assets were approximately $4.011 billion
for 2025, an increase of $113.3 million, or
2.9%, over 2024.
Compared to 2024, 
the change in earning assets was primarily attributable to a $126.4 million
increase in overnight funds sold and a $73.5 million 
increase in investment securities that was partially offset by an
$83.6 million decrease
in loans HFI.
We discuss these variances 
in more detail below. 
Table 2 provides
information on average balances and rates, Table
3 provides an analysis of rate and volume variances,
and Table 
6 highlights the changing mix of our interest earning assets over the last three fiscal
years. 
Loans 
For 2025, average loans HFI decreased $83.6 million or 3.1% compared
to an increase of $50.1 million, or 1.9% in 2024. 
Compared to 2024, the decrease in loans was primarily driven by
a decrease of $39.1 million in consumer loans, primarily 
indirect auto loans, a decrease of $27.8 million in construction loans, and a decrease
in commercial real estate loans of $26.7 
million, partially offset by increases in residential real estate loans
of $17.4 million and home equity loans of $16.2 million. 
Total loans HFI at December
31, 2025 totaled $2.546 billion, a $105.4 million decrease from December
31, 2024 that was largely 
attributable to a decrease in construction loans of $73.1 million,
and to a lesser extent decreases in consumer loans (primarily auto 
indirect)
of $17.2 million, commercial real estate loans of $10.4 million, commercial loans of $8.9
million, and residential real 
estate loans of $16.8 million, that were partially offset by
a $20.8 million increase in home equity loans. 
As part of our overall strategy,
we will originate 1-4 family real estate secured adjustable-rate loans and home
equity loans 
through CCHL, which provides us a larger pool of loan origination
opportunities, and in large part drove the aforementioned 
growth in average residential real estate and home equity loans in 2025.
This loan volume can vary according to the direction of 
residential mortgage interest rates. 
In 2025, average loans held for sale (HFS) decreased $3.1 million, or $11.3%
,
from 2024.
Loans HFI and HFS as a percentage 
of average earning assets decreased to 66.0% in 2025 compared to 70.1%
in 2024, primarily attributable to a decline in loans HFI. 
56 
Table 6 
SOURCES OF EARNING ASSET GROWTH 
2024 to 
Percentage 
Components of 
2025 
of Total 
Average
Earning Assets 
(Average Balances Dollars In Thousands) 
Change 
Change 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Loans: 
Loans HFS 
$ 
(3,072) 
(2.7) 
% 
0.6 
% 
0.7 
% 
1.4 
% 
Loans HFI: 
Commercial, Financial, and Agricultural 
(23,668) 
(20.9) 
4.5 
5.3 
5.9 
Real Estate Construction 
(27,768) 
(24.5) 
4.4 
5.3 
5.8 
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
(26,665) 
(23.5) 
19.8 
21.0 
20.7 
Real Estate Residential 
17,372 
15.3 
26.2 
26.3 
22.5 
Real Estate Home Equity 
16,238 
14.3 
5.7 
5.5 
5.2 
Consumer 
(39,093) 
(34.5) 
4.9 
6.0 
7.6 
Total HFI Loans 
(83,584) 
(73.8) 
65.5 
69.4 
67.7 
Total Loans HFS and
HFI 
$ 
(86,656) 
(76.5) 
66.1 
70.1 
69.1 
% 
Investment Securities: 
Taxable 
$ 
72,969 
64.4 
% 
24.8 
% 
23.7 
% 
25.8 
% 
Tax-Exempt 
543 
0.5 
- 
- 
0.1 
Total Securities 
$ 
73,512 
64.9 
% 
24.8 
% 
23.7 
% 
25.9 
% 
Federal Funds Sold and Interest Bearing Deposits 
126,439 
111.6 
9.1 
6.2 
5.0 
Total Earning Assets 
$ 
113,295 
100 
% 
100 
% 
100 
% 
100 
% 
Our average total loans (HFS and HFI)-to-deposit ratio was 72.5%
in 2025, 76.0% in 2024, and 73.9% in 2023.
The composition of our HFI loan portfolio at December 31 for each of
the past three years is shown in Table
7.
Table 8 arrays 
our HFI loan portfolio at December 31, 2025, by maturity period.
As a percentage of the HFI loan portfolio, loans with fixed 
interest rates represented 24.1% at December 31, 2025 compared to 25.3% at
December 31, 2024.
Higher residential real estate 
adjustable-rate loan balances and lower commercial real estate mortgage
adjustable-rate loan balances at December 31, 2025 
drove the decrease in the percentage.
Table 7 
LOANS HFI BY CATEGORY 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
180,341 
$ 
189,208 
$ 
225,190 
Real Estate Construction 
146,920 
219,994 
196,091 
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
768,731 
779,095 
825,456 
Real Estate Residential 
1,025,690 
1,042,504 
1,004,219 
Real Estate Home Equity 
240,897 
220,064 
210,920 
Consumer 
183,539 
200,685 
272,042 
Total Loans HFI, Net
of Unearned Income 
$ 
2,546,118 
$ 
2,651,550 
$ 
2,733,918 
57 
Table 8 
LOANS HFI MATURITIES 
Maturity Periods 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
One Year 
or Less 
Over One 
Through 
Five Years 
Five 
Through 
Fifteen 
Years 
Over 
Fifteen 
Years 
Total 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
31,786 
$ 
116,764 
$ 
29,568 
$ 
2,223 
$ 
180,341 
Real Estate Construction 
76,019 
60,399 
434 
10,068 
146,920 
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
65,819 
131,848 
291,187 
279,877 
768,731 
Real Estate Residential 
22,493 
14,236 
119,688 
869,273 
1,025,690 
Real Estate Home Equity 
713 
12,237 
45,474 
182,473 
240,897 
Consumer
(1)
5,441 
117,190 
60,627 
281 
183,539 
Total 
$ 
202,271 
$ 
452,674 
$ 
546,978 
$ 
1,344,195 
$ 
2,546,118 
Total Loans HFI with
Fixed Rates 
$ 
71,315 
$ 
326,393 
$ 
170,097 
$ 
44,745 
$ 
612,550 
Total Loans HFI with
Floating or Adjustable-Rates 
130,956 
126,281 
376,881 
1,299,450 
1,933,568 
Total 
$ 
202,271 
$ 
452,674 
$ 
546,978 
$ 
1,344,195 
$ 
2,546,118 
(1)
Demand loans and overdrafts are
reported in the category of one year or less. 
Credit Quality
Table 9 provides
the components of nonperforming assets and various other credit quality and risk metrics
at December 31 for the 
last three fiscal years.
Information regarding our accounting policies related to nonaccruals, past due
loans, and financial 
difficulty modifications is provided in Note 3 Loans
Held for Investment and Allowance for Credit Losses. 
Nonperforming assets (nonaccrual loans and other real estate) totaled $10.5
million at December 31, 2025, compared to $6.7 
million at December 31, 2024.
At December 31, 2025, nonperforming assets as a percentage of total assets was 0.24%,
compared 
to 0.15% at December 31, 2024.
Nonaccrual loans totaled $8.6 million at December 31, 2025, a $2.3
million increase over 
December 31, 2024.
Further, classified loans totaled $14.3 million at December
31, 2025, a $5.6 million decrease from 
December 31, 2024.
Table 9 
CREDIT QUALITY 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Nonaccruing Loans: 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
1,278 
$ 
37 
$ 
311 
Real Estate Construction 
- 
- 
322 
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
2,560 
566 
909 
Real Estate Residential 
2,143 
3,127 
2,990 
Real Estate Home Equity 
1,769 
1,782 
999 
Consumer 
845 
790 
711 
Total Nonaccruing
Loans 
8,595 
6,302 
6,242 
Other Real Estate Owned 
1,936 
367 
1 
Total Nonperforming
Assets 
$ 
10,531 
$ 
6,669 
$ 
6,243 
Past Due Loans 30 89 Days 
$ 
7,017 
$ 
4,311 
$ 
6,855 
Classified Loans 
$ 
14,334 
$ 
19,896 
$ 
22,203 
Nonaccruing Loans/Loans 
0.34 
% 
0.24 
% 
0.23 
% 
Nonperforming Assets/Total
Assets 
0.24 
0.15 
0.15 
Nonperforming Assets/Loans Plus OREO 
0.41 
0.25 
0.23 
Allowance/Nonaccruing Loans 
360.69 
% 
464.14 
% 
479.70 
% 
58 
Nonaccrual Loans
.
Nonaccrual loans totaled $8.6 million at December 31, 2025, a $2.3 million increase
over December 31, 2024 
with the increase primarily attributable to two home equity loans totaling
$1.8 million.
Generally, loans are placed on
nonaccrual 
status if principal or interest payments become 90 days past due or management
deems the collectability of the principal and 
interest to be doubtful.
Once a loan is placed in nonaccrual status, all previously accrued and uncollected
interest is reversed 
against interest income.
Interest income on nonaccrual loans is recognized when the ultimate collectability is no
longer 
considered doubtful.
Loans are returned to accrual status when the principal and interest amounts contractually due
are brought 
current or when future payments are reasonably assured.
If interest on our loans classified as nonaccrual during 2025 had been 
recognized on a fully accruing basis, we would have recorded an additional
$0.4 million of interest income for the year ended 
December 31, 2025. 
Other Real Estate Owned
.
OREO represents property acquired as the result of borrower defaults on
loans or by receiving a deed 
in lieu of foreclosure.
OREO is recorded at the lower of cost or estimated fair value, less estimated selling costs, at the
time of 
foreclosure.
Write-downs occurring at foreclosure are
charged against the allowance for credit losses.
On an ongoing basis, 
properties are either revalued internally or by a third-party appraiser
as required by applicable regulations.
Subsequent declines in 
value are reflected as other noninterest expense.
Carrying costs related to maintaining the OREO properties are expensed as 
incurred and are also reflected as other noninterest expense. 
OREO totaled $1.9 million at December 31, 2025, versus $0.4 million
at December 31, 2024.
During 2025, we added properties 
totaling $4.4 million and sold properties totaling $2.9 million.
For 2024, we added properties totaling $1.0 million and sold 
properties totaling $0.6 million. 
Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing
Financial Difficulty
.
Occasionally, we will modify
loans to borrowers who are 
experiencing financial difficulty.
Loan modifications to borrowers in financial difficulty are loans in
which we will grant an 
economic concession to the borrower that we would not otherwise consider.
In these instances, as part of a work-out alternative, 
we will make concessions including the extension of the loan term, a principal
moratorium, a reduction in the interest rate, or a 
combination thereof.
A modified loan classification can be removed if the borrowers financial condition
improves such that the 
borrower is no longer in financial difficulty,
the loan has not had any forgiveness of principal or interest, and the loan is 
subsequently refinanced or restructured at market terms and qualifies as a new
loan.
At December 31, 2025, we maintained four 
loans for $3.8 million that we modified due to the borrower experiencing
financial difficulty.
Past Due Loans
.
A loan is defined as a past due loan when one full payment is past due or a contractual maturity
is over 30 days 
past due.
Past due loans at December 31, 2025 totaled $7.0 million compared to $4.3 million
at December 31, 2024.
Indirect 
auto loans represented a large portion of the past due balances representing
26% and 56%, respectively,
of the total dollars past 
due at December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
Potential Problem Loans
.
Potential problem loans are defined as those loans which are now current but where management
has 
doubt as to the borrowers ability to comply with present
loan repayment terms.
At December 31, 2025, we had $4.7 million in 
loans of this type which were not included in either of the nonaccrual or
90 days past due loan categories compared to $2.8 
million at December 31, 2024.
Management monitors these loans closely and reviews their performance
on a regular basis. 
Loan Concentrations
.
Loan concentrations exist when there are amounts loaned to multiple borrowers engaged
in similar 
activities which cause them to be similarly impacted by economic or other conditions
and such amount exceeds 10% of our total 
loans.
Due to the lack of diversified industry within our markets and the relatively
close proximity of the markets, we have both 
geographic concentrations as well as concentrations in the types of loans funded.
Specifically, due to the nature of our markets,
a 
significant portion of our HFI loan portfolio has historically been
secured with real estate, approximately 86% at December 31, 
2025 and 85% at December 31, 2024, with the increase driven by lower loan volume
in 2025
for commercial and consumer 
(indirect auto) loans and a higher volume of 1-4 family residential real estate loans
originated in 2025 in comparison to other loan 
types.
The primary types of real estate collateral are commercial properties and 1-4 family
residential properties. 
We review our
loan portfolio segments and concentration limits on an ongoing basis and will make
adjustments as needed to 
mitigate/reduce risk to segments that reflect decline or stress.
We 
have established an internal lending limit of $10 million for the total aggregate
amount of credit that will be extended to a 
client and any related entities within our Board approved policies.
This compares to our legal lending limit of approximately 
$101 million. 
59 
The following table summarizes our real estate loan category as segregated
by the type of property.
Property type concentrations 
are stated as a percentage of total real estate loans at December 31. 
Table 10 
REAL ESTATE
LOANS BY PROPERTY TYPE 
2025 
2024 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Investor Real 
Estate 
Owner 
Occupied 
Real Estate 
Investor Real 
Estate 
Owner 
Occupied 
Real Estate 
Vacant
Land, Construction, and Land 
Development 
$ 
246,361 
11.3 
% 
- 
- 
$ 
317,881 
14.1 
% 
- 
- 
Improved Property 
520,731 
23.9 
$ 
1,415,146 
64.8 
% 
542,858 
24.2 
$ 
1,386,912 
61.7 
% 
$ 
767,092 
35.2 
% 
64.8 
% 
$ 
860,739 
38.3 
% 
61.7 
% 
A major portion of our real estate loan segment is centered in the owner occupied
category, which carries a lower risk
of non-
collection than certain segments of the investor category.
The owner occupied category was approximately 65% of total real 
estate loans at December 31, 2025 and 62% of total real estate loans at December 31, 2024.
Further, investor real estate totaled 
35% and 38% of total real estate loans at December 31, 2025 and December
31, 2024, respectively.
The table below further segments the investor real estate category for improved
property. 
Table 11 
REAL ESTATE
LOANS IMPROVED PROPERTY 
DISTRIBUTION 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Hotel/Motel 
$ 
77,527 
14.9 
% 
$ 
74,400 
13.7 
% 
Gas Station/C-Store 
7,716 
1.5 
7,628 
1.4 
Industrial/Warehouse 
32,292 
6.2 
30,427 
5.6 
Multi-Family 
49,649 
9.5 
49,295 
9.1 
Office 
35,127 
6.7 
45,541 
8.4 
Retail & Shopping Centers 
107,095 
20.6 
116,402 
21.4 
Commercial Condos 
2,127 
0.4 
867 
0.2 
Other 
44,663 
8.6 
32,022 
5.9 
Total Improved
Property 
356,196 
68.4 
356,582 
65.7 
Non-Owner Occupied 1-4 Residential 
$ 
164,535 
31.6 
% 
$ 
186,276 
34.3 
% 
Total Investor
Real Estate Improved Property 
$ 
520,731 
100 
% 
$ 
542,858 
100 
% 
Allowance for Credit Losses 
The allowance for credit losses is a valuation account that is deducted from
the loans amortized cost basis to present the net 
amount expected to be collected on the loans.
The allowance for credit losses is adjusted by a credit loss provision which is 
reported in earnings and reduced by the charge-off
of loan amounts, net of recoveries.
Loans are charged off against the 
allowance when management believes the uncollectability of a loan
balance is confirmed.
Expected recoveries do not exceed the 
aggregate of amounts previously charged-off
and expected to be charged-off.
Expected credit loss inherent in non-cancellable 
off-balance sheet credit exposures is provided through the credit
loss provision but recorded separately in other liabilities. 
Management estimates the allowance balance using relevant available
information, from internal and external sources, relating to 
past events, current conditions, and reasonable and supportable forecasts.
Historical loan default and loss experience provides the 
basis for the estimation of expected credit losses.
Adjustments to historical loss information incorporate managements
view of 
current conditions and forecasts.
Detailed information regarding the methodology for estimating
the amount reported in the allowance for credit losses is provided 
in Note 1 Significant Accounting Policies/Allowance for Credit Losses in
the Consolidated Financial Statements. 
60 
Note 3 Loans Held for Investment and Allowance for Credit Losses in the
Consolidated Financial Statements provides the 
activity in the allowance and the allocation by loan type for each of
the past three fiscal years. 
At December 31, 2025, the allowance for credit losses for HFI loans totaled
$31.0 million compared to $29.2 million at December 
31, 2024 and $29.9 million at December 31, 2023.
The $1.8 million increase in the allowance in 2025 reflected a credit loss 
provision of $5.3 million and net loan charge-offs
of $3.6 million.
The $0.7 million decrease in the allowance in 2024 reflected a 
credit loss provision of $5.0 million and net loan charge
-offs of $5.7 million.
The increase in the allowance in 2025 was primarily 
attributable to qualitative factor adjustments that were partially offset
by lower loan balances.
The decrease in the allowance in 
2024 was primarily attributable to lower new loan volume and loan balances
and favorable loan migration.
For 2025, we realized net loan charge-offs
of $3.6 million, or 0.14%, of average HFI loans, compared to net loan charge
-offs of 
$5.7 million, or 0.21%, for 2024, and net loan charge-offs
of $4.7 million, or 0.18%, for 2023.
Consumer (indirect auto) net loan 
charge-offs represented 66%, 62%, and
76% of total net loan charge-offs for the same respective
years.
Further, indirect auto net 
loan charge-offs represented approximately
1.38% of average indirect auto loans in 2025, 1.68% in 2024, and 1.31% in 2023.
Since 2022,
we have reduced our exposure to this loan segment.
At December 31, 2025, the allowance for credit losses represented 1.22%
of HFI loans and provided coverage of 361% of 
nonperforming loans compared to 1.10% and 464%, respectively,
at December 31, 2024 and 1.10% and 480%, respectively,
at 
December 31, 2023. 
Table 12 further
segments the allocation of allowance for credit losses at December 31 for each of
the last three fiscal years. 
Table 12 
ALLOCATION OF
ALLOWANCE
FOR CREDIT LOSSES 
2025 
2024 
2023 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
ACL 
Amount 
Percent of 
Loans to 
Total
Loans 
ACL 
Amount 
Percent of 
Loans to 
Total
Loans 
ACL 
Amount 
Percent of 
Loans to 
Total
Loans 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
1,751 
7.1 
% 
$ 
1,514 
7.1 
% 
$ 
1,482 
8.2 
% 
Real Estate: 
Construction 
1,681 
5.8 
2,384 
8.3 
2,502 
7.2 
Commercial 
6,859 
30.2 
5,867 
29.4 
5,782 
30.2 
Residential 
15,317 
40.2 
14,568 
39.3 
15,056 
36.7 
Home Equity 
2,368 
9.5 
1,952 
8.3 
1,818 
7.7 
Consumer 
3,025 
7.2 
2,966 
7.6 
3,301 
10.0 
Total 
$ 
31,001 
100 
% 
$ 
29,251 
100 
% 
$ 
29,941 
100 
% 
Investment Securities
Our average investment portfolio balance was $998 million
in 2025, $924 million in 2024, and $1.019 billion in 2023.
As a 
percentage of average earning assets, our investment portfolio
represented 24.9% in 2025, compared to 23.7% in 2024,
and 25.9% 
in 2023.
Compared to 2024, investment portfolio activity reflected the reinvestment of
cash flow from matured securities as well 
as growth in the balance due to a higher level of liquidity.
For comparison to 2023, the decline in the investment portfolio was 
attributable to the allocation of investment cash flows to support loan
growth.
In 2026, we plan to reinvest cash flow from the 
investment portfolio and as appropriate allocate to support loan demand
and other liquidity management strategies.
For 2025, average taxable investments increased by $73.0 million, or 7.9%,
while tax-exempt investments increased $0.5 million, 
or 64.0%.
Both taxable and non-taxable bonds increased as part of our overall investment strategy
to reinvest cash flows from 
investments plus additional funds to grow the portfolio. At December 31, 2025,
municipal securities (taxable and non-taxable) 
comprised 3% of the portfolio. 
61 
Our investment portfolio is a significant component of our operations and, as such,
it functions as a key element of liquidity and 
asset/liability management.
Two types of classifications are approved
for investment securities which are Available
-for-Sale 
(AFS) and Held-to-Maturity (HTM).
For 2025
and 2024, we maintained securities under both the AFS and HTM 
designations.
At December 31, 2025, $643.9 million, or 62.9%, of our investment portfolio was classified as AFS,
with $377.4 
million, or 36.9%, classified as HTM, and $2.1 million, or 0.2%, classified as equity
securities.
At December 31, 2024, $403.3 
million, or 41.5%, of our investment portfolio was classified as AFS, with $567.2
million, or 58.3%, classified as HTM and $2.4 
million, or 0.2%, classified as equity securities.
Table 13 provides
the composition of our investment securities portfolio at December 31 for each of
the last three fiscal years. 
Table 13 
INVESTMENT SECURITIES COMPOSITION 
2025 
2024 
2023 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Carrying 
Amount 
Percent 
Carrying 
Amount 
Percent 
Carrying 
Amount 
Percent 
Available for
Sale 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
333,264 
32.6 
% 
$ 
105,801 
10.9 
% 
$ 
24,679 
2.6 
% 
U.S. Government Agency 
172,114 
16.7 
143,127 
14.8 
145,034 
15.1 
States and Political Subdivisions 
34,911 
3.4 
39,382 
4.0 
39,083 
4.0 
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
52,004 
5.1 
55,477 
5.7 
63,303 
6.6 
Corporate Debt Securities 
43,532 
4.3 
51,462 
5.3 
57,552 
6.0 
Other Securities 
8,097 
0.8 
8,096 
0.8 
8,251 
0.9 
Total
643,922 
62.9 
403,345 
41.5 
337,902 
35.1 
Held to Maturity 
U.S. Government Treasury 
129,782 
12.7 
368,005 
37.8 
457,681 
47.4 
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
247,664 
24.2 
199,150 
20.5 
167,341 
17.3 
Total 
377,446 
36.9 
567,155 
58.3 
625,022 
64.7 
Other Equity Securities 
2,069 
0.2 
2,399 
0.2 
3,450 
0.2 
Total Investment
Securities 
$ 
1,023,437 
100 
% 
$ 
972,899 
100 
% 
$ 
966,374 
100 
% 
The classification of a security is determined upon acquisition based
on how the purchase will affect our asset/liability strategy 
and future business plans and opportunities.
Classification determinations will also factor in regulatory capital requirements, 
volatility in earnings or other comprehensive income, and liquidity
needs.
Securities in the AFS portfolio are recorded at fair 
value with unrealized gains and losses associated with these securities recorded
net of tax, in the accumulated other 
comprehensive income (loss) component of shareowners equity.
Securities designated as HTM are those acquired or owned with 
the intent of holding them to maturity (final payment date).
HTM investments are measured at amortized cost.
It is neither 
managements current
intent nor practice to participate in the trading of investment securities for the purpose of recognizing
gains 
and therefore we do not maintain a trading portfolio. 
At December 31, 2025, there were 736 positions (combined AFS and HTM)
with pre-tax unrealized losses totaling $23.7 million.
The Government National Mortgage Association mortgage-backed
securities, U.S. Treasuries, and SBA securities held carry
the 
full faith and credit guarantee of the U.S. Government and are deemed
to be 0% risk-weighted assets.
Other mortgage-backed 
securities held (Federal National Mortgage Association and Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation) are issued by U.S. 
Government sponsored entities.
Direct obligations of U.S. Government agencies (Federal Farm Credit
Bank and Federal Home 
Loan Bank of Atlanta) are also owned.
We believe the
long history of no credit losses on government securities indicates that the 
expectation of nonpayment of the amortized cost basis is zero.
A large portion of the SBA securities float monthly or quarterly 
with the prime rate and are uncapped.
The remaining positions owned are municipal and corporate bonds.
At December 31, 
2025, 42 corporate bond positions had a total allowance for credit loss of $42,000.
All of these positions maintain an overall 
rating of at least BBB+, and all are expected to mature at par.
The average maturity of our investment portfolio at December 31,
2025
was 2.57 years, with a duration of 2.12 compared to 2.54 
years and 2.19, respectively,
at December 31, 2024. The average life of our investment portfolio increased
primarily due to 
continued reinvestment of maturities in the portfolio in conjunction
with additional purchases of new securities.
62 
The weighted average taxable equivalent yield of our investment portfolio
at December 31, 2025 was 3.17% versus 2.41% in 
2024.
This increase in yield reflected a favorable reinvestment rate on securities purchased
in 2025. Our bond portfolio contained 
no investments in obligations, other than U.S. Governments, of any state, municipality,
political subdivision, or any other issuer 
that exceeded 10% of our shareowners equity at December 31, 2025.
Table 14 and Note 2
in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements present a detailed analysis of our
investment securities as 
to type, maturity, unrealized
losses, and yield at December 31.
Table 14 
MATURITY DISTRIBUTION
OF INVESTMENT SECURITIES 
Within 1 year 
1 - 5 years 
5 - 10 years 
After 10 years 
Total 
(Dollars in 
Thousands) 
Amount 
WAY
(3)
Amount 
WAY
(3)
Amount 
WAY
(3)
Amount 
WAY
(3)
Amount 
WAY
(3)
Available for
Sale 
U.S. Government 
Treasury 
$ 
49,706 
2.25 
% 
$ 
283,558 
3.88 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
333,264 
3.82 
% 
U.S. Government 
Agency 
36,384 
0.96 
133,531 
4.06 
2,199 
4.57 
- 
- 
172,114 
3.41 
States and Political 
Subdivisions 
3,884 
1.37 
26,449 
1.78 
4,578 
2.14 
- 
- 
34,911 
1.78 
Mortgage-Backed 
Securities
(1)
2 
4.79 
10,414 
1.44 
41,588 
2.49 
- 
- 
52,004 
2.29 
Corporate Debt 
Securities 
12,799 
1.51 
27,960 
1.86 
2,774 
2.05 
- 
- 
43,532 
1.77 
Other Securities
(2)
- 
- 
- 
- 
- 
- 
8,097 
6.22 
8,097 
6.22 
Total 
$ 
102,775 
2.25 
% 
$ 
481,912 
3.67 
% 
$ 
51,139 
2.52 
% 
$ 
8,097 
6.22 
% 
$ 
643,922 
3.35 
% 
Held to Maturity 
U.S. Government 
Treasury 
$ 
129,782 
1.79 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
129,782 
1.79 
% 
Mortgage-Backed 
Securities
(1)
3,583 
2.23 
204,456 
3.26 
39,625 
4.49 
- 
- 
247,664 
3.44 
Total 
$ 
133,365 
1.80 
% 
$ 
204,456 
3.26 
% 
$ 
39,625 
4.49 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
377,446 
2.87 
% 
Equity Securities 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
- 
- 
% 
$ 
2,069 
0.92 
% 
$ 
2,069 
0.92 
% 
Total Investment 
Securities 
$ 
236,140 
2.00 
% 
$ 
686,368 
3.55 
% 
$ 
90,764 
3.38 
% 
$ 
10,166 
6.22 
% 
$ 
1,023,437 
3.17 
% 
(1)
Based on weighted-average maturity. 
(2)
Federal Home Loan Bank Stock and Federal Reserve
Bank Stock are included in this category for weighted average yield, but
do not have stated maturities. 
(3)
Weighted average yield ("WAY")
calculated based on current amortized cost balances not presented on a tax equivalent basis. 
63 
Deposits
Average total
deposits for 2025 were $3.651 billion compared to $3.597 billion in 2024 with the
$53.9 million, or 1.5%, increase 
reflective of increases in NOW accounts of $43.3 million, money market
accounts of $20.3 million, and certificates of deposit of 
$21.4 million, partially offset by decreases in noninterest
bearing accounts of $17.3 million and savings accounts of $13.9 million.
The aforementioned increases generally reflected growth in average
core deposit balances throughout 2025 and re-mix in 
balances due to clients seeking higher yield deposit products.
At December 31, 2025, total deposits were $3.662 billion, a decrease of $9.7 million,
or 0.3% from December 31, 2024.
The 
decrease reflected decreases in noninterest bearing accounts of $54.4 million,
money market accounts of $13.5 million, and 
savings accounts of $3.3 million, partially offset by increases in NOW accounts
of $36.8 million and certificates of deposit of 
$24.7 million.
Public funds balances totaled $654.7 million at December 31, 2025 and $660.9 million at December
31, 2024.
Although the overnight funds rate was lowered in the second half of 2025 by
75 basis points to a target range of 3.50%-3.75%, 
the overall rate environment remains higher than early 2022 when the overnight
funds rate was 0.00%-0.25%.
As a result in 
2025, we continued to see a shift in mix out of noninterest bearing accounts into interest
bearing accounts, primarily NOW, 
money market, and certificates of deposit accounts.
We have several strategies in
place to protect core deposits and mitigate 
deposit run-off, and we will continue to closely monitor
several metrics such as the sensitivity of our clients to our deposit rates, 
our overall liquidity position, and competitor rates when pricing deposits.
This strategy is consistent with previous rate cycles and 
allows us to manage the mix of our deposits as well as the overall client relationship
rather than competing solely on rate.
Table 2 provides
an analysis of our average deposits, by category,
and average rates paid for each of the last three fiscal years. 
Table 15 reflects the
shift in our deposit mix over the last year and Table
16 provides a maturity distribution of time deposits in 
denominations of greater than $250,000 at December 31, 2025.
For 2025, noninterest bearing deposits represented 36.1% of total 
average deposits.
This compares to 37.2% in 2024 and 41.1% in 2023. The declines
in 2025 and 2024 reflected slight migration 
into higher yielding deposit products. 
Table 15 
SOURCES OF DEPOSIT GROWTH 
2024 to 
Percentage 
Components of 
2025 
of Total 
Total
Deposits 
(Average Balances - Dollars in Thousands) 
Change 
Change 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Noninterest Bearing Deposits 
$ 
(17,265) 
32.0 
% 
36.2 
% 
37.2 
% 
41.1 
% 
NOW Accounts 
43,354 
(80.4) 
33.6 
32.9 
32.0 
Money Market Accounts 
20,328 
(37.7) 
11.5 
11.1 
8.2 
Savings Accounts 
(13,918) 
25.8 
13.8 
14.4 
16.1 
Time Deposits 
21,414 
(39.7) 
4.9 
4.4 
2.6 
Total Deposits 
$ 
53,913 
100 
% 
100 
% 
100 
% 
100 
% 
Table 16 
MATURITY DISTRIBUTION
OF CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSITS GREATER
THAN $250,000 
2025 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Certificates
of Deposit 
Percent 
Three months or less 
$ 
18,657 
27.2 
% 
Over three through six months 
30,313 
44.3 
Over six through 12 months 
13,969 
20.4 
Over 12 months 
5,537 
8.1 
Total 
$ 
68,476 
100 
% 
64 
Market Risk and Interest Rate Sensitivity
Overview.
Market risk arises from changes in interest rates, exchange rates,
commodity prices, and equity prices.
We have risk 
management policies designed to monitor and limit exposure to market
risk and we do not participate in activities that give rise to 
significant market risk involving exchange rates, commodity prices, or
equity prices.
In asset and liability management activities, 
our policies are designed to minimize structural interest rate risk. 
Interest Rate Risk Management.
Our net income is largely dependent on net interest income.
Net interest income is susceptible to 
interest rate risk to the degree that interest-bearing liabilities mature
or reprice on a different basis than interest-earning 
assets.
When interest-bearing liabilities mature or reprice more quickly than interest-earning
assets in a given period, a significant 
increase in market rates of interest could adversely affect net interest income.
Similarly, when interest-earning
assets mature or 
reprice more quickly than interest-bearing liabilities, falling market interest
rates could result in a decrease in net interest 
income.
Net interest income is also affected by changes in the portion of interest-earning
assets that are funded by interest-
bearing liabilities rather than by other sources of funds, such as noninterest
-bearing deposits and shareowners equity. 
We have established
what we believe to be a comprehensive interest rate risk management policy,
which is administered by 
managements Asset Liability Management
Committee (ALCO).
The policy establishes limits of risk, which are quantitative 
measures of the percentage change in net interest income (a measure of net
interest income at risk) and the fair value of equity 
capital (a measure of economic value of equity (EVE) at risk) resulting from
a hypothetical change in interest rates for 
maturities from one day to 30 years.
We measure the
potential adverse impacts that changing interest rates may have on our 
short-term earnings, long-term value, and liquidity by employing
simulation analysis through the use of computer modeling.
The Companys interest rate risk sensitivity
simulations apply various behavior models and assumptions to account
for customer 
tendencies stemming from interest rate risk changes. The key behavior
models and assumptions incorporated in the NII and EVE 
simulations impact deposit pricing, deposit runoff,
time deposit early withdrawal, and prepayments on loans and investments. The 
deposit pricing model is one of the most significant of these assumptions and
determines to what degree our deposit rates change 
when benchmark interest rates change. The deposit runoff
model reflects the increased attrition rate observed in noninterest 
bearing deposits in higher rate scenarios as customers migrate to interest bearing
deposits and/or alternative investments. The time 
deposit early withdrawal model incorporates the customers
ability to early terminate time deposits and reprice higher.
The 
prepayment models applied to loans and investments reflects the incentive
borrowers have to refinance when market rates are low 
while conversely slowing down their payments in higher rate environments.
Each of the models and assumptions are tailored to 
the specific interest rate environment and validated on a regular basis. However,
assumptions and models are inherently uncertain 
and actual results may differ from those derived in simulation analysis
for multiple reasons, which may include actual balance 
sheet composition differences, timing, magnitude
and frequency of interest rate changes, deviations from projected customer 
behavioral assumptions, and changes in market conditions or management
strategies. 
The statement of financial condition is subject to testing for both parallel and
non-parallel upward and downward shifts in interest 
rates (assuming no balance sheet growth) to indicate the inherent interest
rate risk.
We prepare a base
case (assumes a static rate 
environment) and several alternative interest rate simulations for
various ranges of upward and downward interest rate changes.
This analysis is prepared quarterly and reported to ALCO, our Market
Risk Oversight Committee (MROC), our Risk Oversight 
Committee (ROC) and the Board of Directors.
We will periodically
augment our interest rate simulations with alternative 
interest rate scenarios that may include various non-parallel shifts in interest rates,
including a flattening or steepening of the yield 
curve.
Our goal is to structure the statement of financial condition so that net interest earnings at risk over
12-month and 24-month 
periods and the economic value of equity at risk do not exceed policy guidelines
at the various interest rate shock levels.
We 
attempt to achieve this goal by balancing, within policy limits, the volume
of floating-rate liabilities with a similar volume of 
floating-rate assets, by keeping the average maturity of fixed-rate asset and liability
contracts reasonably matched, by managing 
the mix of our core deposits, and by adjusting our rates to market conditions on
a continuing basis.
Analysis.
Measures of net interest income at risk produced by simulation analysis are
indicators of an institutions short-term 
performance in alternative rate environments.
These measures are typically based upon a relatively brief period, and do not 
necessarily indicate the long-term prospects or economic value of the institution.
The following table presents our net interest 
income simulation results for gradual 12-month and 24-month ramp
scenarios applied to base scenario.
The ramp scenario is 
a parallel shift applied gradually over a 12-month period for the projected
12-month and 24-month period on a pro rata basis.
65 
Table 17 
ESTIMATED CHANGES
IN NET INTEREST INCOME
% Change in NII 
Policy Limit 
Change in Interest Rates 
12 Months 
24 Months 
12 Months 
24 Months 
+200 bp Ramp 
5.3 
% 
18.5 
% 
-10.0 
% 
-12.5 
% 
+100 bp Ramp 
2.0 
% 
10.8 
% 
-7.5 
% 
-10.0 
% 
-100 bp Ramp 
-2.7 
% 
-4.9 
% 
-7.5 
% 
-10.0 
% 
-200 bp Ramp 
-5.5 
% 
-13.3 
% 
-10.0 
% 
-12.5 
% 
Net Interest Income at risk is within our prescribed policy limits over both
the 12-month and 24-month periods for all rate 
scenarios with the exception of the down 200 bps scenario primarily due to our
limited ability to lower our deposit rates relative 
to the decline in market rates for that scenario. Given that our average nonmaturity
deposit rate is less than 1.00%, this down 200 
bps scenario is more impactful to asset yields than deposit rates.
The measures of equity value at risk indicate our ongoing economic value
by considering the effects of changes in interest rates 
on all of our cash flows by discounting the cash flows to estimate the present value of
assets and liabilities. The difference 
between these discounted values of the assets and liabilities is the economic value
of equity, which in theory
approximates the fair 
value of our net assets.
The following table presents our equity value at risk simulation applied to immediate parallel
shock 
scenarios.
Table 18 
ESTIMATED CHANGES
IN ECONOMIC VALUE
OF EQUITY
2025 
2024 
Changes in Interest Rates 
% Change in 
EVE 
Policy Limit 
% Change in 
EVE 
Policy Limit 
EVE Ratio 
Policy 
Minimum 
+200 bp Shock 
-21.0 
% 
-20.0 
% 
-23.7 
% 
-20.0 
% 
17.1 
% 
5.0 
% 
+100 bp Shock 
-9.7 
% 
-15.0 
% 
-17.2 
% 
-15.0 
% 
19.8 
% 
5.0 
% 
-100 bp Shock 
7.0 
% 
-15.0 
% 
9.0 
% 
-15.0 
% 
24.2 
% 
5.0 
% 
-200 bp Shock 
10.4 
% 
-20.0 
% 
17.0 
% 
-20.0 
% 
25.4 
% 
5.0 
% 
At December 31, 2025, the economic value of equity was favorable in all rising
rate scenarios and unfavorable in the falling rate 
scenarios.
EVE was within prescribed tolerance levels as the EVE ratio (EVE/EVA)
in all rate scenarios is greater than 5.0%.
Factors that can impact EVE values include the absolute level of rates, the overall
structure of the balance sheet (including 
liquidity levels), pre-payment speeds, loan floors, and the change
of model assumptions. 
As the interest rate environment and the dynamics of the economy continue to change,
additional simulations will be analyzed to 
address not only the changing rate environment, but also the changing
statement of financial condition mix, measured over 
multiple years, to help assess the risk to the Company. 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL
RESOURCES
Liquidity
In general terms, liquidity is a measurement of our ability to meet our
cash needs.
Our objective in managing our liquidity is to 
maintain our ability to fund loan commitments, purchase securities, accommodate
deposit withdrawals or repay other liabilities in 
accordance with their terms, without an adverse impact on our current or
future earnings.
Our liquidity strategy is guided by 
policies that are formulated and monitored by our ALCO and senior management,
and take into account the marketability of 
assets, the sources and stability of funding and the level of unfunded commitments.
We regularly evaluate
all of our various 
funding sources with an emphasis on accessibility,
stability, reliability,
and cost-effectiveness.
For 2025
and 2024, our principal 
source of funding was client deposits, supplemented by our short-term
and long-term borrowings, primarily from our trust-
preferred securities, securities sold under repurchase agreements, federal
funds purchased, and FHLB borrowings.
We believe 
that the cash generated from operations, our borrowing capacity and
our access to capital resources are sufficient to meet our 
future operating capital and funding requirements. 
66 
At December 31, 2025, we had the ability to generate approximately $1.523
billion (excludes overnight funds position of $467.8 
million) in additional liquidity through various sources,
including various Federal Home Loan Bank borrowings, the Federal 
Reserve Discount Window,
federal funds purchased lines, and brokered deposits.
We recognize
the importance of maintaining 
liquidity and have developed a Contingent Liquidity Plan, which addresses various
liquidity stress levels and our response and 
action based on the level of severity.
We periodically test our credit
facilities for access to the funds but also understand that as 
the severity of the liquidity level increases certain credit facilities may no longer
be available.
We conduct quarterly
liquidity 
stress tests, and the results are reported to ALCO, MROC, ROC and the Board
of Directors.
We believe the
liquidity available to 
us is sufficient to meet our ongoing needs. 
We also view our
investment portfolio as a liquidity source and have the option to pledge securities in our
portfolio as collateral 
for borrowings or deposits, and/or to sell selected securities.
Our portfolio consists of debt issued by the U.S. Treasury,
U.S. 
governmental agencies, municipal governments, and corporate entities.
At December 31, 2025, the weighted-average maturity 
and duration of our portfolio were 2.57 years and 2.12, respectively,
and the AFS portfolio had a net unrealized tax-effected loss 
of $9.5 million.
Our average net overnight funds sold position (defined as funds sold plus interest-bearing
deposits with other banks less funds 
purchased) was $366.2 million in 2025 compared to an average net overnight
funds sold position of $239.7 million in 2024.
The 
increase was primarily attributable to deposit growth and a decline in our average
loan balances, partially offset by growth in the 
investment portfolio.
We expect capital
expenditures over the next 12 months to be approximately $10.0 million, which
will consist primarily of 
technology purchases for banking offices, office
leasehold improvements, business applications, and information technology 
security needs as well as furniture and fixtures and banking office
remodels.
We expect that these capital
expenditures will be 
funded with existing resources without impairing our ability to meet our
ongoing obligations. 
Borrowings 
Average short
-term borrowings totaled $36.7 million in 2025 compared to $31.9 million in 2024
with the $4.8 million increase 
primarily attributable to a higher level of warehouse line of credit borrowing
s
to support loans held for sale.
Additional detail on 
these warehouse borrowings is provided in Note 4 Mortgage Banking
Activities in the Consolidated Financial Statements. 
At December 31, 2025, there were no outstanding advances from the FHLB.
One advance totaling $0.1 million comprised of one 
note was paid off in the third quarter of 2025.
FHLB advances are collateralized by a floating lien on certain 1-4 family 
residential mortgage loans, commercial real estate mortgage loans,
and home equity mortgage loans.
We have issued two
junior subordinated deferrable interest notes to wholly owned Delaware statutory
trusts.
The first note for 
$30.9 million was issued to CCBG Capital Trust I in
November 2004, of which $10 million was retired in April 2016 and an 
additional $5.1 million of principal payments were made in 2025.
The second note for $32.0 million was issued to CCBG Capital 
Trust II in May 2005, of which $5.1
million of principal payments were made in 2025.
The interest payment for the CCBG 
Capital Trust I borrowing is due quarterly and adjusts
quarterly to a variable rate of three-month CME Term
SOFR (secured 
overnight financing rate) plus a margin of 1.90%.
This note matures on December 31, 2034.
The interest payment for the CCBG 
Capital Trust II borrowing is due quarterly and adjusts
quarterly to a variable interest rate based on three-month CME Term 
SOFR plus a margin of 1.80%.
This note matures on June 15, 2035.
The proceeds from these borrowings were used to partially 
fund acquisitions.
Under the terms of each junior subordinated deferrable interest note, in the event of default or
if we elect to 
defer interest on the note, we may not, with certain exceptions, declare or pay dividends
or make distributions on our capital stock 
or purchase or acquire any of our capital stock.
In the second quarter of 2020, we entered into a ten-year derivative cash flow 
hedge of our interest rate risk related to our subordinated debt.
The notional amount of the derivative is $30 million ($10 million 
of the CCBG Capital Trust I borrowing and $20 million
of the CCBG Capital Trust II borrowing).
In October 2025, the interest 
rate swaps were terminated.
Additional detail on the interest rate swap agreement is provided in Note 5
Derivatives in the 
Consolidated Financial Statements. 
See Note 11 Short Term
Borrowings and Note 12 Long Term
Borrowings in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
for additional information on borrowings. 
In the ordinary course of business, we have entered into contractual obligations
and have made other commitments to make future 
payments.
Refer to the accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements elsewhere in
this report for the expected timing 
of such payments as of December 31, 2025.
These include payments related to (i) long-term borrowings (Note 12 Long-Term 
Borrowings), (ii) short-term borrowings (Note 11
Short-Term Borrowings),
(iii) operating leases (Note 7 Leases), (iv) time 
deposits with stated maturities (Note 10 Deposits), and (v) commitments
to extend credit and standby letters of credit (Note 21 
Commitments and Contingencies). 
67 
Capital Resources 
Shareowners equity was $552.9 million at December 31, 2025,
compared to $495.3 million at December 31, 2024.
For 2025, 
shareowners equity was positively impacted by net income attributable
to shareowners of $61.6 million, a net $9.1 million 
decrease in the accumulated other comprehensive loss, the issuance of
common stock of $3.5 million, and stock compensation 
accretion of $2.4 million. The net favorable change in accumulated other
comprehensive loss reflected a $10.7 million decrease in 
the investment securities loss that was partially offset by a $1.3 million
decrease in the fair value of the interest rate swap related 
to subordinated debt and a $0.3 million decrease in the pension plan loss from the year-end
re-measurement of the plan. 
Shareowners equity was reduced by common stock dividends of $17.1
million ($1.00 per share) and net adjustments totaling 
$1.9 million related to transactions under our stock compensation plans. 
Additional historical information on capital changes is provided in the Consolidated
Statements of Changes in Shareowners 
Equity in the Consolidated Financial Statements. 
We continue
to maintain a strong capital position.
The ratio of shareowners' equity to total assets at December 31, 2025 was 
12.61% compared to 11.45% at December
31, 2024.
Further, our tangible common equity ratio was 10.79%
(non-GAAP 
financial measure) at December 31, 2025
compared to 9.51% at December 31, 2024.
If our unrealized HTM securities losses of 
$6.0 million (after-tax) were recognized in accumulated other comprehensive
loss, our adjusted tangible capital ratio would be 
10.65%.
The improvement in the ratios in 2025 was primarily attributable to
strong earnings and a decrease in the unrealized loss 
on AFS securities which is recognized in accumulated other comprehensive
loss.
We are subject to
regulatory risk-based capital requirements that measure capital relative
to risk-weighted assets and off-balance 
sheet financial instruments.
At December 31, 2025, our total risk-based capital ratio was 21.45% compared
to 18.64% at 
December 31, 2024.
Our common equity tier 1 capital ratio was 18.56% and 15.54%, respectively,
on these dates.
Our leverage 
ratio was 11.77% and 11.05%,
respectively, on these
dates.
For a detailed discussion of our regulatory capital requirements, refer 
to the Regulatory Considerations Capital Regulations section
on page 14.
See Note 17 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial 
Statements for additional information as to our capital adequacy. 
At December 31, 2025, our common stock had a book value of $32.23 per diluted
share compared to $29.11 at December 31, 
2024.
Book value is impacted by the net unrealized gains and losses on investment
securities.
At December 31, 2025, the net 
unrealized loss was $9.5 million compared to an unrealized loss of
$20.2 million at December 31, 2024.
Book value is also 
impacted by the recording of our unfunded pension liability through
other comprehensive income in accordance with Accounting 
Standards Codification Topic
715.
At December 31, 2025, the net pension asset reflected in accumulated other comprehensive 
loss was $9.4 million compared to $9.7 million at December 31, 2024.
In January 2024, our Board of Directors authorized the Capital City Bank Group,
Inc. Share Repurchase Program (the 
Program), effective February 1, 2024, which authorizes
the repurchase of up to 750,000 shares of our outstanding common stock 
over a five-year period.
Under the Program, shares may be repurchased by the Company from time to time
in the open market or 
in privately negotiated transactions,
as market conditions warrant; however, the
Program does not obligate the Company to 
repurchase any specified number of shares.
We did not repurchase
any shares in 2025.
We repurchased
(i) 73,349 shares under 
the Program in 2024 at an average price of $28.03 per share and (ii) 9,101
shares in January 2024 at an average price of $29.47 
per share under a substantially similar repurchase plan that was authorized
in 2019 and expired in 2024. There are 676,561 shares 
remaining for purchase under the Program.
Dividends
Adequate capital and financial strength are paramount to our stability
and the stability of CCB.
Cash dividends declared and paid 
should not place unnecessary strain on our capital levels.
When determining the level of dividends,
the following factors are 
considered: 
Compliance with state and federal laws and regulations; 
Our capital position and our ability to meet our financial obligations; 
Projected earnings and asset levels; and 
The ability of the Bank and us to fund dividends. 
OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS
We are a party
to financial instruments with off-balance sheet risks in the normal
course of business to meet the financing needs 
of our clients.
See Note 21 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
68 
If commitments arising from these financial instruments continue to require
funding at historical levels, management does not 
anticipate that such funding will adversely impact our ability to meet on-going
obligations.
In the event these commitments 
require funding in excess of historical levels, management believes current
liquidity, investment security
maturities, available 
advances from the FHLB and Federal Reserve Bank, and warehouse
lines of credit provide a sufficient source of funds to meet 
these commitments. 
In conjunction with the sale and securitization of loans held for sale and their related
servicing rights, we may be exposed to 
liability resulting from recourse, repurchase,
and make-whole agreements.
If it is determined subsequent to our sale of a loan or 
its related servicing rights that a breach of the representations or warranties
made in the applicable sale agreement has occurred, 
which may include guarantees that prepayments will not occur within a specified
and customary time frame, we may have an 
obligation to either (a) repurchase the loan for the unpaid principal balance,
accrued interest, and related advances; (b) indemnify 
the purchaser against any loss it suffers;
or (c) make the purchaser whole for the economic benefits of the
loan and its related 
servicing rights. Although such claims can vary with market condition,
they have historically been limited. 
Our repurchase, indemnification and make-whole obligations vary based upon
the terms of the applicable agreements, the nature 
of the asserted breach, and the status of the mortgage loan at the time a claim is made.
We establish reserves for
estimated losses 
of this nature inherent in the origination of mortgage loans by estimating the losses inherent
in the population of all loans sold 
based on trends in claims and actual loss severities experienced. The reserve
will include accruals for probable contingent losses 
in addition to those identified in the pipeline of claims received. The estimation
process is designed to include amounts based on 
actual losses experienced from actual activity. 
ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
The consolidated financial statements and accompanying Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements are prepared in accordance 
with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America,
which require us to make various estimates and 
assumptions (see Note 1 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements).
We believe that,
of our significant accounting 
policies, the following may involve a higher degree of judgment and
complexity. 
Allowance for Credit Losses
.
The amount of the allowance for credit losses represents managemen
ts best estimate of current 
expected credit losses considering available information, from internal
and external sources, relevant to assessing exposure to 
credit loss over the contractual term of the instrument.
Relevant available information includes historical credit loss experience, 
current conditions,
and reasonable and supportable forecasts.
While historical credit loss experience provides
the basis for the 
estimation of expected credit losses, adjustments to historical loss information
may be made for changes in loan risk grades, loss 
experience trends, loan prepayment trends, differences
in current portfolio-specific risk characteristics, environmental conditions, 
future expectations, or other relevant factors.
While management utilizes its best judgment and information available, the 
ultimate adequacy of our allowance accounts is dependent upon
a variety of factors beyond our control, including the 
performance of our portfolios, the economy,
changes in interest rates, and the view of the regulatory authorities toward 
classification of assets. Detailed information on the Allowance
for Credit Losses valuation, and the assumptions used are provided 
in Note 1 Significant Accounting Policies of the Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Goodwill
.
Goodwill represents the excess of the cost of acquired businesses over the fair value
of their identifiable net 
assets.
We perform
an impairment review on an annual basis or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances
indicate 
that the carrying value may not be recoverable.
Adverse changes in the economic environment, declining operations, or other 
factors could result in a decline in the estimated implied fair value of goodwill.
If the estimated implied fair value of goodwill is 
less than the carrying amount, a loss would be recognized to reduce the
carrying amount to the estimated implied fair value. 
We evaluate goodwill
for impairment on an annual basis.
Accounting Standards Update 2017-04, Intangibles Goodwill and 
Other (Topic 350):
Simplifying Accounting for Goodwill Impairment allows for a qualitative assessment of
goodwill impairment 
indicators.
If the assessment indicates that impairment has more than likely occurred, the Company
must compare the estimated 
fair value of the reporting unit to its carrying amount.
If the carrying amount of the reporting unit exceeds its estimated fair value, 
an impairment charge is recorded equal to the excess. 
During the fourth quarter of 2025, we performed our annual impairment
testing.
We proceeded with qualitative
assessment by 
evaluating impairment indicators and concluded there were none that
indicated that goodwill impairment had occurred.
69 
Pension Assumptions
.
We have a defined benefit
pension plan for the benefit of a portion of our associates.
On December 30, 
2019, the plan was amended to remove plan eligibility for new associates hired after
December 31, 2019.
Our funding policy 
with respect to the pension plan is to contribute, at a minimum, amounts sufficient
to meet minimum funding requirements as set 
by law.
Pension expense is determined by an external actuarial valuation based on assumptions that are
evaluated annually as of 
December 31, the measurement date for the pension obligation.
The service cost component of pension expense is reflected as 
Compensation Expense in the Consolidated Statements of Income.
All other components of pension expense are reflected as 
Other Expense.
The Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition reflect an accrued
pension benefit cost due to funding levels and 
unrecognized actuarial amounts.
The most significant assumptions used in calculating the pension
obligation are the weighted-
average discount rate used to determine the present value of the pension obligation,
the weighted-average expected long-term rate 
of return on plan assets, and the assumed rate of annual compensation increases.
These assumptions are re-evaluated annually 
with the external actuaries, taking into consideration both current market
conditions and anticipated long-term market conditions. 
The discount rate is determined by matching the anticipated defined
pension plan cash flows to the spot rates of a corporate AA-
rated bond index/yield curve and solving for the single equivalent discount
rate which would produce the same present value.
This methodology is applied consistently from year to year.
The discount rate utilized in 2025 was 5.82%.
The estimated impact 
to 2025 pension expense of a 25 basis point increase or decrease in the discount
rate would have been an approximate $0.5 
million decrease or increase, respectively.
We anticipate using
a 5.67% discount rate in 2026.
Based on the balances at the December 31, 2025 measurement date, the
estimated impact on accumulated other comprehensive 
loss of a 25 basis point increase or decrease in the discount rate would have been a decrease
or increase of approximately $3.2 
million (after-tax).
The estimated impact on accumulated other comprehensive loss of a 1% favorable/unfavorable
variance in the 
actual rate of return on plan assets versus the assumed rate of return
on plan assets of 6.75% would have been an approximate 
$1.0 million (after-tax) decrease/increase,
respectively.
The weighted-average expected long-term rate of return on plan assets is determined
based on the current and anticipated future 
mix of assets in the plan.
The assets currently consist of equity securities, U.S. Government and Government
agency debt 
securities, and other securities (typically temporary liquid funds awaiting investment).
The weighted-average expected long-term 
rate of return on plan assets utilized for 2025 was 6.75%.
The estimated impact to 2024 pension expense of a 25 basis point 
increase or decrease in the rate of return would have been an approximate $0.2 million
decrease or increase, respectively.
We 
anticipate using a rate of return on plan assets of 6.50% for 2026. 
The assumed rate of annual compensation increases of 4.67% for 2025
was based on an experience study performed for the plan 
in 2022.
It is anticipated that this compensation increase assumption may change based on updates
to the actual plan participants 
remaining in the plan at the end of each plan year. 
Detailed information on the pension plan, the actuarially determined
disclosures, and the assumptions used are provided in Note 
15 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
Income Taxes
.
Income tax expense is the total of the current year income tax due or refundable and the change in deferred
tax 
assets and liabilities.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are the expected future tax amounts for the
temporary differences between 
carrying amounts and tax bases of assets and liabilities, computed using enacted
tax rates.
A valuation allowance, if needed, 
reduces deferred tax assets to the amount expected to be realized.
A tax position is recognized as a benefit only if it is more likely than not that the tax
position would be sustained in a tax 
examination, with a tax examination being presumed to occur.
The amount recognized is the largest amount of tax benefit that is 
greater than 50% likely of being realized on examination.
For tax positions not meeting the more likely than not test, no tax 
benefit is recorded.
We 
recognize interest and/or penalties related to income tax matters in other
expenses. 
ITEM 7A.
QUANTITATIVE
AND QUALITATIVE
DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK
See Financial Condition - Market Risk and Interest Rate Sensitivity in Managements
Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations, above, which is incorporated herein
by reference. 
70 
Item 8.
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
2025 Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB ID 
686
) 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC.
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS 
PAGE 
71 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
73 
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition 
74 
Consolidated Statements of Income 
75 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income 
76 
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareowners Equity 
77 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 
79 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
71 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
Shareowners, Board of Directors, and Audit Committee
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
Tallahassee, Florida 
Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements 
We have audited
the accompanying consolidated statements of financial condition of Capital City Bank
Group, Inc. (Company) as 
of December 31, 2025 and 2024, the related consolidated statements of
income, comprehensive income, changes in shareowners 
equity, and cash flows
for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2025, and the related notes (collectively 
referred to as the consolidated financial statements). In our opinion,
the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in 
all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2025
and 2024, and the results of its operations 
and its cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December
31, 2025, in conformity with accounting 
principles generally accepted in the United States of America. 
We also have audited,
in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United
States) 
(PCAOB), the Companys
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025, based on criteria
established in 
Internal Control Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of
Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway 
Commission and our report dated February 27, 2026, expressed an unqualified
opinion. 
Basis for Opinion 
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Companys
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the 
Companys consolidated
financial statements based on our audits. 
We are a public
accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
(United States) (PCAOB) 
and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with
the U.S. federal securities laws and the 
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
and the PCAOB. 
We conducted
our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require
that we plan and perform the 
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free
of material misstatement, whether due to error 
or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform,
an audit of its internal control over financial 
reporting. As part of our audits, we are required to obtain an understanding
of internal control over financial reporting but not for 
the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the
Companys internal control over
financial reporting. Accordingly, 
we express no such opinion. 
Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement
of the financial statements, whether due to 
error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such
procedures include examining, on a test basis, 
evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits
also included evaluating the accounting 
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating
the overall presentation of the financial 
statements. We believe
that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
72 
Critical Audit Matter 
The critical audit matter communicated below arises from the current-period
audit of the financial statements that were 
communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee
and that: (1) relate to accounts or disclosures that are 
material to the financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging,
subjective, or complex judgments. The 
communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the
financial statements, taken as a whole, and 
we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below,
providing a separate opinion on the critical audit matter or on the 
accounts or disclosures to which it relates. 
Allowance for Credit Losses 
The Companys
loans held
for investment
portfolio totaled
$2.55 billion
as of
December 31,
2025, and
the allowance
for credit 
losses on
loans held
for investment
was $31.0
million. As
more fully
described in
Notes 1
and 3
to the
Companys
consolidated 
financial statements,
the Company
estimates its exposure
to expected
credit losses as
of the
statement of
financial condition
date 
for existing financial instruments held at amortized cost. 
The determination
of the
ACL requires
management to
exercise significant
judgment
and consider
numerous subjective
factors, 
including
determining
qualitative
factors
utilized
to
adjust
historical
loss
rates,
loan
credit
risk
grading
and
identifying
loans 
requiring individual
evaluation, among others.
As disclosed by
management, different
assumptions and conditions
could result
in 
a materially different amount for the estimate of the ACL.
We
identified
the
process
for
establishing
the
qualitative
factors
at
December
31,
2025
as
a
critical
audit
matter.
Auditing
the 
qualitative factors involved a high degree of subjectivity in evaluating
managements estimates. 
The primary procedures we performed as of December 31, 2025 to address
this critical audit matter included: 
Obtained
an
understanding
of
the
Companys
process
for
establishing
the
ACL,
including
the
qualitative
factor 
adjustments of the ACL. 
Tested the design
and operating effectiveness of controls over the establishment of qualitative
adjustments. 
Evaluated
the qualitative
adjustments to
the ACL,
including assessing
the basis
for adjustments
and the
reasonableness 
of the significant assumptions. 
Evaluated
the
overall
reasonableness
of
assumptions
used
by
management
considering
trends
identified
within
peer 
groups. 
Evaluated credit quality trends in delinquencies, non-accruals, charge
-offs, and loan risk ratings. 
/s/ 
Forvis Mazars, LLP
We have served as the Companys
auditor since 2021. 
Little Rock, Arkansas
February 27, 2026
73 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC. 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
OF FINANCIAL CONDITION 
As of December 31, 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
ASSETS 
Cash and Due From Banks 
$ 
62,189
$ 
70,543
Federal Funds Sold and Interest Bearing Deposits 
467,782
321,311
Total Cash and Cash Equivalents 
529,971
391,854
Investment Securities, Available
for Sale, at fair value (amortized cost of $
656,546
and $
429,033
) 
643,922
403,345
Investment Securities, Held to Maturity (fair value of $
369,320
and $
544,460
) 
377,446
567,155
Equity Securities 
2,069
2,399
Total Investment
Securities 
1,023,437
972,899
Loans Held For Sale, at fair value 
21,695
28,672
Loans, Held for Investment 
2,546,118
2,651,550
Allowance for Credit Losses 
(31,001)
(29,251)
Loans Held for Investment, Net 
2,515,117
2,622,299
Premises and Equipment, Net 
79,457
81,952
Goodwill and Other Intangibles 
89,095
92,773
Other Real Estate Owned 
1,936
367
Other Assets 
125,057
134,116
Total Assets 
$ 
4,385,765
$ 
4,324,932
LIABILITIES 
Deposits: 
Noninterest Bearing Deposits 
$ 
1,251,886
$ 
1,306,254
Interest Bearing Deposits 
2,410,426
2,365,723
Total Deposits 
3,662,312
3,671,977
Short-Term
Borrowings 
50,092
28,304
Subordinated Notes Payable 
42,582
52,887
Other Long-Term
Borrowings 
680
794
Other Liabilities 
77,248
75,653
Total Liabilities 
3,832,914
3,829,615
SHAREOWNERS EQUITY 
Preferred Stock, $
0.01
par value; 
3,000,000
shares authorized; 
no
shares issued and outstanding 
-
-
Common Stock, $
0.01
par value; 
90,000,000
shares authorized;
17,084,386
and 
16,974,513
shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively 
171
170
Additional Paid-In Capital 
41,650
37,684
Retained Earnings 
508,443
463,949
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss), Net of Tax 
2,587
(6,486)
Total Shareowners
Equity 
552,851
495,317
Total Liabilities and Shareowners
Equity 
$ 
4,385,765
$ 
4,324,932
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are
an integral part of these statements. 
74 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC. 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
OF INCOME 
For the Years
Ended December 31, 
(Dollars in Thousands, Except Per Share
Data) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
INTEREST INCOME 
Loans, including Fees 
$ 
161,194
$ 
164,933
$ 
152,250
Investment Securities: 
Taxable 
27,399
17,074
18,652
Tax Exempt 
43
23
40
Federal Funds Sold and Interest Bearing Deposits 
15,751
12,627
10,126
Total Interest Income 
204,387
194,657
181,068
INTEREST EXPENSE 
Deposits 
29,597
32,162
17,582
Short-Term
Borrowings 
1,183
1,080
2,051
Subordinated Notes Payable 
1,924
2,449
2,427
Other Long-Term
Borrowings 
35
28
20
Total Interest Expense 
32,739
35,719
22,080
NET INTEREST INCOME 
171,648
158,938
158,988
Provision for Credit Losses 
5,264
4,031
9,714
Net Interest Income After Provision for Credit Losses 
166,384
154,907
149,274
NONINTEREST INCOME 
Deposit Fees 
22,069
21,346
21,325
Bank Card Fees 
14,705
14,707
14,918
Wealth Management
Fees 
20,667
19,113
16,337
Mortgage Banking Revenues 
16,959
14,343
10,400
Other 
7,955
6,467
8,630
Total Noninterest
Income 
82,355
75,976
71,610
NONINTEREST EXPENSE 
Compensation 
107,178
100,721
93,787
Occupancy, Net 
27,953
27,982
27,660
Other 
31,891
36,612
35,576
Total Noninterest
Expense 
167,022
165,315
157,023
INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAXES 
81,717
65,568
63,861
Income Tax Expense
20,160
13,924
13,040
NET INCOME 
$ 
61,557
$ 
51,644
$ 
50,821
Loss Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests 
-
1,271
1,437
NET INCOME ATTRIBUTABLE
TO COMMON SHAREOWNERS 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
BASIC NET INCOME PER SHARE 
$ 
3.61
$ 
3.12
$ 
3.08
DILUTED NET INCOME PER SHARE 
$ 
3.60
$ 
3.12
$ 
3.07
Average Basic Common
Shares Outstanding 
17,055
16,943
16,987
Average Diluted
Common Shares Outstanding 
17,102
16,969
17,023
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are
an integral part of these statements. 
75 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC. 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME 
For the Years
Ended December 31, 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
NET INCOME ATTRIBUTABLE
TO COMMON SHAREOWNERS 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
Other comprehensive income, before
tax: 
Investment Securities: 
Change in net unrealized loss on securities available-for-sale 
13,039
4,199
12,076
Amortization of unrealized losses on securities transferred from 
available-for-sale to held-to-maturity 
1,172
3,134
3,479
Derivative: 
Change in net unrealized gain on effective cash flow
derivative 
(1,532)
2
(878)
Amortization of discontinued cash flow derivative gain 
(203)
-
-
Benefit Plans: 
Reclassification adjustment for amortization of prior service cost 
102
(239)
156
Reclassification adjustment for amortization of net gain 
(1,771)
(116)
112
Defined benefit plan settlement gain 
(1,552)
-
(291)
Current year actuarial gain 
2,845
13,948
4,905
Total Benefit Plans 
(376)
13,593
4,882
Other comprehensive income, before
tax: 
12,100
20,928
19,559
Deferred tax expense related to other comprehensive income 
(3,027)
(5,268)
(4,476)
Other comprehensive income, net of tax 
9,073
15,660
15,083
TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE
INCOME 
$ 
70,630
$ 
68,575
$ 
67,341
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are
an integral part of these statements.
76 
CAPITAL CITY BANK
GROUP,
INC. 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
OF CHANGES IN SHAREOWNERS' EQUITY 
Accumulated 
Other 
Comprehensive 
(Loss) Gain,
Net of Taxes 
(Dollars in Thousands, Except Share Data) 
Shares 
Outstanding 
Common 
Stock 
Additional 
Paid-In 
Capital 
Retained 
Earnings 
Total 
Balance, January 1, 2023 
16,986,785
170
37,331
387,009
(37,229)
387,281
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
- 
-
-
52,258
-
52,258
Reclassification to Temporary Equity
(1)
- 
-
-
(87)
-
(87)
Other Comprehensive Income, Net of Tax 
- 
-
-
-
15,083
15,083
Cash Dividends ($
0.76
per share) 
- 
-
-
(12,905)
-
(12,905)
Stock Based Compensation 
- 
-
1,237
-
-
1,237
Stock Compensation Plan Transactions, net
85,975
-
1,468
-
-
1,468
Repurchase of Common Stock 
(122,538)
-
(3,710)
-
-
(3,710)
Balance, December 31, 2023 
16,950,222
170
36,326
426,275
(22,146)
440,625
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
- 
-
-
52,915
-
52,915
Reclassification to Temporary Equity
(1)
- 
-
-
(751)
-
(751)
Reclassification from Temporary Equity 
(2)
- 
-
-
416
-
416
Other Comprehensive Income, Net of Tax 
- 
-
-
-
15,660
15,660
Cash Dividends ($
0.88
per share) 
- 
-
-
(14,906)
-
(14,906)
Stock Based Compensation 
- 
-
1,802
-
-
1,802
Stock Compensation Plan Transactions, net
106,831
-
1,886
-
-
1,886
Repurchase of Common Stock 
(82,540)
- 
(2,330)
- 
- 
(2,330)
Balance, December 31, 2024 
16,974,513
170
37,684
463,949
(6,486)
495,317
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
- 
-
-
61,557
-
61,557
Other Comprehensive Income, Net of Tax 
- 
-
-
-
9,073
9,073
Cash Dividends ($
1.00
per share) 
- 
-
-
(17,063)
-
(17,063)
Stock Based Compensation 
- 
-
2,324
-
-
2,324
Stock Compensation Plan Transactions, net
109,873
1
1,642
-
-
1,643
Balance, December 31, 2025 
17,084,386
171
41,650
508,443
2,587
552,851
(1)
Adjustments to redemption value for non-controlling interest in CCHL
(2)
Adjustment reflects the difference between the fair value and the book value of the non-controlling interest in CCHL 
reclassified from Temporary Equity to Other Liabilities
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these statements. 
77 
CAPITAL CITY BANK GROUP,
INC. 
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
OF CASH FLOWS 
For the Years Ended
December 31, 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES 
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
Adjustments to Reconcile Net Income to Cash From Operating Activities: 
Provision for Credit Losses 
5,264
4,031
9,714
Depreciation 
7,409
7,671
7,918
Amortization of Premiums, Discounts, and Fees, net 
4,300
4,192
4,221
Amortization of Intangible Assets 
107
160
160
Gain on Securities Transactions 
-
-
3
Gain on Sale of Subsidiary 
(773)
-
-
Pension Settlement Gain 
(1,552)
-
(291)
Originations of Loans Held for Sale 
(441,019)
(485,901)
(406,803)
Proceeds From Sales of Loans Held for Sale 
461,891
494,825
404,332
Mortgage Banking Revenues 
(16,959)
(14,343)
(10,400)
Net Additions (Deletions) for Capitalized Mortgage Servicing Rights 
9
(102)
419
Stock Compensation 
2,324
1,802
1,237
Net Tax Benefit from Stock Compensation 
(154)
(5)
(48)
Deferred Income Taxes 
1,589
(1,032)
(483)
Net Change in Operating Leases 
31
213
79
Net Gain on Sales and Write-Downs of Other Real Estate Owned 
(4,486)
(979)
(2,053)
Net Decrease (Increase) in Other Assets 
7,482
(12,024)
(1,029)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Other Liabilities 
594
12,150
(4,452)
Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities 
87,614
63,573
54,782
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES 
Securities Held to Maturity: 
Purchases 
(94,089)
(64,031)
(1,483)
Payments, Maturities, and Calls 
283,296
121,638
36,600
Securities Available for Sale: 
Purchases 
(307,446)
(126,783)
(8,379)
Proceeds from the Sale of Securities 
-
-
30,420
Payments, Maturities, and Calls 
78,962
63,843
62,861
Purchases 
(120)
(9,164)
(13,566)
Net Decrease in Equity Securities 
1,327
10,215
10,127
Purchases of Loans Held for Investment 
(1,183)
(848)
(2,488)
Net Decrease (Increase) in Loans Held for Investment 
34,675
39,258
(226,896)
Proceeds from Sales of Loans 
66,857
41,320
47,314
Net Cash Received for Divestitures 
2,375
-
-
Proceeds From Sales of Other Real Estate Owned 
7,342
1,592
3,995
Purchases of Premises and Equipment, net 
(7,589)
(8,688)
(7,046)
Net Cash Provided By (Used In) Investing Activities 
64,407
68,352
(68,541)
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES 
Net Decrease in Deposits 
(9,665)
(29,845)
(237,495)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Short-Term Borrowings 
21,788
(7,236)
(21,452)
Principal Payments of Subordinated Notes 
(10,305)
-
-
Repayment of Other Long-Term Borrowings 
-
(116)
(199)
Net Increase in Other Long-Term Borrowings 
-
794
-
Dividends Paid 
(17,063)
(14,906)
(12,905)
Payments to Repurchase Common Stock 
-
(2,330)
(3,710)
Issuance of Common Stock Under Compensation Plans 
1,341
1,501
937
Net Cash (Used in) Provided By Financing Activities 
(13,904)
(52,138)
(274,824)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS 
138,117
79,787
(288,583)
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Year 
391,854
312,067
600,650
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Year 
$ 
529,971
$ 
391,854
$ 
312,067
78 
Supplemental Cash Flow Disclosures: 
Interest Paid 
$ 
32,281
$ 
35,017
$ 
21,775
Federal Income Taxes Paid 
$ 
12,650
$ 
3,864
$ 
8,350
State and Local Income Taxes Paid: 
Florida 
$ 
1,035
$ 
2,227
$ 
735
All Other 
$ 
247
$ 
46
$ 
33
Supplemental Noncash Items: 
Loans Transferred from Held for Investment to Held for Sale, net 
$ 
59,600
$ 
36,362
$ 
35,745
Loans and Premises Transferred to Other Real Estate Owned 
$ 
4,424
$ 
979
$ 
1,512
Transfer of Temporary Equity to Other Liabilities 
$ 
-
$ 
6,472
$ 
-
The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these statements. 
79 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
Note 1 
SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES 
Nature of Operations 
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. (CCBG) provides a full range of banking
and banking-related services to individual and 
corporate clients through its wholly-owned subsidiary,
Capital City Bank (CCB or the Bank and together with CCBG, the 
Company), with banking offices located in Florida,
Georgia, and Alabama.
The Company is subject to competition from other 
financial institutions, is subject to regulation by certain government agencies
and undergoes periodic examinations by those 
regulatory authorities.
Basis of Presentation 
The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of CCBG and
CCB.
CCB has three primary subsidiaries, which are 
wholly owned, Capital City Trust Company,
Capital City Investments and Capital City Home Loans, LLC (CCHL).
Prior to 
January 1, 2025, the Company maintained a 
51
% membership interest in CCHL that was a consolidated entity in the Companys 
financial statements.
The Company, which operates
a single reportable business segment that is comprised of commercial banking
within the states of 
Florida, Georgia, and Alabama, follows accounting principles generally
accepted in the United States of America and reporting 
practices applicable to the banking industry.
The principles which materially affect the financial position, results of
operations 
and cash flows are summarized below.
See Note 24 Segment Reporting for additional information.
The Company determines whether it has a controlling financial interest in an
entity by first evaluating whether the entity is a 
voting interest entity or a variable interest entity under accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America. 
Voting
interest entities are entities in which the total equity investment at risk is sufficient
to enable the entity to finance itself 
independently and provide the equity holders with the obligation to absorb losses, the
right to receive residual returns and the 
right to make decisions about the entitys
activities.
The Company consolidates voting interest entities in which it has all, or at 
least a majority of, the voting interest.
As defined in applicable accounting standards, variable interest entities (VIEs) are 
entities that lack one or more of the characteristics of a voting interest entity.
A controlling financial interest in an entity is 
present when an enterprise has a variable interest, or a combination of variable
interests, that will absorb a majority of the entitys 
expected losses, receive a majority of the entitys
expected residual returns, or both.
The enterprise with a controlling financial 
interest, known as the primary beneficiary,
consolidates the VIE.
Two of CCBGs
wholly owned subsidiaries, CCBG Capital 
Trust I (established November 1, 2004) and
CCBG Capital Trust II (established May 24, 2005) are VIEs for
which the Company 
is not the primary beneficiary.
Accordingly, the
accounts of these entities are not included in the Companys
consolidated 
financial statements. 
Certain previously reported amounts have been reclassified to conform
to the current years presentation. All material inter-
company transactions and accounts have been eliminated in consolidation.
The Company has evaluated subsequent events for 
potential recognition and/or disclosure through the date the consolidated
financial statements included in this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K were filed with the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Use of Estimates
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of 
America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect
the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the 
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and 
expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could vary from these estimates.
Material estimates that are particularly 
susceptible to significant changes in the near-term
relate to the determination of the allowance for credit losses, pension expense, 
income taxes, loss contingencies, valuation of other real estate owned, and
valuation of goodwill and their respective analysis of 
impairment.
80 
Significant Accounting Principles 
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include cash and due from banks, interest-bearing
deposits in other banks, and federal funds 
sold. Generally,
federal funds are purchased and sold for one-day periods and all other cash
equivalents have a maturity of 90 
days or less.
The Company maintains certain cash balances that are restricted under
warehouse lines of credit and master repurchase 
agreements.
The restricted cash balance at December 31, 2025 and 2024 was $
0.1
million.
Investment Securities
Investment securities are classified as held-to-maturity (HTM) and
carried at amortized cost when the Company has the positive 
intent and ability to hold them until maturity.
Investment securities not classified as HTM are classified as available-for-sale 
(AFS) and carried at fair value.
The Company does not have trading investment securities. Investment securities classified
as 
equity securities that do not have readily determinable fair values,
are measured at cost and remeasured to fair value when 
impaired or upon observable transaction prices.
The Company determines the appropriate classification of securities at the time 
of purchase.
For reporting and risk management purposes, the Company further segment
s
investment securities by the issuer of 
the security which correlates to its risk profile: U.S. government treasury,
U.S. government agency, state and
political 
subdivisions, mortgage-backed securities,
and corporate debt securities.
Certain equity securities with limited marketability,
such 
as stock in the Federal Reserve Bank and the Federal Home Loan Bank,
are classified as AFS and carried at cost.
Interest income includes amortization and accretion of purchase premiums
and discounts.
Realized gains and losses are derived 
from the amortized cost of the security sold.
Gains and losses on the sale of securities are recorded on the trade date and are 
determined using the specific identification method.
Securities transferred from AFS to HTM are recorded at amortized cost plus 
or minus any unrealized gain or loss at the time of transfer.
Any existing unrecognized gain or loss continues to be reported
in 
accumulated other comprehensive loss (net of tax) and amortized as an adjustment
to interest income over the remaining life of 
the security.
Any existing allowance for credit loss is reversed at the time of transfer.
Subsequent to transfer, the allowance for 
credit losses on the transferred security is evaluated in accordance with the
accounting policy for HTM securities.
Additionally, 
any allowance amounts reversed or established as part of the transfer
are presented on a gross basis in the Consolidated Statement 
of Income.
The accrual of interest is generally suspended on securities more than
90 days past due with respect to principal or interest.
When 
a security is placed on nonaccrual status, all previously accrued and uncollected interest
is reversed against current income and 
thus not included in the estimate of credit losses.
Credit losses and changes thereto, are established as an allowance for
credit loss through a provision for credit loss expense.
Losses are charged against the allowance when management
believes the uncollectability of a security is confirmed or when 
either of the criteria regarding intent or requirement to sell is met. 
Certain debt securities in the Companys
investment portfolio were issued by a U.S. government entity or agency and are either 
explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the U.S. government.
The Company considers the long history of no credit losses on these 
securities indicates that the expectation of nonpayment of the amortized
cost basis is zero, even if the U.S. government were to 
technically default.
Further, certain municipal securities held by
the Company have been pre-refunded and secured by 
government guaranteed treasuries.
Therefore, for the aforementioned securities, the Company does not
assess or record expected 
credit losses due to the zero loss assumption. 
81 
Impairment - Available
-for-Sale Securities
. 
Unrealized gains on AFS securities are excluded from earnings and
reported, net of tax, in other comprehensive income.
For AFS 
securities that are in an unrealized loss position, the Company first assesses whether it intends
to sell, or whether it is more likely 
than not it will be required to sell the security before recovery of
its amortized cost basis.
If either of the criteria regarding intent 
or requirement to sell is met, the securitys
amortized cost basis is written down to fair value through income.
For AFS securities 
that do not meet the aforementioned criteria or have a zero loss assumption,
the Company evaluates whether the decline in fair 
value has resulted from credit losses or other factors.
In making this assessment, management considers the extent to which fair 
value is less than amortized cost, any changes to the rating of the security
by a rating agency, and adverse
conditions specifically 
related to the security,
among other factors.
If the assessment indicates that a credit loss exists, the present value of cash flows to 
be collected from the security are compared to the amortized cost basis of the security.
If the present value of cash flows 
expected to be collected is less than the amortized cost basis, a credit
loss exists and an allowance for credit losses is recorded 
through a provision for credit loss expense, limited by the amount that fair
value is less than the amortized cost basis.
Any 
impairment that is not credit related is recognized in other comprehensive
income.
Allowance for Credit Losses - Held-to-Maturity
Securities. 
Management measures expected credit losses on each individual HTM debt
security that has not been deemed to have a zero 
assumption.
Each security that is not deemed to have zero credit losses is individually measured
based on net realizable value, or 
the difference between the discounted value
of the expected cash flows, based on the original effective rate, and
the recorded 
amortized basis of the security.
To the extent a shortfall is related
to credit loss, an allowance for credit loss is recorded through a 
provision for credit loss expense. See Note 2 Investment Securities for
additional information.
Loans Held for Investment
Loans held for investment (HFI) are stated at amortized cost which includes
the principal amount outstanding, net premiums 
and discounts, and net deferred loan fees and costs.
Accrued interest receivable on loans is reported in other assets and is not 
included in the amortized cost basis of loans.
Interest income is accrued on the effective yield method based on outstanding 
principal balances and includes loan late fees.
Fees charged to originate loans and direct loan origination
costs are deferred and 
amortized over the life of the loan as a yield adjustment.
The Company defines loans as past due when one full payment is past due or
a contractual maturity is over 30 days late.
The 
accrual of interest is generally suspended on loans more than 90 days past
due with respect to principal or interest.
When a loan is 
placed on nonaccrual status, all previously accrued and uncollected
interest is reversed against current income and thus a policy 
election has been made to not include accrued interest in the estimate of credit
losses.
Interest income on nonaccrual loans is 
recognized when the ultimate collectability is no longer considered doubtful.
Loans are returned to accrual status when the 
principal and interest amounts contractually due are brought current
or when future payments are reasonably assured.
Loan charge-offs on commercial and
investor real estate loans are recorded when the facts and circumstances of the
individual 
loan confirm the loan is not fully collectible and the loss is reasonably quantifiable.
Factors considered in making these 
determinations are the borrowers and any guarantors
ability and willingness to pay,
the status of the account in bankruptcy court 
(if applicable), and collateral value.
Charge-off decisions for consumer loans
are dictated by the Federal Financial Institutions 
Examination Councils Uniform
Retail Credit Classification and Account Management Policy which establishes
standards for the 
classification and treatment of consumer loans, which generally require
charge-off after 120 days of delinquency. 
The Company has adopted comprehensive lending policies, underwriting
standards and loan review procedures designed to 
maximize loan income within an acceptable level of risk.
Reporting systems are used to monitor loan originations, loan ratings, 
concentrations, loan delinquencies, nonperforming and potential problem
loans, and other credit quality metrics.
The ongoing 
review of loan portfolio quality and trends by Management and the Credit
Risk Oversight Committee support the process for 
estimating the allowance for credit losses. See Note 3 Loans Held for Investment
and Allowance for Credit Losses for 
additional information.
Allowance for Credit Losses
The allowance for credit losses is a valuation account that is deducted from
the loans amortized cost basis to present the net 
amount expected to be collected on the loans.
The allowance for credit losses is adjusted by a credit loss provision which is 
reported in earnings and reduced by the charge-off
of loan amounts, net of recoveries.
Loans are charged off against the 
allowance when management believes the uncollectability of a loan
balance is confirmed.
Expected recoveries do not exceed the 
aggregate of amounts previously charged-off
and expected to be charged-off.
Expected credit loss inherent in non-cancellable 
off-balance sheet credit exposures is provided for through the credit
loss provision but recorded separately in other liabilities. 
82 
Management estimates the allowance balance using relevant available
information, from internal and external sources, relating to 
past events, current conditions, and reasonable and supportable forecasts.
Historical loan default and loss experience provides the 
basis for the estimation of expected credit losses.
Adjustments to historical loss information incorporate managements
view of 
current conditions and forecasts.
The methodology for estimating the amount of credit losses reported in
the allowance for credit losses has two basic components: 
first, an asset-specific component involving loans that do not share risk
characteristics and the measurement of expected credit 
losses for such individual loans; and second, a pooled component for
expected credit losses for pools of loans that share similar 
risk characteristics.
Loans That Do Not Share Risk Characteristics (Individually
Analyzed) 
Loans that do not share similar risk characteristics are evaluated on an individual
basis.
Loans deemed to be collateral dependent 
have differing risk characteristics and are individually
analyzed to estimate the expected credit loss.
A loan is collateral 
dependent when the borrower is experiencing financial difficulty
and repayment of the loan is dependent on the liquidation and 
sale of the underlying collateral.
For collateral dependent loans where foreclosure is probable, the expected
credit loss is 
measured based on the difference between the fair
value of the collateral (less selling cost) and the amortized cost basis of the 
asset.
For collateral dependent loans where foreclosure is not probable,
the Company has elected the practical expedient allowed 
by Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic
326-20 to measure the 
expected credit loss under the same approach as those loans where foreclosure
is probable.
For loans with balances greater than 
$250,000,
the fair value of the collateral is obtained through independent appraisal of
the underlying collateral.
For loans with 
balances less than $250,000, the Company has made a policy election to
measure expected loss for these individual loans utilizing 
loss rates for similar loan types.
Loans That Share Similar Risk Characteristics (Pooled
Loans) 
The general steps in determining expected credit losses for the pooled
loan component of the allowance are as follows: 
Segment loans into pools according to similar risk characteristics 
Develop historical loss rates for each loan pool segment 
Incorporate the impact of forecasts 
Incorporate the impact of other qualitative factors
Calculate and review pool specific allowance for credit loss estimate 
A discounted cash flow methodology is utilized to calculate expected
cash flows for the life of each individual loan.
The 
discounted present value of expected cash flow is then compared
to the loans amortized cost basis to determine
the credit loss 
estimate.
Individual loan results are aggregated at the pool level in determining
total reserves for each loan pool.
The primary inputs used to calculate expected cash flows include historical
loss rates which reflect probability of default (PD) 
and loss given default (LGD), and prepayment rates.
The historical look-back period is a key factor in the calculation of the PD 
rate and is based on managements assessment
of current and forecasted conditions and may vary by loan pool.
Loans subject to 
the Companys risk rating process are
further sub-segmented by risk rating in the calculation of PD rates.
LGD rates generally 
reflect the historical average net loss rate by loan pool.
Expected cash flows are further adjusted to incorporate the impact of loan 
prepayments which will vary by loan segment and interest rate conditions.
In general, prepayment rates are based on observed 
prepayment rates occurring in the loan portfolio and consideration of forecasted
interest rates. 
83 
In developing loss rates, adjustments are made to incorporate the impact
of forecasted conditions.
Certain assumptions are also 
applied, including the length of the forecast and reversion periods.
The forecast period is the period within which management is 
able to make a reasonable and supportable assessment of future conditions.
The reversion period is the period beyond which 
management believes it can develop a reasonable and supportable forecast
and bridges the gap between the forecast period and 
the use of historical default and loss rates.
The remainder period reflects the remaining life of the loan.
The length of the forecast 
and reversion periods are periodically evaluated and based on managements
assessment of current and forecasted conditions and 
may vary by loan pool.
For purposes of developing a reasonable and supportable assessment
of future conditions, management 
utilizes established industry and economic data points and sources,
including the Federal Open Market Committee forecast, with 
the forecasted unemployment rate being a significant factor.
PD rates for the forecast period will be adjusted accordingly based 
on managements assessment of
future conditions.
PD rates for the remainder period will reflect the historical mean PD rate.
Reversion period PD rates reflect the difference between
forecast and remainder period PD rates calculated using a straight-line 
adjustment over the reversion period.
Loss rates are further adjusted to account for other risk factors that impact loan
defaults and losses.
These adjustments are based 
on managements assessment of
trends and conditions that impact credit risk and resulting credit losses, more
specifically internal 
and external factors that are independent of and not reflected in the quantitative
loss rate calculations.
Risk factors management 
considers in this assessment include trends in underwriting standards,
nature/volume/terms of loan originations, past due loans, 
loan review systems, collateral valuations, concentrations, legal/regulatory/political
conditions, and the unforeseen impact of 
natural disasters. 
Allowance for Credit Losses on Off-Balance
Sheet Credit Exposures 
The Company estimates expected credit losses over the contractual period
in which it is exposed to credit risk through a 
contractual obligation to extend credit, unless that obligation is unconditionally
cancellable by the Company.
The allowance for 
credit losses on off-balance sheet credit exposures is adjusted as a provision
for credit loss expense and is recorded in other 
liabilities.
The estimate includes consideration of the likelihood that funding
will occur and an estimate of expected credit losses 
on commitments expected to be funded over its estimated life and applies the
same estimated loss rate as determined for current 
outstanding loan balances by segment.
Off-balance sheet credit exposures are identified and classified in the same categories as 
the allowance for credit losses with similar risk characteristics that have
been previously mentioned. See Note 21 Commitments 
and Contingencies for additional information.
Mortgage Banking Activities 
Mortgage Loans Held for Sale and Revenue Recognition 
Mortgage loans held for sale (HFS) are carried at fair value under the fair value
option with changes in fair value recorded in 
mortgage banking revenues on the Consolidated Statements of
Income. The fair value of mortgage loans held for sale committed 
to investors is calculated using observable market information such
as the investor commitment, assignment of trade or other 
mandatory delivery commitment prices. The Company bases loans
committed to Federal National Mortgage Association 
(FNMA), Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA),
and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Agency) 
investors based on the Agencys quoted
mortgage backed security (MBS) prices. The fair value of mortgage loans held for
sale 
not committed to investors is based on quoted best execution secondary
market prices. If no such quoted price exists, the fair 
value is determined using quoted prices for a similar asset or assets, such as MBS prices,
adjusted for the specific attributes of that 
loan, which would be used by other market participants. 
Gains and losses from the sale of mortgage loans held for sale are recognized based
upon the difference between the sales 
proceeds and carrying value of the related loans upon sale and are recorded
in mortgage banking revenues on the Consolidated 
Statements of Income. Sales proceeds reflect the cash received from investors
through the sale of the loan and servicing release 
premium. If the related mortgage loan is sold with servicing retained, the
MSR addition is recorded in mortgage banking revenues 
on the Consolidated Statements of Income.
Mortgage banking revenues also includes the unrealized gains and losses associated 
with the changes in the fair value of mortgage loans held for sale, and the
realized and unrealized gains and losses from derivative 
instruments. 
Mortgage loans held for sale are considered sold when the Company surrenders
control over the financial assets. Control is 
considered to have been surrendered when the transferred assets have been
isolated from the Company, beyond
the reach of the 
Company and its creditors; the purchaser obtains the right (free of conditions
that constrain it from taking advantage of that right) 
to pledge or exchange the transferred assets; and the Company does not
maintain effective control over the transferred assets 
through either an agreement that both entitles and obligates the Company
to repurchase or redeem the transferred assets before 
their maturity or the ability to unilaterally cause the holder to return specific
assets. The Company typically considers the above 
criteria to have been met upon acceptance and receipt of sales proceeds
from the purchaser. 
84 
GNMA optional repurchase programs allow financial institutions to buy
back individual delinquent mortgage loans that meet 
certain criteria from the securitized loan pool for which the institution provides servicing.
At the servicers option and without 
GNMAs
prior authorization, the servicer may repurchase such a delinquent
loan for an amount equal to 100 percent of the 
remaining principal balance of the loan.
Under FASB ASC Topic
860, Transfers and Servicing, this buy-back
option is 
considered a conditional option until the delinquency criteria are met,
at which time the option becomes unconditional.
When the 
Company is deemed to have regained effective control
over these loans under the unconditional buy-back option, the loans can
no 
longer be reported as sold and must be brought back onto the Consolidated
Statement of Financial Condition,
regardless of 
whether there is intent to exercise the buy-back option.
These loans are reported in other assets with the offsetting liability
being 
reported in other liabilities.
Derivative Instruments (IRLC/Forward Commitments)
The Company holds and issues derivative financial instruments such as interest
rate lock commitments (IRLCs) and other 
forward sale commitments. IRLCs are subject to price risk primarily
related to fluctuations in market interest rates. To
hedge the 
interest rate risk on certain IRLCs, the Company uses forward sale commitments,
such as to-be-announced securities (TBAs) or 
mandatory delivery commitments with investors. Management
expects these forward sale commitments to experience changes in 
fair value opposite to the changes in fair value of the IRLCs thereby reducing
earnings volatility. Forward
sale commitments are 
also used to hedge the interest rate risk on mortgage loans held for sale that
are not committed to investors and still subject to 
price risk. If the mandatory delivery commitments are not fulfilled, the
Company pays a pair-off fee. Best effort
forward sale 
commitments are also executed with investors, whereby certain loans
are locked with a borrower and simultaneously committed 
to an investor at a fixed price. If the best effort IRLC does not fund,
there is no obligation to fulfill the investor commitment. 
The Company considers various factors and strategies in determining
what portion of the IRLCs and uncommitted mortgage loans 
held for sale to economically hedge.
All derivative instruments are recognized as other assets or other liabilities on
the 
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition at their fair value.
Changes in the fair value of the derivative instruments are 
recognized in mortgage banking revenues on the Consolidated Statements
of Income in the period in which they occur.
Gains and 
losses resulting from the pairing-out of forward sale commitments are
recognized in mortgage banking revenues on the 
Consolidated Statements of Income. The Company accounts for
all derivative instruments as free-standing derivative instruments 
and does not designate any for hedge accounting. 
Mortgage Servicing Rights (MSRs) and Revenue Recognition
The Company sells residential mortgage loans in the secondary market and
may retain the right to service the loans sold. Upon 
sale, an MSR asset is capitalized, which represents the then current fair value of
future net cash flows expected to be realized for 
performing servicing activities.
As the Company has not elected to subsequently measure any class of
servicing assets under the 
fair value measurement method, the Company follows the amortization
method.
MSRs are amortized to noninterest income 
(other income) in proportion to and over the period of estimated net servicing
income and are assessed for impairment at each 
reporting date.
MSRs are carried at the lower of the initial capitalized amount, net of accumulated amortization,
or estimated fair 
value, and included in other assets, net, on the Consolidated Statements of
Financial Condition.
The Company periodically evaluates its MSRs asset for impairment.
Impairment is assessed based on fair value at each reporting 
date using estimated prepayment speeds of the underlying mortgage
loans serviced and stratifications based on the risk 
characteristics of the underlying loans (predominantly loan type and note
interest rate).
As mortgage interest rates fall, 
prepayment speeds are usually faster and the value of the MSRs asset generally
decreases, requiring additional valuation reserve.
Conversely, as mortgage
interest rates rise, prepayment speeds are usually slower and the value of
the MSRs asset generally 
increases, requiring less valuation reserve.
A valuation allowance is established, through a charge to earnings,
to the extent the 
amortized cost of the MSRs exceeds the estimated fair value by stratification.
If it is later determined that all or a portion of the 
temporary impairment no longer exists for a stratification, the valuation
is reduced through a recovery to earnings.
An other-than-
temporary impairment (i.e., recoverability is considered remote when
considering interest rates and loan pay off activity) is 
recognized as a write-down of the MSRs asset and the related valuation allowance
(to the extent a valuation allowance is 
available) and then against earnings.
A direct write-down permanently reduces the carrying value of the MSRs asset and 
valuation allowance, precluding subsequent recoveries. See Note 4 
Mortgage Banking Activities for additional information.
85 
Derivative/Hedging Activities 
At the inception of a derivative contract, the Company designates the derivative
as one of three types based on the Companys 
intentions and belief as to the likely effectiveness as a hedge. These
three types are (1) a hedge of the fair value of a recognized 
asset or liability or of an unrecognized firm commitment (fair value
hedge), (2) a hedge of a forecasted transaction or the 
variability of cash flows to be received or paid related to a recognized
asset or liability (cash flow hedge), or (3) an instrument 
with no hedging designation (standalone derivative). For a fair value hedge,
the gain or loss on the derivative, as well as the 
offsetting loss or gain on the hedged item, are recognized
in current earnings as fair values change. For a cash flow hedge, the 
gain or loss on the derivative is reported in other comprehensive income
and is reclassified into earnings in the same periods 
during which the hedged transaction affects earnings.
For both types of hedges, changes in the fair value of derivatives that are 
not highly effective in hedging the changes in fair value
or expected cash flows of the hedged item are recognized immediately in 
current earnings. Net cash settlements on derivatives that qualify for
hedge accounting are recorded in interest income or interest 
expense, based on the item being hedged. Net cash settlements on derivatives
that do not qualify for hedge accounting are 
reported in non-interest income. Cash flows on hedges are classified in the cash flow
statement the same as the cash flows of the 
items being hedged. 
The Company formally documents the relationship between derivatives
and hedged items, as well as the risk-management 
objective and the strategy for undertaking hedge transactions at the inception
of the hedging relationship. This documentation 
includes linking fair value or cash flow hedges to specific assets and liabilities on
the Consolidated Statement of Financial 
Condition or to specific firm commitments or forecasted transactions. The
Company also formally assesses, both at the hedges 
inception and on an ongoing basis, whether the derivative instruments that are
used are highly effective in offsetting changes in 
fair values or cash flows of the hedged items. The Company discontinues
hedge accounting when it determines that the derivative 
is no longer effective in offsetting changes in the
fair value or cash flows of the hedged item, the derivative is settled or 
terminates, a hedged forecasted transaction is no longer probable, a hedged
firm commitment is no longer firm, or treatment of the 
derivative as a hedge is no longer appropriate or intended. When hedge
accounting is discontinued, subsequent changes in fair 
value of the derivative are recorded as non-interest income. When
a fair value hedge is discontinued, the hedged asset or liability 
is no longer adjusted for changes in fair value,
and the existing basis adjustment is amortized or accreted over the remaining life 
of the asset or liability.
When a cash flow hedge is discontinued but the hedged cash flows or forecasted
transactions are still 
expected to occur, gains or losses that were accumulated
in other comprehensive income are amortized into earnings over the 
same periods, in which the hedged transactions will affect
earnings. See Note 5 Derivatives for additional information.
Long-Lived Assets
Premises and equipment is stated at cost less accumulated depreciation,
computed on the straight-line method over the estimated 
useful lives for each type of asset with premises being depreciated over
a range of 
10
to 
40
years, and equipment being 
depreciated over a range of 
3
to 
10
years.
Additions, renovations and leasehold improvements to premises are capitalized and 
depreciated over the lesser of the useful life or the remaining lease term.
Repairs and maintenance are charged to noninterest 
expense as incurred. 
Long-lived assets are evaluated for impairment if circumstances suggest that their
carrying value may not be recoverable, by 
comparing the carrying value to estimated undiscounted cash flows.
If the asset is deemed impaired, an impairment charge is 
recorded equal to the carrying value less the fair value. See Note 6 Premises and
Equipment for additional information.
Leases 
The Company has entered into various operating leases, primarily for
banking offices.
Generally, these leases have initial
lease 
terms from one to ten years.
Many of the leases have one or more lease renewal options.
The exercise of lease renewal options is 
at the Companys sole discretion.
The Company does not consider exercise of any lease renewal options reasonably
certain.
Certain leases contain early termination options.
No renewal options or early termination options have been included in the 
calculation of the operating right-of-use assets or operating lease liabilities.
Certain lease agreements provide for periodic 
adjustments to rental payments for inflation.
At the commencement date of the lease, the Company recognizes a lease liability
at 
the present value of the lease payments not yet paid, discounted using
the discount rate for the lease or the Companys 
incremental borrowing rate.
As the majority of the Companys
leases do not provide an implicit rate, the Company uses its 
incremental borrowing rate at the commencement date in determining
the present value of lease payments.
The incremental 
borrowing rate is based on the term of the lease.
At the commencement date, the Company also recognizes a right-of-use asset 
measured at (i) the initial measurement of the lease liability; (ii) any lease payments
made to the lessor at or before the 
commencement date less any lease incentives received; and (iii) any initial direct
costs incurred by the lessee.
Leases with an 
initial term of 12 months or less are not recorded on the Consolidated Statement
of Financial Condition.
For these short-term 
leases, lease expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
The Company has no leases classified as finance 
leases. See Note 7 Leases for additional information.
86 
Bank Owned Life Insurance 
The Company, through
its subsidiary bank, has purchased life insurance policies on certain key officers.
Bank owned life 
insurance is recorded at the amount that can be realized under the insurance contract
at the statement of financial condition date, 
which is the cash surrender value adjusted for other charges or
other amounts due that are probable at settlement.
Goodwill and Other Intangibles
Goodwill represents the excess of the cost of businesses acquired over the fair
value of the net assets acquired.
In accordance 
with FASB ASC Topic
350, the Company determined it has one goodwill reporting unit.
Goodwill is tested for impairment 
annually during the fourth quarter or on an interim basis if an event occurs
or circumstances change that would more likely than 
not reduce the fair value of the reporting unit below its carrying value.
Other intangible assets relate to customer intangibles 
purchased as part of a business acquisition.
Intangible assets are tested for impairment at least annually or whenever changes in 
circumstances indicate the carrying amount of the assets may not
be recoverable from future undiscounted cash flows.
See Note 8 
Goodwill and Other Intangibles for additional information
.
Other Real Estate Owned
Assets acquired through, or in lieu of, loan foreclosure are held for sale and are
initially recorded at the lower of cost or fair value 
less estimated selling costs, establishing a new cost basis.
Subsequent to foreclosure, valuations are periodically performed by 
management,
and the assets are carried at the lower of carrying amount or fair value less cost to sell.
The valuation of foreclosed 
assets is subjective in nature and may be adjusted in the future because of changes in economic
conditions.
Revenue and 
expenses from operations and changes in value are included in noninterest
expense. See Note 9 Other Real Estate for additional 
information.
Loss Contingencies
Loss contingencies, including claims and legal actions arising in the ordinary
course of business are recorded as liabilities when 
the likelihood of loss is probable and an amount or range of loss can be reasonably estimated.
See Note 21 Commitments and 
Contingencies for additional information.
Noncontrolling Interest 
Prior to January 1, 2025, the Company maintained a 
51
% membership interest in CCHL that was a consolidated entity in the 
Companys financial statements.
To the extent
the Companys interest in a consolidated
entity represents less than 100% of the 
entitys equity,
the Company recognizes noncontrolling interests in subsidiaries.
In the case of the CCHL acquisition, the 
noncontrolling interest represents equity which is redeemable or convertible
for cash at the option of the equity holder and is 
classified within temporary equity in the mezzanine section of the Consolidated
Statements of Financial Condition.
The 
subsidiarys
net income or loss and related dividends are allocated to CCBG and the noncontrolling
interest holder based on their 
relative ownership percentages.
The noncontrolling interest carrying value is adjusted on a quarterly basis to the
higher of the 
carrying value or current redemption value, at the Statement of Financial
Condition date, through a corresponding adjustment to 
retained earnings.
The redemption value is calculated quarterly and is based on the higher of a predetermined
book value or pre-
tax earnings multiple.
To the extent the redemption value
exceeds the fair value of the noncontrolling interest, the Companys 
earnings per share attributable to common shareowners is adjusted by
that amount.
The Company uses an independent valuation 
expert to assist in estimating the fair value of the noncontrolling interest using:
1) the discounted cash flow methodology under 
the income approach, and (2) the guideline public company methodology
under the market approach.
The estimated fair value is 
derived from equally weighting the result of each of the two methodologies.
The estimation of the fair value includes significant 
assumptions concerning: (1) projected loan volumes; (2) projected
pre-tax profit margins; (3) tax rates and (4) discount rates.
Concurrent with the agreement to assign the minority membership interest (49%)
in CCHL, temporary equity was reclassified to 
other liabilities and recorded at the fair value of the minority interest of $
6.5
million at December 31, 2024.
87 
Income Taxes
Income tax expense is the total of the current year income tax due or refundable
and the change in deferred tax assets and 
liabilities (excluding deferred tax assets and liabilities related to business
combinations or components of other comprehensive 
income).
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are the expected future tax amounts for the temporary differences
between carrying 
amounts and tax bases of assets and liabilities, computed using enacted tax
rates.
A valuation allowance, if needed, reduces 
deferred tax assets to the expected amount most likely to be realized.
Realization of deferred tax assets is dependent upon the 
generation of a sufficient level of future taxable income and recoverable
taxes paid in prior years.
The income tax effects related 
to settlements of share-based payment awards are reported in earnings as an
increase or decrease in income tax expense. See Note 
13 Income Taxes
for additional information.
The Company files a consolidated federal income tax return and a separate
federal tax return for CCHL. Each subsidiary files a 
separate state income tax return.
Earnings Per Common Share
Basic earnings per common share is based on net income divided by the weighted
-average number of common shares outstanding 
during the period excluding non-vested stock.
Diluted earnings per common share include the dilutive effect of
stock options and 
non-vested stock awards granted using the treasury stock method.
A reconciliation of the weighted-average shares used in 
calculating basic earnings per common share and the weighted average
common shares used in calculating diluted earnings per 
common share for the reported periods is provided in Note 16 Earnings
Per Share.
Comprehensive Income
Comprehensive income includes all changes in shareowners equity
during a period, except those resulting from transactions with 
shareowners.
Besides net income, other components of the Companys
comprehensive income include the after tax effect of 
changes in the net unrealized gain/loss on securities AFS, unrealized gain/loss
on cash flow derivatives, and changes in the funded 
status of defined benefit and supplemental executive retirement plans.
Comprehensive income is reported in the accompanying 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income and Changes in Shareowners
Equity.
Stock Based Compensation
Compensation cost is recognized for share-based awards issued to employees,
based on the fair value of these awards at the date 
of grant.
Compensation cost is recognized over the requisite service period, generally
defined as the vesting period.
The market 
price of the Companys common
stock at the date of the grant is used for restricted stock awards.
For stock purchase plan awards, 
a Black-Scholes model is utilized to estimate the fair value of the award.
The impact of forfeitures of share-based awards on 
compensation expense is recognized as forfeitures occur.
See Note 14 Stock-based Compensation for additional information.
Revenue Recognition 
FASB ASC Topic
606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (ASC 606), establishes
principles for reporting information 
about the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash
flows arising from the entitys contracts
to provide goods or 
services to customers. The core principle requires an entity to recognize revenue
to depict the transfer of goods or services to 
customers in an amount that reflects the consideration that it expects to be
entitled to receive in exchange for those goods or 
services recognized as performance obligations are satisfied. 
The majority of the Companys revenue
-generating transactions are not subject to ASC 606, including revenue generated
from 
financial instruments, such as our loans, letters of credit, and investment
securities, and revenue related to the sale of residential 
mortgages in the secondary market, as these activities are subject to other
GAAP discussed elsewhere within our disclosures.
The 
Company recognizes revenue from these activities as it is earned based
on contractual terms, as transactions occur,
or as services 
are provided and collectability is reasonably assured.
Descriptions of the major revenue-generating activities that are within the 
scope of ASC 606, which are presented in the accompanying Consolidated
Statements of Income as components of non-interest 
income are as follows: 
Deposit Fees - these represent general service fees for monthly account
maintenance and activity- or transaction-based fees and 
consist of transaction-based revenue, time-based revenue (service period),
item-based revenue or some other individual attribute-
based revenue.
Revenue is recognized when the Companys performance
obligation is completed, which is generally monthly for 
account maintenance services or when a transaction has been completed.
Payment for such performance obligations are generally 
received at the time the performance obligations are satisfied. 
88 
Wealth Management
- trust fees and retail brokerage fees trust fees represent monthly fees due from wealth
management clients 
as consideration for managing the clients
assets. Trust services include custody of assets, investment
management, fees for trust 
services and similar fiduciary activities. Revenue is recognized when
the Companys performance obligation
is completed each 
month or quarter, which is the time that payment
is received. Also, retail brokerage fees are received from a third-party broker-
dealer, for which the Company acts as an agent,
as part of a revenue-sharing agreement for fees earned from
customers that are 
referred to the third party.
These fees are for transactional and advisory services and are paid by the third party on
a monthly 
basis and recognized ratably throughout the quarter as the Companys
performance obligation is satisfied. 
Bank Card Fees bank card related fees primarily includes interchange
income from client use of consumer and business debit 
cards.
Interchange income is a fee paid by a merchant bank to the card-issuing bank through
the interchange network.
Interchange fees are set by the credit card associations and are based on cardholder
purchase volumes.
The Company records 
interchange income as transactions occur. 
Gains and Losses from the Sale of Bank Owned Property the performance
obligation in the sale of other real estate owned 
typically will be the delivery of control over the property to the buyer.
If the Company is not providing the financing of the sale, 
the transaction price is typically identified in the purchase and sale agreement.
However, if the Company provides seller 
financing, the Company must determine a transaction price, depending
on if the sale contract is at market terms and taking into 
account the credit risk inherent in the arrangement.
Insurance Commissions insurance commissions recorded by the
Company are received from various insurance carriers based on 
contractual agreements to sell policies to customers on behalf of
the carriers. The performance obligation for the Company is to 
sell life and health insurance policies to customers.
This performance obligation is met when a new policy is sold (effective
date) 
or when an existing policy renews. New policies and renewals generally have a one
-year term. In the agreements with the 
insurance carriers, a commission rate is agreed upon. The commission
is recognized at the time of the sale of the policy (effective 
date) or when a policy renews, which is the time that payment is received.
Insurance commissions are recorded within other 
noninterest income.
Other non-interest income primarily includes items such as mortgage
banking fees (gains from the sale of residential mortgage 
loans held for sale), bank-owned life insurance, and safe deposit box fees,
none of which are subject to the requirements of ASC 
606. 
The Company has made no significant judgments in applying the revenue
guidance prescribed in ASC 606 that affects the 
determination of the amount and timing of revenue from the above-described
contracts with clients.
Recently Adopted Accounting Pronouncements 
ASU No. 2023-09, Income Taxes
(Topic
740): Improvements to Income Tax
Disclosures. 
ASU 2023-09 is intended to enhance 
transparency and decision usefulness of income tax disclosures. The ASU addresses
investor requests for more transparency about 
income tax information through improvements to income tax disclosures,
primarily related to the rate reconciliation and income 
taxes paid information. Retrospective application in all prior periods is permitted.
ASU 2023-09 will be effective for the company 
on January 1, 2025. 
The adoption of the standard did not have a material impact on its consolidated financial
statements. Refer to 
Note 13 Income Taxes. 
Issued But Not Yet
Effective Accounting Standards 
ASU No. 2023-06, Disclosure Improvements:
Codification Amendments in Response to the SECs
Disclosure Update and 
Simplification Initiative. 
ASU 2023-06 is intended to clarify or improve disclosure and presentation
requirements of a variety of 
topics, which will allow users to more easily compare entities subject to the
SECs existing disclosures with those entities
that 
were not previously subject to the requirements and align the requirements in
the FASB accounting standard
codification with the 
SECs regulations. ASU 2023
-06 is to be applied prospectively,
and early adoption is prohibited. For reporting entities subject to 
the SECs existing disclosure requirements,
the effective dates of ASU 2023-06 will be the date on which the SECs
removal of 
that related disclosure requirement from Regulation S-X or Regulation
S-K becomes effective. If by June 30, 2027, the SEC has 
not removed the applicable requirement from Regulation S-X or Regulation
S-K, the pending content of the related amendment 
will be removed from the Codification and will not become effective
for any entities. The Company is currently evaluating the 
provisions of the amendments and the impact on its future consolidated
statements.
ASU No. 2023-03, Income Statement Reporting Comprehensive
Income Expense Disaggregation
Disclosures (Subtopic 
220-40): Disaggregation of Income Statement
Expenses.
ASU 2024-03 introduces new requirements to disclose additional 
information about certain types of expenses, including employee compensation,
depreciation, intangible asset amortization, and 
selling expenses. ASU 2024-03 is effective for the Company as of January
1, 2026. The Company is currently evaluating the 
impact of the incremental disclosures that will be required under the
standard. 
89 
ASU 2025-06, Intangibles - Goodwill and Other -Internal-Use Software
(Subtopic 350-40): Targeted
Improvements to the 
Accounting for Internal-Use Software.
The ASU updates accounting for internal-use software by shifting
from a stage-based 
model to a principles-based approach aligned with modern development.
Key provisions include new capitalization criteria based 
on authorization, funding commitment, and probable completion,
removal of development stages, integrated website guidance, 
and enhanced disclosures. ASU 2025-06 is effective for
the Company as of January 1, 2027. The Company is currently evaluating 
the provisions of the amendments and the impact on its future consolidated
statements and disclosures.
ASU 2025-08, Financial InstrumentsCredit Losses
(Topic
326): Purchased Loans.
The ASU updates the accounting for 
purchased loans under ASC 326. The amendments expand the population
of loans subject to the gross-up accounting model by 
eliminating the former distinction between purchased credit
-deteriorated (PCD) and non-PCD loans. Under the new guidance, 
entities will apply a single model for purchased loans by recognizing an
allowance for credit losses and adjusting the amortized 
cost basis for the associated noncredit discount at acquisition. ASU 2025
-08 is effective for the Company as of January 1, 2027. 
The Company is currently evaluating the provisions of the amendments
and the impact on its future consolidated statements and 
disclosures. 
ASU 2025-11,
Interim Reporting (Topic
270): Narrow-Scope Improvements.
The ASU aims to clarify and enhance interim 
financial reporting by defining its scope, consolidating GAAP disclosures
in Topic 270,
adding a principle for material post-year-
end event disclosure, and refining statement format guidance to improve
consistency for all preparers. These changes do not alter 
the fundamental requirements of interim reporting but seek to streamline
and standardize the process.
ASU 2025-11 is effective 
for interim reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2027.
The Company is currently evaluating the provisions of the 
amendments and the impact on its future consolidated statements. 
ASU 2025-12, Codification Improvements/
The ASU was issued to make technical corrections, clarify ambiguous
guidance, 
and generally streamline the Accounting Standards Codification across
various topics, affecting most reporting entities, with key 
changes including clarifications for diluted EPS during losses, lease receivable
disclosures, beneficial interest calculations, and 
treasury stock accounting, aiming for better usability without significantly
altering core accounting outcomes.
The Company is 
currently evaluating the provisions of the amendments and the impact
on its future consolidated statements.
ASU 2025-12 is 
effective for the Company as of January 1, 2027.
The Company is currently evaluating the provisions of the amendments and the 
impact on its future consolidated statements.
90 
Note 2 
INVESTMENT SECURITIES 
Investment Portfolio Composition
.
The following tables summarize the amortized cost and related fair value of investment 
securities AFS and securities HTM, the corresponding amounts of
gross unrealized gains and losses, and allowance for credit 
losses.
Available for
Sale 
Amortized 
Unrealized 
Unrealized 
Allowance for 
Fair 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Cost 
Gains 
Losses 
Credit Losses 
Value 
December 31, 2025 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
331,495
$ 
1,940
$ 
171
$ 
-
$ 
333,264
U.S. Government Agency 
174,527
71
2,484
-
172,114
States and Political Subdivisions 
36,918
38
2,045
-
34,911
Mortgage-Backed Securities
(1)
59,699
2
7,697
-
52,004
Corporate Debt Securities 
45,810
-
2,236
(42)
43,532
Other Securities
(2)
8,097
-
-
-
8,097
Total
$ 
656,546
$ 
2,051
$ 
14,633
$ 
(42)
$ 
643,922
December 31, 2024 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
106,710
$ 
25
$ 
934
$ 
-
$ 
105,801
U.S. Government Agency 
148,666
39
5,578
-
143,127
States and Political Subdivisions 
43,212
-
3,827
(3)
39,382
Mortgage-Backed Securities
(1)
66,379
-
10,902
-
55,477
Corporate Debt Securities 
55,970
-
4,444
(64)
51,462
Other Securities
(2)
8,096
-
-
-
8,096
Total
$ 
429,033
$ 
64
$ 
25,685
$ 
(67)
$ 
403,345
Held to Maturity 
Amortized 
Unrealized 
Unrealized 
Fair 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Cost 
Gains 
Losses 
Value 
December 31, 2025 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
129,782
$ 
-
$ 
514
$ 
129,268
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
247,664
930
8,542
240,052
Total
$ 
377,446
$ 
930
$ 
9,056
$ 
369,320
December 31, 2024 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
368,005
$ 
-
$ 
6,476
$ 
361,529
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
199,150
16
16,235
182,931
Total
$ 
567,155
$ 
16
$ 
22,711
$ 
544,460
(1)
Comprised of residential mortgage-backed
securities.
(2)
Includes Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Reserve Bank recorded
at cost of $
3.0
million and $
5.1
million, respectively,
at December 31, 2025 and 2024.
At December 31, 2025, and 2024, the investment portfolio had $
2.1
million and $
2.4
million, respectively, in
equity securities. 
These securities do not have a readily determinable fair value and were not
credit impaired.
Securities with an amortized cost of $
461.3
million and $
489.5
million at December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively,
were 
pledged to secure public deposits and for other purposes. 
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, there were 
no
holdings of securities of any one issuer, other than
the U.S. Government and its 
agencies, in an amount greater than 10% of shareowners equity. 
91 
The Bank, as a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta (FHLB), is required
to own capital stock in the FHLB based 
generally upon the balances of residential and commercial real estate loans, and
FHLB advances.
FHLB stock which is included 
in other securities is pledged to secure FHLB advances.
No ready market exists for this stock, and it has no quoted fair value; 
however, redemption of this stock has historically
been at par value.
As a member of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, the 
Bank is required to maintain stock in the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta based
on a specified ratio relative to the Banks capital.
Federal Reserve Bank stock is carried at cost. 
Investment Sales
. During 2023, the Company sold $
30.4
million of investment securities. There were 
no
significant sales of 
investment securities during 2025 and 202
4. 
Maturity Distribution
.
The following table shows the Companys
AFS and HTM investment securities maturity distribution 
based on contractual maturity at December 31, 2025.
Expected maturities may differ from contractual maturities because 
borrowers may have the right to call or prepay obligations.
Mortgage-backed securities and certain amortizing U.S. government 
agency securities are shown separately since they are not due at a certain maturity
date.
Equity securities do not have a 
contractual maturity date.
Available for
Sale 
Held to Maturity 
Amortized 
Fair 
Amortized 
Fair 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Cost 
Value 
Cost 
Value 
Due in one year or less 
$ 
102,643
$ 
102,057
$ 
129,782
$ 
129,268
Due after one through five years 
335,400
335,032
-
-
Due after five through ten years 
25,188
23,042
- 
- 
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
59,699
52,004
247,664
240,052
U.S. Government Agency 
125,519
123,690
- 
- 
Other Securities 
8,097
8,097
- 
- 
Total
$ 
656,546
$ 
643,922
$ 
377,446
$ 
369,320
92 
Unrealized Losses
. The following table summarizes the investment securities with unrealized
losses at December 31, aggregated 
by major security type and length of time in a continuous unrealized loss position:
Less Than 12 Months 
Greater Than 12 Months 
Total 
Fair 
Unrealized 
Fair 
Unrealized 
Fair 
Unrealized 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Value 
Losses 
Value 
Losses 
Value 
Losses 
December 31, 2025 
Available for
Sale 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
31,319
$ 
22
$ 
8,902
$ 
149
$ 
40,221
$ 
171
U.S. Government Agency 
62,809
182
91,760
2,302
154,569
2,484
States and Political Subdivisions 
3,030
124
30,705
1,921
33,735
2,045
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
-
-
51,932
7,697
51,932
7,697
Corporate Debt Securities 
-
-
42,333
2,236
42,333
2,236
Total
97,158
328
225,632
14,305
322,790
14,633
Held to Maturity 
U.S. Government Treasury 
-
-
129,268
514
129,268
514
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
33,589
98
106,262
8,444
139,851
8,542
Total
$ 
33,589
$ 
98
$ 
235,530
$ 
8,958
$ 
269,119
$ 
9,056
December 31, 2024 
Available for
Sale
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
81,363
$ 
318
$ 
14,510
$ 
616
$ 
95,873
$ 
934
U.S. Government Agency 
33,155
184
100,844
5,394
133,999
5,578
States and Political Subdivisions 
2,728
164
36,654
3,663
39,382
3,827
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
54
-
55,409
10,902
55,463
10,902
Corporate Debt Securities 
3,093
249
48,369
4,195
51,462
4,444
Total
120,393
915
255,786
24,770
376,179
25,685
Held to Maturity 
U.S. Government Treasury 
-
-
361,529
6,476
361,529
6,476
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
58,230
1,000
119,353
15,235
177,583
16,235
Total
$ 
58,230
$ 
1,000
$ 
480,882
$ 
21,711
$ 
539,112
$ 
22,711
At December 31, 2025, there were 
736
positions (combined AFS and HTM securities) with pre-tax unrealized
losses totaling 
$
23.7
million.
At December 31, 2024 there were 
856
positions (combined AFS and HTM securities) with pre-tax unrealized 
losses totaling $
48.4
million.
For 2025, 
29
of these of these positions were U.S. Treasury bonds
and carry the full faith and credit 
of the U.S. Government.
625
of these positions were U.S. government agency and mortgage-backed
securities issued by U.S. 
government sponsored entities.
We believe the
long history of 
no
credit losses on government securities indicates that the 
expectation of nonpayment of the amortized cost basis is 
zero
.
The remaining 
82
positions (municipal securities and corporate 
bonds) have a credit component.
At December 31, 2025, all collateralized mortgage obligation securities (CMO), MBS,
Small 
Business Administration securities (SBA), U.S. Agency,
and U.S. Treasury bonds held were AA1 or above rated.
At December 
31, 2025, corporate debt securities had an allowance for credit losses of $
42
thousand.
No
ne of the securities held by the 
Company were past due or in nonaccrual status at December 31, 2025. 
Credit Quality Indicators
The Company monitors the credit quality of its investment securities through
various risk management procedures, including the 
monitoring of credit ratings.
A large portion of the debt securities in the Companys
investment portfolio were issued by a U.S. 
government entity or agency and are either explicitly or implicitly guaranteed
by the U.S. government.
The Company believes 
the long history of no credit losses on these securities indicates that the
expectation of nonpayment of the amortized cost basis is 
zero, even if the U.S. government were to technically default.
Further, certain municipal securities held
by the Company have 
been pre-refunded and secured by government guaranteed
treasuries.
Therefore, for the aforementioned securities, the Company 
does 
no
t assess or record expected credit losses due to the zero loss assumption.
The Company monitors the credit quality of its 
municipal and corporate securities portfolio via credit ratings which are
updated on a quarterly basis.
On a quarterly basis, 
municipal and corporate securities in an unrealized loss position are
evaluated to determine if the loss is attributable to credit 
related factors and if an allowance for credit loss is needed.
93 
Note 3 
LOANS HELD FOR INVESTMENT AND ALLOWANCE
FOR CREDIT LOSSES 
Loan Portfolio Composition
.
The composition of the HFI loan portfolio at December 31 was as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
180,341
$ 
189,208
Real Estate Construction 
146,920
219,994
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
768,731
779,095
Real Estate Residential
(1)
1,025,690
1,042,504
Real Estate Home Equity 
240,897
220,064
Consumer
(2)
183,539
200,685
Loans Held for Investment, Net of Unearned Income 
$ 
2,546,118
$ 
2,651,550
(1)
Includes loans in process with outstanding balances
of $
5.6
million and $
13.6
million for 2025 and 2024, respectively. 
(2)
Includes overdraft balances of $
1.2
million at December 31, 2025 and 2024.
Net deferred costs, which include premiums on purchased loans, included
in loans were $
8.6
million at December 31, 2025 and 
$
8.3
million at December 31, 2024.
Accrued interest receivable on loans which is excluded from amortized
cost totaled $
9.8
million at December 31, 2025 and $
10.3
million at December 31, 2024, and is reported separately in Other Assets.
The Company has pledged a floating lien on certain 1-4 family residential
mortgage loans, commercial real estate mortgage loans, 
and home equity loans to support available borrowing capacity at the FHLB and
has pledged a blanket floating lien on all 
consumer loans, commercial loans, and construction loans to support available
borrowing capacity at the Federal Reserve Bank of 
Atlanta.
Loan Purchases and Sales
. During the year ended December 31, 2025, the Company sold loans classified as held
for investment 
totaling $
4.7
million, resulting in a net loss of $
0.2
million. The Company retained no continuing interest in the loans sold.
Allowance for Credit Losses
.
The methodology for estimating the amount of credit losses reported in
the allowance for credit 
losses (ACL) has two basic components: first, an asset-specific component
involving loans that do not share risk characteristics 
and the measurement of expected credit losses for such individual loans;
and second, a pooled component for expected credit 
losses for pools of loans that share similar risk characteristics.
This methodology is discussed further in Note 1 Significant 
Accounting Policies.
94 
The following table details the activity in the allowance for credit losses by portfolio
segment for the years ended December 31.
Allocation of a portion of the allowance to one category of loans does not preclude
its availability to absorb losses in other 
categories.
Commercial
, 
Real Estate 
Financial,
Real Estate 
Commercial
Real Estate 
Real Estate 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Agricultural 
Construction 
Mortgage 
Residential 
Home Equity 
Consumer 
Total 
2025 
Beginning Balance 
$ 
1,514
$ 
2,384
$ 
5,867
$ 
14,568
$ 
1,952
$ 
2,966
$ 
29,251
Provision for Credit Losses 
688
(703)
950
680
393
3,327
5,335
Charge-Offs 
(782)
-
(4)
(136)
(44)
(5,954)
(6,920)
Recoveries
331
-
46
205
67
2,686
3,335
Net (Charge-Offs) Recoveries 
(451)
-
42
69
23
(3,268)
(3,585)
Ending Balance 
$ 
1,751
$ 
1,681
$ 
6,859
$ 
15,317
$ 
2,368
$ 
3,025
$ 
31,001
2024 
Beginning Balance 
$ 
1,482
$ 
2,502
$ 
5,782
$ 
15,056
$ 
1,818
$ 
3,301
$ 
29,941
Provision for Credit Losses 
1,165
(74)
(173)
(603)
129
4,531
4,975
Charge-Offs 
(1,512)
(47)
(3)
(61)
(132)
(7,627)
(9,382)
Recoveries 
379
3
261
176
137
2,761
3,717
Net (Charge-Offs) Recoveries 
(1,133)
(44)
258
115
5
(4,866)
(5,665)
Ending Balance 
$ 
1,514
$ 
2,384
$ 
5,867
$ 
14,568
$ 
1,952
$ 
2,966
$ 
29,251
2023 
Beginning Balance 
$ 
1,506
$ 
2,654
$ 
4,815
$ 
10,741
$ 
1,864
$ 
3,488
$ 
25,068
Provision for Credit Losses 
210
(154)
1,035
4,141
(233)
4,596
9,595
Charge-Offs 
(511)
-
(120)
(79)
(39)
(8,543)
(9,292)
Recoveries 
277
2
52
253
226
3,760
4,570
Net (Charge-Offs) Recoveries 
(234)
2
(68)
174
187
(4,783)
(4,722)
Ending Balance 
$ 
1,482
$ 
2,502
$ 
5,782
$ 
15,056
$ 
1,818
$ 
3,301
$ 
29,941
The $
1.8
million increase in the allowance for credit losses in 2025 reflected a credit loss provision
of $
5.3
million and net loan 
charge-offs of $
3.6
million.
The $
0.7
million decrease in the allowance for credit losses in 2024 reflected a
credit loss provision 
of $
5.0
million and net loan charge-offs of $
5.7
million.
The increase in the allowance in 2025 was primarily attributable to 
qualitative factor adjustments that were partially offset by
lower loan balances.
The decrease in the allowance in 2024 was 
primarily due to lower new loan volume and loan balances and favorable
loan grade migration.
Four unemployment rate forecast 
scenarios continue to be utilized to estimate probability of default and
are weighted based on managements
estimate of 
probability.
See Note 1 Significant accounting policies for more on the calculation of the provision
for credit losses.
See Note 
21 Commitments and Contingencies for information on the provision
for credit losses related to off-balance sheet commitments.
95 
Loan Portfolio Aging.
A loan is defined as a past due loan when one full payment is past due or a contractual maturity
is over 30 
days past due (DPD).
The following table presents the aging of the amortized cost basis in accruing
past due loans by class of loans at December 31,
30-59
60-89
90 +
Total 
Total 
Nonaccrual 
Total 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
DPD 
DPD 
DPD 
Past Due 
Current 
Loans 
Loans 
2025 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
537
$ 
172
$ 
-
$ 
709
$ 
178,354
$ 
1,278
$ 
180,341
Real Estate Construction 
295
-
-
295
146,625
-
146,920
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
1,386
-
-
1,386
764,785
2,560
768,731
Real Estate Residential 
807
1,930
-
2,737
1,020,810
2,143
1,025,690
Real Estate Home Equity 
67
-
-
67
239,061
1,769
240,897
Consumer 
1,561
262
-
1,823
180,871
845
183,539
Total 
$ 
4,653
$ 
2,364
$ 
-
$ 
7,017
$ 
2,530,506
$ 
8,595
$ 
2,546,118
2024 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
340
$ 
50
$ 
-
$ 
390
$ 
188,781
$ 
37
$ 
189,208
Real Estate Construction 
-
-
-
-
219,994
-
219,994
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
719
100
-
819
777,710
566
779,095
Real Estate Residential 
185
498
-
683
1,038,694
3,127
1,042,504
Real Estate Home Equity 
122
-
-
122
218,160
1,782
220,064
Consumer 
2,154
143
-
2,297
197,598
790
200,685
Total 
$ 
3,520
$ 
791
$ 
-
$ 
4,311
$ 
2,640,937
$ 
6,302
$ 
2,651,550
Nonaccrual Loans
.
Loans are generally placed on nonaccrual status if principal or interest payments
become 90 days past due 
and/or management deems the collectability of the principal and/or
interest to be doubtful.
Loans are returned to accrual status 
when the principal and interest amounts contractually due are brought
current or when future payments are reasonably assured.
The Company did not recognize a significant amount of interest income
on nonaccrual loans for the years ended December 31, 
2025
and 2024.
The following table presents the amortized cost basis of loans in nonaccrual
status and loans past due over 90 days and still on 
accrual by class of loans.
2025 
2024 
Nonaccrual 
Nonaccrual 
90 + Days 
Nonaccrual 
Nonaccrual 
90 + Days 
With No 
With 
Still 
With No 
With 
Still 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
ACL 
ACL 
Accruing 
ACL 
ACL 
Accruing 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
1,038
$ 
240
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
37
$ 
-
Real Estate Construction 
-
-
-
-
-
-
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
753
1,807
-
427
139
-
Real Estate Residential 
1,275
868
-
2,046
1,081
-
Real Estate Home Equity 
1,382
387
-
509
1,273
-
Consumer 
-
845
-
-
790
-
Total
Nonaccrual Loans 
$ 
4,448
$ 
4,147
$ 
-
$ 
2,982
$ 
3,320
$ 
-
96 
Collateral Dependent Loans
.
The following table presents the amortized cost basis of collateral dependent loans
at December 31:
2025 
2024 
Real Estate 
Non Real Estate 
Real Estate 
Non Real Estate 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Secured 
Secured 
Secured 
Secured 
Commercial, Financial and Agricultural 
$ 
-
$ 
1,087
$ 
-
$ 
39
Real Estate Construction 
-
-
-
-
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage 
2,450
-
427
-
Real Estate Residential 
1,275
-
2,476
-
Real Estate Home Equity 
1,561
-
651
-
Consumer 
-
-
-
55
Total 
$ 
5,286
$ 
1,087
$ 
3,554
$ 
94
A loan is collateral dependent when the borrower is experiencing financial
difficulty and repayment of the loan is dependent on 
the sale or operation of the underlying collateral.
The Banks collateral dependent
loan portfolio is comprised primarily of real estate secured loans, collateralized
by either 
residential or commercial collateral types.
The loans are carried at fair value based on current values determined by either 
independent appraisals or internal evaluations, adjusted for selling costs or
other amounts to be deducted when estimating 
expected net sales proceeds.
Residential Real Estate Loans In Process of Foreclosure
.
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, the Company had $
0.2
million and 
$
0.5
million, respectively, in 1-4 family
residential real estate loans for which formal foreclosure proceedings were
in process. 
Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing
Financial Difficulty
.
Occasionally, the Company
may modify loans to borrowers who 
are experiencing financial difficulty.
Loan modifications to borrowers in financial difficulty are loans
in which the Company has 
granted an economic concession to the borrower that it would not otherwise consider.
In these instances, as part of a work-out 
alternative, the Company will make concessions including the extension
of the loan term, a principal moratorium, a reduction in 
the interest rate, or a combination thereof.
The impact of the modifications and defaults are factored into the allowance for credit 
losses on a loan-by-loan basis.
Thus, specific reserves are established based upon the results of either a discounted
cash flow 
analysis or the underlying collateral value, if the loan is deemed to be collateral
dependent.
A modified loan classification can be 
removed if the borrowers financial condition improves
such that the borrower is no longer in financial difficulty,
the loan has not 
had any forgiveness of principal or interest, and the loan
is subsequently refinanced or restructured at market terms and qualifies 
as a new loan. 
The financial effects of the loan modifications made to borrowers during
the 12 months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024 were 
not significant.
During the year ended December 31, 2025, the Company modified 
three
commercial mortgage loans to borrowers experiencing 
financial difficulty.
One
loan for $
2.5
million at the modification date was provided a 
6
-month interest only extension in 
exchange for additional collateral and had a $
2.1
million balance at December 31, 2025.
Two
loans totaling $
1.4
million were 
provided a 
5
-month interest only forbearance period, and the outstanding balances
at the modification date remained unchanged at 
December 31, 2025.
All 
three
loans were current with no payment delay at December 31, 2025.
During the year ended December 31, 2024, the Company modified 
one
commercial mortgage loan due to the borrower 
experiencing financial difficulty.
The balance of the loan at December 31, 2024 was $
0.3
million. The Company reduced the 
interest rate on the loan by 
1
% in addition to extending the term of the loan from 
5
to 
20
years.
The loan was on non-accrual 
status at December 31, 2024 and did not have a payment delay as of December 31,
2024.
Credit Risk Management
.
The Company has adopted comprehensive lending policies, underwriting standards
and loan review 
procedures designed to maximize loan income within an acceptable
level of risk.
Management and the Board of Directors of the 
Company review and approve these policies and procedures on
a regular basis (at least annually).
97 
Reporting systems are used to monitor loan originations, loan quality,
concentrations of credit, loan delinquencies and 
nonperforming loans and potential problem loans.
Management and the Credit Risk Oversight Committee periodically review 
our lines of business to monitor asset quality trends and the appropriateness
of credit policies.
In addition, total borrower 
exposure limits are established, and concentration risk is monitored.
As part of this process, the overall composition of the loan 
portfolio is reviewed to gauge diversification of risk, client concentrations,
industry group, loan type, geographic area, or other 
relevant classifications of loans.
Specific segments of the loan portfolio are monitored and reported to
the Board on a quarterly 
basis and have strategic plans in place to supplement board-approved
credit policies governing exposure limits and underwriting 
standards.
Detailed below are the types of loans within the Companys
loan portfolio and risk characteristics unique to each.
Commercial, Financial, and Agricultural Loans in this category
are primarily made based on identified cash flows of the 
borrower with consideration given to underlying collateral and
personal or other guarantees.
Lending policy establishes debt 
service coverage ratio limits that require a borrowers cash flow to
be sufficient to cover principal and interest payments on all 
new and existing debt.
The majority of these loans are secured by the assets being financed or other
business assets such as 
accounts receivable, inventory,
or equipment.
Collateral values are determined based upon third-party appraisals and evaluations.
Loan to value ratios at origination are governed by established policy guidelines.
Real Estate Construction Loans in this category consist of short-term
construction loans, revolving and non-revolving credit 
lines and construction/permanent loans made to individuals and investors
to finance the acquisition, development, construction or 
rehabilitation of real property.
These loans are primarily made based on identified cash flows of the
borrower or project and 
generally secured by the property being financed, including 1-4
family residential properties and commercial properties that are 
either owner-occupied or investment in nature.
These properties may include either vacant or improved property.
Construction 
loans are generally based upon estimates of costs and value associated with
the completed project.
Collateral values are 
determined based upon third-party appraisals and evaluations.
Loan to value ratios at origination are governed by established 
policy guidelines.
The disbursement of funds for construction loans is made in relation to the progress
of the project and as such 
these loans are closely monitored by on-site inspections.
Real Estate Commercial Mortgage Loans in this category consist of commercial
mortgage loans secured by property that is 
either owner-occupied or investment in nature.
These loans are primarily made based on identified cash flows of the borrower
or 
project with consideration given to underlying real estate collateral and
personal guarantees.
Lending policy establishes debt 
service coverage ratios and loan to value ratios specific to the property type.
Collateral values are determined based upon third-
party appraisals and evaluations.
Real Estate Residential Residential mortgage loans held in the Companys
loan portfolio are made to borrowers that 
demonstrate the ability to make scheduled payments with full consideration
to underwriting factors such as current income, 
employment status, current assets, other financial resources, credit history,
and the value of the collateral.
Collateral consists of 
mortgage liens on 1-4 family residential properties.
Collateral values are determined based upon third party appraisals and 
evaluations.
The Company does not originate sub-prime loans.
Real Estate Home Equity Home equity loans and lines are made to qualified
individuals for legitimate purposes generally 
secured by senior or junior mortgage liens on owner-occupied
1-4 family homes or vacation homes.
Borrower qualifications 
include favorable credit history combined with supportive income and debt
ratio requirements and combined loan to value ratios 
within established policy guidelines.
Collateral values are determined based upon third-party appraisals and evaluations.
Consumer Loans This loan category includes personal installment loans,
direct and indirect automobile financing, and overdraft 
lines of credit.
The majority of the consumer loan category consists of indirect and direct automobile
loans.
Lending policy 
establishes maximum debt to income ratios, minimum credit scores, and
includes guidelines for verification of applicants income 
and receipt of credit reports.
Credit Quality Indicators
.
As part of the ongoing monitoring of the Companys
loan portfolio quality, management
categorizes 
loans into risk categories based on relevant information about the
ability of borrowers to service their debt such as: current 
financial information, historical payment performance, credit documentation,
and current economic and market trends, among 
other factors.
Risk ratings are assigned to each loan and revised as needed through established monitoring
procedures for 
individual loan relationships over a predetermined amount
and review of smaller balance homogenous loan pools.
The Company 
uses the definitions noted below for categorizing and managing its criticized
loans.
Loans categorized as Pass do not meet the 
criteria set forth below and are not considered criticized. 
Special Mention Loans in this category are presently protected from loss, but
weaknesses are apparent which, if not corrected, 
could cause future problems.
Loans in this category may not meet required underwriting criteria and
have no mitigating 
factors.
More than the ordinary amount of attention is warranted for these loans. 
98 
Substandard Loans in this category exhibit well-defined weaknesses that would
typically bring normal repayment into jeopardy. 
These loans are no longer adequately protected due to well-defined
weaknesses that affect the repayment capacity of the 
borrower.
The possibility of loss is much more evident and above average supervision is required
for these loans. 
Doubtful Loans in this category have all the weaknesses inherent in a loan categorized
as Substandard, with the characteristic 
that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of currently
existing facts, conditions, and values, highly 
questionable and improbable. 
Performing/Nonperforming Loans within certain homogenous
loan pools (home equity and consumer) are not individually 
reviewed but are monitored for credit quality via the aging status of the loan and
by payment activity.
The performing or 
nonperforming status is updated on an on-going basis dependent upon
improvement and deterioration in credit quality. 
99 
The following tables summarize gross loans held for investment at December
31, 2025
and December 31, 2024
and current period 
gross write-offs for each of the 12-month periods ended
December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024
by years of origination and 
internally assigned credit risk ratings (refer to Credit Risk Management section
for detail on risk rating system).
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Term Loans by Origination Year 
Revolving 
December 31, 2025 
2025 
2024 
2023 
2022 
2021 
Prior 
Loans 
Total 
Commercial, Financial, 
Agricultural: 
Pass 
$ 
37,680
$ 
23,425
$ 
22,907
$ 
23,068
$ 
10,922
$ 
8,740
$ 
48,354
$ 
175,096
Special Mention 
322
121
2,740
63
4
180
163
3,593
Substandard 
-
146
95
245
16
36
1,114
1,652
Total 
$ 
38,002
$ 
23,692
$ 
25,742
$ 
23,376
$ 
10,942
$ 
8,956
$ 
49,631
$ 
180,341
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
209
$ 
114
$ 
344
$ 
70
$ 
1
$ 
44
$ 
782
Real Estate - Construction: 
Pass 
$ 
76,850
$ 
39,024
$ 
3,298
$ 
14,996
$ 
53
$ 
187
$ 
9,295
$ 
143,703
Special Mention 
-
-
372
2,127
-
-
-
2,499
Substandard 
-
-
718
-
-
-
-
718
Total 
$ 
76,850
$ 
39,024
$ 
4,388
$ 
17,123
$ 
53
$ 
187
$ 
9,295
$ 
146,920
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
Real Estate - Commercial 
Mortgage: 
Pass 
$ 
93,723
$ 
76,348
$ 
101,262
$ 
174,959
$ 
92,388
$ 
152,307
$ 
22,555
$ 
713,542
Special Mention 
9,830
4,477
5,725
20,547
3,922
4,074
720
49,295
Substandard 
750
1,402
98
418
1,229
1,847
150
5,894
Total 
$ 
104,303
$ 
82,227
$ 
107,085
$ 
195,924
$ 
97,539
$ 
158,228
$ 
23,425
$ 
768,731
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
4
$ 
-
$ 
4
Real Estate - Residential: 
Pass 
$ 
142,278
$ 
130,895
$ 
269,844
$ 
316,402
$ 
59,950
$ 
87,545
$ 
10,521
$ 
1,017,435
Special Mention 
-
-
-
116
954
807
378
2,255
Substandard 
-
558
429
1,201
1,310
2,341
161
6,000
Total
$ 
142,278
$ 
131,453
$ 
270,273
$ 
317,719
$ 
62,214
$ 
90,693
$ 
11,060
$ 
1,025,690
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
27
$ 
59
$ 
32
$ 
-
$ 
18
$ 
-
$ 
136
Real Estate - Home 
Equity: 
Performing 
$ 
391
$ 
9
$ 
411
$ 
19
$ 
106
$ 
587
$ 
237,678
$ 
239,201
Nonperforming 
-
-
-
-
-
-
1,696
1,696
Total
$ 
391
9
411
19
106
587
239,374
240,897
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
9
$ 
35
$ 
44
Consumer: 
Performing 
$ 
63,443
$ 
21,866
$ 
27,919
$ 
31,464
$ 
21,524
$ 
5,164
$ 
11,315
$ 
182,695
Nonperforming 
186
191
149
215
72
31
-
844
Total
$ 
63,629
$ 
22,057
$ 
28,068
$ 
31,679
$ 
21,596
$ 
5,195
$ 
11,315
$ 
183,539
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
2,789
$ 
376
$ 
1,003
$ 
1,036
$ 
454
$ 
144
$ 
152
$ 
5,954
100 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Term Loans by Origination Year 
Revolving 
December 31, 2024 
2024 
2023 
2022 
2021 
2020 
Prior 
Loans 
Total 
Commercial, Financial, 
Agricultural: 
Pass 
$ 
35,596
$ 
36,435
$ 
37,506
$ 
18,433
$ 
4,610
$ 
9,743
$ 
41,720
$ 
184,043
Special Mention 
435
3,979
261
9
-
-
76
4,760
Substandard 
-
-
193
12
58
71
71
405
Total 
$ 
36,031
$ 
40,414
$ 
37,960
$ 
18,454
$ 
4,668
$ 
9,814
$ 
41,867
$ 
189,208
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
9
$ 
548
$ 
500
$ 
111
$ 
160
$ 
1
$ 
183
$ 
1,512
Real Estate - Construction: 
Pass 
$ 
105,148
$ 
73,615
$ 
29,821
$ 
53
$ 
-
$ 
185
$ 
8,288
$ 
217,110
Special Mention 
1,555
-
1,329
-
-
-
-
2,884
Total 
$ 
106,703
$ 
73,615
$ 
31,150
$ 
53
$ 
-
$ 
185
$ 
8,288
$ 
219,994
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
47
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
47
Real Estate - Commercial 
Mortgage: 
Pass 
$ 
77,561
$ 
110,183
$ 
207,574
$ 
109,863
$ 
87,369
$ 
122,272
$ 
26,324
$ 
741,146
Special Mention 
171
2,913
17,031
-
2,253
4,402
530
27,300
Substandard 
-
2,463
3,403
869
2,508
1,305
101
10,649
Total 
$ 
77,732
$ 
115,559
$ 
228,008
$ 
110,732
$ 
92,130
$ 
127,979
$ 
26,955
$ 
779,095
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
3
$ 
3
Real Estate - Residential: 
Pass 
$ 
165,050
$ 
316,521
$ 
358,851
$ 
71,423
$ 
31,169
$ 
76,921
$ 
11,872
$ 
1,031,807
Special Mention 
-
265
-
1,104
468
534
521
2,892
Substandard 
-
528
1,450
1,446
1,295
2,918
168
7,805
Total
$ 
165,050
$ 
317,314
$ 
360,301
$ 
73,973
$ 
32,932
$ 
80,373
$ 
12,561
$ 
1,042,504
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
13
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
48
$ 
-
$ 
61
Real Estate - Home 
Equity: 
Performing 
$ 
801
$ 
521
$ 
30
$ 
119
$ 
9
$ 
821
$ 
215,981
$ 
218,282
Nonperforming 
-
-
-
-
-
-
1,782
1,782
Total
$ 
801
521
30
119
9
821
217,763
220,064
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
132
$ 
132
Consumer: 
Performing 
$ 
32,293
$ 
44,995
$ 
55,942
$ 
42,002
$ 
10,899
$ 
4,116
$ 
9,648
$ 
199,895
Nonperforming 
10
174
321
156
58
71
-
790
Total
$ 
32,303
$ 
45,169
$ 
56,263
$ 
42,158
$ 
10,957
$ 
4,187
$ 
9,648
$ 
200,685
Current-Period Gross 
Writeoffs 
$ 
2,562
$ 
1,605
$ 
2,088
$ 
897
$ 
237
$ 
76
$ 
162
$ 
7,627
101 
Note 4 
MORTGAGE BANKING ACTIVITIES 
The Companys mortgage
banking activities include mandatory delivery loan sales, forward sales contracts used to
manage 
residential loan pipeline price risk, utilization of warehouse lines to fund
secondary market residential loan closings, and 
residential mortgage servicing. 
Residential Mortgage Loan Production 
The Company originates, markets, and services conventional and
government-sponsored residential mortgage loans.
Generally, 
conforming fixed rate residential mortgage loans are held for sale in the
secondary market and non-conforming and adjustable-
rate residential mortgage loans may be held for investment.
The volume of residential mortgage loans originated for sale and 
secondary market prices are the primary drivers of origination revenue. 
Residential mortgage loan commitments are generally outstanding for 30
to 90 days, which represents the typical period from 
commitment to originate a residential mortgage loan to when the closed
loan is sold to an investor.
Residential mortgage loan 
commitments are subject to both credit and price risk.
Credit risk is managed through underwriting policies and procedures, 
including collateral requirements, which are generally accepted by
the secondary loan markets.
Price risk is primarily related to 
interest rate fluctuations and is partially managed through forward sales of
residential mortgage-backed securities (primarily 
TBAs) or mandatory delivery commitments with investors.
The unpaid principal balance of residential mortgage loans held for sale,
notional amounts of derivative contracts related to 
residential mortgage loan commitments and forward contract sales and their
related fair values are set forth below.
December 31, 2025 
December 31, 2024 
Unpaid Principal 
Unpaid Principal 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Balance/Notional 
Fair Value 
Balance/Notional 
Fair Value 
Residential Mortgage Loans Held for Sale 
$ 
20,944
$ 
21,695
$ 
28,117
$ 
28,672
Residential Mortgage Loan Commitments
(1)
20,699
464
15,000
248
Forward Sales Contracts
(2)
25,500
(84)
16,000
96
$ 
22,075
$ 
29,016
(1)
Recorded in other assets at fair value 
(2)
Recorded in other liabilities and other assets at fair value
at December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, the Company had 
no
residential mortgage loans held for sale 30-89 days past due or on 
nonaccrual status.
Mortgage banking revenues for the year ended December 31, were
as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Net realized gain on sales of mortgage loans 
$ 
13,605
$ 
11,492
$ 
5,297
Net change in unrealized gain on mortgage loans held for sale 
326
(384)
(252)
Net change in the fair value of mortgage loan commitments 
216
(275)
(296)
Net change in the fair value of forward sales contracts 
(180)
305
(395)
Pair-Offs on net settlement of forward
sales contracts 
(473)
331
367
Mortgage servicing rights additions 
167
303
651
Net origination fees 
3,298
2,571
5,028
Total mortgage banking
revenues 
$ 
16,959
$ 
14,343
$ 
10,400
Residential Mortgage Servicing
The Company may retain the right to service residential mortgage loans
sold.
The unpaid principal balance of loans serviced for 
others is the primary driver of servicing revenue. 
102 
The following represents a summary of mortgage servicing rights.
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Number of residential mortgage loans serviced for others 
456
504
Outstanding principal balance of residential mortgage loans serviced
for others 
$ 
118,429
$ 
135,416
Weighted average
interest rate 
5.69%
5.86%
Remaining contractual term (in months) 
354
348
Conforming conventional loans serviced by the Company are sold to the
FNMA on a non-recourse basis, whereby foreclosure 
losses are generally the responsibility of FNMA and not the Company.
The government loans serviced by the Company are 
secured through the GNMA, whereby the Company is insured against loss by
the Federal Housing Administration or partially 
guaranteed against loss by the Veterans
Administration.
At December 31, 2025, the servicing portfolio balance consisted of the 
following loan types: FNMA (
61.2
%), GNMA (
4.4
%), and private investor (
34.4
%).
FNMA and private investor loans are 
structured as actual/actual payment remittance. 
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, the Company did 
no
t have delinquent residential mortgage loans currently in GNMA pools 
serviced by the Company.
The right to repurchase these loans and the corresponding liability has been recorded in other assets 
and other liabilities, respectively,
in the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition.
The Company had 
no
repurchases for 
the 12 months ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, of GNMA delinquent
or defaulted mortgage loans with the intention to 
modify their terms and include the loans in new GNMA pools.
Activity in the capitalized mortgage servicing rights for the year ended
December 31 was as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Beginning balance 
$ 
933
$ 
831
$ 
2,599
Additions due to loans sold with servicing retained 
167
303
651
Deletions and amortization 
(176)
(201)
(232)
Sale of Servicing Rights
(1)
-
-
(2,187)
Ending balance 
$ 
924
$ 
933
$ 
831
(1)
In 2023, the Company sold an MSR portfolio with an unpaid principal balance of
$
334
million for a sales price of $
4.0
million, 
recognizing a $
1.38
million gain on sale, recorded
in other noninterest income on the Consolidated
Statement of Income.
The Company did 
no
t record any permanent impairment losses on mortgage servicing rights for the
years ended December 31, 
2025
and 2024.
The key unobservable inputs used in determining the fair value of the Companys
mortgage servicing rights at December 31, were 
as follows:
2025 
2024 
Minimum 
Maximum 
Minimum 
Maximum 
Discount rates 
9.50%
12.00%
9.50%
12.00%
Annual prepayment speeds 
8.50%
18.73%
9.14%
18.88%
Cost of servicing (per loan) 
$ 
85
95
$ 
85
95
103 
Changes in residential mortgage interest rates directly affect
the prepayment speeds used in valuing the Companys
mortgage 
servicing rights.
A separate third-party model is used to estimate prepayment speeds based on interest rates, housing
turnover 
rates, estimated loan curtailment, anticipated defaults, and other relevant
factors.
The weighted average annual prepayment speed 
was 
13.05
% at December 31, 2025 and 
13.44
% at December 31, 2024.
Warehouse
Line Borrowings 
The Company has the following warehouse lines of credit and master repurchase
agreements with various financial institutions at 
December 31, 2025:
Amounts 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Outstanding 
$
20
million master repurchase agreement without defined expiration.
Interest is at the SOFR rate plus 
2.25%
to plus 
3.25%
, with a floor rate of 
3.25%
to 
4.25%
.
A cash pledge deposit of $
0.1
million is 
required by the lender. 
$ 
13,104
$
25
million warehouse line of credit agreement expiring in 
June 2026
.
Interest is at the SOFR plus 
2.50%
to 
3.00%
. 
14,970
$ 
28,074
Warehouse
line borrowings are classified as short-term borrowings.
At December 31, 2024, warehouse line borrowings totaled 
$
1.9
million.
At December 31, 2025, the Company had mortgage loans held for sale pledged as collateral
under the above 
warehouse lines of credit and master repurchase agreements.
The above agreements also contain covenants which include certain 
financial requirements, including maintenance of minimum tangible
net worth, minimum liquid assets and maximum debt to net 
worth ratio, as defined in the agreements.
The Company was in compliance with all significant debt covenants at December
31, 
2025.
The Company intends to renew the warehouse lines of credit and master repurchase
agreements when they mature. 
The Company extended a $
50
million warehouse line of credit to CCHL.
Balances and transactions under this line of credit were 
eliminated in the Companys
consolidated financial statements and thus not included in the total short-term
borrowings noted on 
the Consolidated Statement of Financial Condition.
The line of credit was discontinued in December 2025.
The balance of this 
line of credit at December 31, 2024 was $
32.8
million.
Note 5 
DERIVATIVES
The Company enters into derivative financial instruments to manage exposures
that arise from business activities that result in the 
receipt or payment of future known and uncertain cash amounts, the value of
which are determined by interest rates.
The 
Companys derivative financial
instruments are used to manage differences in the amount, timing,
and duration of the Companys 
known or expected cash receipts and its known or expected cash payments
principally related to the Companys
subordinated 
debt.
Cash Flow Hedges of Interest Rate Risk 
At December 31, 2024, the Company maintained interest rate swaps with
notional amounts totaling $
30
million designated as a 
cash flow hedge for subordinated debt.
Under the swap arrangement, the Company paid a fixed interest rate of 
2.50
% and 
received
a variable interest rate based on three-month CME Term
SOFR (secured overnight financing rate).
In October 2025, the 
Company terminated the swaps and derecognized the derivative assets. The
unrealized gain of $
2.7
million is deferred in 
accumulated other comprehensive income and will be amortized on
a straight-line basis into interest expense through the 
remaining term of the original cash flow hedge. The Company estimates there will
be approximately $
0.8
million reclassified as a 
decrease to interest expense within the next 12 months. 
For derivatives designated and that qualify as cash flow hedges of interest rate
risk, the gain or loss on the derivative is recorded 
in accumulated other comprehensive loss (AOCI) and subsequently
reclassified into interest expense in the same period(s) 
during which the hedged transaction affects earnings. Amounts
reported in accumulated other comprehensive loss related to 
derivatives will be reclassified to interest expense as interest payments are
made on the Companys variable-rate
subordinated 
debt. 
104 
The following table reflects the cash flow hedges included in the Consolidated
Statements of Financial Condition.
Statement of Financial 
Notional 
Fair
Weighted Average 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Condition Location 
Amount 
Value 
Maturity (Years) 
Interest rate swaps related to subordinated debt: 
December 31, 2024 
Other Assets 
$ 
30,000
$ 
5,319
5.5
The following table presents the net gains (losses) recorded in AOCI and the
Consolidated Statement of Income related to the 
cash flow derivative instruments (interest rate swaps related to subordinated debt).
Amount of Gain 
Amount of Gain 
(Loss) Recognized 
(Loss) Reclassified 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Category 
in AOCI 
from AOCI to Income 
December 31, 2025 
Interest Expense 
$ 
2,676
$ 
1,102
December 31, 2024 
Interest Expense 
$ 
3,971
$ 
1,459
December 31, 2023 
Interest Expense 
$ 
3,969
$ 
1,395
At December 31, 2024, the Company had a collateral liability of $
5.5
million.
Note 6 
PREMISES AND EQUIPMENT
The composition of the Companys
premises and equipment at December 31 was as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Land 
$ 
21,391
$ 
22,251
Buildings 
106,104
111,313
Fixtures and Equipment 
58,921
64,528
Total Premises and Equipment 
186,416
198,092
Accumulated Depreciation 
(106,959)
(116,140)
Premises and Equipment, Net 
$ 
79,457
$ 
81,952
Depreciation expense for the above premises and equipment was approximately
$
7.4
. million, $
7.7
million, and $
7.9
million in 
2025, 2024, and 2023, respectively
. 
105 
Note 7 
LEASES 
Operating leases in which the Company is the lessee are recorded as operating
lease right of use (ROU) assets and operating 
liabilities, included in 
other assets
and 
liabilities
, respectively,
on its Consolidated Statement of Financial Condition.
Operating lease ROU assets represent the Companys
right to use an underlying asset during the lease term and operating lease 
liabilities represent the Companys
obligation to make lease payments arising from the lease.
ROU assets and operating lease 
liabilities are recognized at lease commencement based on the present value of
the remaining lease payments using a discount rate 
that represents the Companys incremental
borrowing rate at the lease commencement date.
Operating lease expense, which is 
comprised of amortization of the ROU asset and the implicit interest accreted
on the operating lease liability,
is recognized on a 
straight-line basis over the lease term and is recorded in occupancy expense in
the Consolidated Statement of Income.
The Companys operating
leases primarily relate to banking offices with remaining lease terms
from 
one
to 
forty-two years
.
The 
Companys leases are not complex
and do not contain residual value guarantees, variable lease payments, or
significant 
assumptions or judgments made in applying the requirements of ASC Topic
842.
Operating leases with an initial term of 12 
months or less are not recorded on the Consolidated Statement of Financial Condition
and the related lease expense is recognized 
on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
At December 31, 2025, the operating lease ROU assets and liabilities were $
26.3
million and $
26.9
million, respectively.
At December 31, 2024, the operating lease ROU assets and liabilities were $
24.9
million 
and $
25.5
million, respectively. The
Company recognized $
0.1
million and $
0.7
million of rental income during the 12 months 
ended December 31, 2025 and 2024,
respectively, for a lease that terminated
in February 2025. The Company does not have any 
finance leases. 
The table below summarizes our lease expense and other information at
December 31, related to the Companys
operating leases:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Operating lease expense 
$ 
3,604
$ 
3,347
$ 
2,919
Short-term lease expense 
857
838
622
Total lease expense 
$ 
4,461
$ 
4,185
$ 
3,541
Other information: 
Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease liabilities: 
Operating cash flows from operating leases 
$ 
3,574
$ 
3,147
$ 
2,847
Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for new operating lease liabilities 
4,069
395
6,748
Weighted-average
remaining lease term operating leases (in years) 
15.7
16.4
16.9
Weighted-average
discount rate operating leases 
3.7
% 
3.6
% 
3.5
%
The table below summarizes the maturity of remaining lease liabilities: 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
December 31, 2025 
2026 
$ 
3,601
2027 
3,397
2028 
3,111
2029 
2,880
2030 
2,848
2031 and thereafter 
18,445
Total 
$ 
34,282
Less: Interest 
(7,350)
Present Value
of Lease Liability 
$ 
26,932
A related party is the lessor in an operating lease with the Company.
The terms of this lease agreement are further described in 
Note 19 Related Party Transactions. 
In December 2024, the Company entered into a sale leaseback agreement related
to the sale of an office location.
This agreement 
contained a 
two-year
operating lease which resulted in the recognition of a right-of-use asset and lease liability.
Further, the sale 
resulted in a gain on sale of $
0.7
million included in other noninterest income.
106 
Note 8 
GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLES
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, the Company had goodwill of $
89.1
and $
91.8
million, respectively.
Goodwill is tested for 
impairment on an annual basis, or more often if impairment indicators exist.
Testing allows for a qualitative assessment
of 
goodwill impairment indicators.
If the assessment indicates that impairment has more than likely occurred,
the Company must 
compare the estimated fair value of the reporting unit to its carrying amount.
If the carrying amount of the reporting unit exceeds 
its estimated fair value, an impairment charge is recorded
equal to the excess. 
On April 30, 2021, CCSW acquired substantially all of the assets of Strategic Wealth
Group, LLC (SWG), including advisory, 
service, and insurance carrier agreements, and the assignment of all related revenues
thereof. Under the terms of the purchase 
agreement, SWG principles became officers of CCSW and will
continue the operation of their 
five
offices in South Georgia 
offering wealth management services and comprehensive
risk management and asset protection services for individuals and 
businesses. 
CCBG paid $
4.5
million in cash consideration and recorded goodwill of $
2.8
million and a customer relationship 
intangible asset (
10 year
life) of $
1.6
million.
In September 2025, CCSW was sold resulting in $
2.8
million and $
0.9
million 
reduction in goodwill and customer relationship 
intangible asset
, respectively.
Amortization expense related to the customer 
relationship intangible totaled $
0.1
million and $
0.2
million in 2025 and 2024, respectively.
The intangible asset balance as of 
December 31, 2024 was $
1.0
million.
The Company evaluates goodwill for impairment as defined by ASC Topic
350. During the fourth quarter of 2025, the Company 
performed its annual goodwill impairment testing and determined
that 
no
goodwill impairment existed at December 31, 2025 and 
no
goodwill impairment existed at December 31, 2024.
Note 9 
OTHER REAL ESTATE
OWNED 
The following table presents other real estate owned activity at December 31,
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Beginning Balance 
$ 
367
$ 
1
$ 
431
Additions 
4,424
979
1,512
Valuation
Write-Downs 
(28)
-
(16)
Sales 
(2,827)
(613)
(1,926)
Ending Balance 
$ 
1,936
$ 
367
$ 
1
Net expenses applicable to other real estate owned for the three years ended December
31, were as follows: 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Gains from the Sale of Properties 
$ 
(4,514)
$ 
(980)
$ 
(2,072)
Losses from the Sale of Properties 
-
1
3
Rental Income from Properties 
-
(5)
-
Property Carrying Costs 
177
116
84
Valuation
Adjustments 
28
-
16
Total 
$ 
(4,309)
$ 
(868)
$ 
(1,969)
Note 10 
DEPOSITS
The composition of the Companys
interest bearing deposits at December 31 was as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
NOW Accounts 
$ 
1,322,114
$ 
1,285,281
Money Market Accounts 
390,888
404,396
Savings Deposits 
503,485
506,766
Time Deposits 
193,939
169,280
Total Interest Bearing
Deposits 
$ 
2,410,426
$ 
2,365,723
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, $
1.2
million in overdrawn deposit accounts were reclassified as loans. 
107 
The amount of time deposits that meet or exceed the FDIC insurance limit of $250,000
totaled $
76.0
million and $
56.8
million at 
December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively. 
At December 31, the scheduled maturities of time deposits were as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2026 
$ 
174,907
2027 
11,610
2028 
3,170
2029 
1,563
2030 
2,689
Total 
$ 
193,939
Interest expense on deposits for the three years ended December 31 was as follows: 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
NOW Accounts 
$ 
15,441
$ 
16,835
$ 
12,375
Money Market Accounts 
8,594
9,957
3,670
Savings Deposits 
666
723
598
Time Deposits < $250,000 
3,183
3,579
117
Time Deposits > $250,000 
1,713
1,068
822
Total Interest Expense 
$ 
29,597
$ 
32,162
$ 
17,582
Note 11 
SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS
Short-term borrowings included the following:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Federal Funds 
Purchased 
Securities
Sold Under 
Repurchase 
Agreements
(1)
Other
Short-Term 
Borrowings
(2)
2025 
Balance at December 31 
$ 
-
$ 
22,018
$ 
28,074
Maximum indebtedness at any month end 
-
43,681
28,074
Daily average indebtedness outstanding 
2
23,728
12,947
Average rate paid
for the year 
4.58
% 
2.58
% 
4.40
% 
Average rate paid
on period-end borrowings 
-
% 
2.44
% 
5.31
% 
2024 
Balance at December 31 
$ 
-
$ 
26,240
$ 
2,064
Maximum indebtedness at any month end 
-
29,339
10,003
Daily average indebtedness outstanding 
1
26,970
4,881
Average rate paid
for the year 
5.55
% 
3.11
% 
4.94
% 
Average rate paid
on period-end borrowings 
-
% 
2.72
% 
3.00
% 
2023 
Balance at December 31 
$ 
-
$ 
26,957
$ 
8,384
Maximum indebtedness at any month end 
-
32,426
42,345
Daily average indebtedness outstanding 
12
19,917
24,134
Average rate paid
for the year 
7.03
% 
2.57
% 
6.37
% 
Average rate paid
on period-end borrowings 
-
% 
2.81
% 
9.51
% 
(1)
Balances are fully collateralized by government treasury or agency securities held in the Company's investment portfolio. 
(2)
Comprised of warehouse lines of credit totaling $
28.1
million and $
1.9
million at December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
108 
Note 12 
LONG-TERM BORROWINGS
Federal Home Loan Bank Advances.
The Company had one FHLB long-term advance for $
0.1
million at December 31, 2024. 
This outstanding balance was reclassified to Short-Term
Borrowings in 2024, 
matured in 2025, and had a rate of 4.80%.
FHLB 
advances are collateralized by a floating lien on certain 1-4 family residential
mortgage loans, commercial real estate mortgage 
loans, and home equity mortgage loans.
Interest on the FHLB advances is paid on a monthly basis.
Long-term Notes Payable
.
During 2024, the Company entered into 
two
notes payable totaling $
0.8
million with the third-party 
vendor for its retail brokerage platform.
The notes mature in 2031 and accrue interest at the minimum federal rate per
annum 
published by the Internal Revenue Service.
The notes are forgivable in annual installments commencing 
one year
after the 
issuance date.
For the year ended December 31, 2025, $
0.1
million of the balance was forgiven, and the carrying amount of
the 
notes payable was $
0.7
million at December 31, 2025.
Junior Subordinated Deferrable Interest
Notes.
The Company has issued 
two
junior subordinated deferrable interest notes to 
wholly owned Delaware statutory trusts.
The first note for $
30.9
million was issued to CCBG Capital Trust I.
The second note 
for $
32.0
million was issued to CCBG Capital Trust II. The 
two
trusts are considered variable interest entities for which the 
Company is not the primary beneficiary.
Accordingly, the accounts of
the trusts are not included in the Companys consolidated 
financial statements. See Note 1 - Significant Accounting Policies for additional
information about the Companys consolidation 
policy.
Details of the Companys transaction with
the two trusts are provided below. 
In November 2004, CCBG Capital Trust I
issued $
30.0
million of trust preferred securities which represent interest in the assets 
of the trust.
The interest payments are due quarterly and adjust quarterly to a variable rate of 
3-month CME Term SOFR
plus a 
margin of 
1.90
%.
The trust preferred securities will mature on 
December 31, 2034
, and are redeemable upon approval of the 
Federal Reserve in whole or in part at the option of the Company at any
time after December 31, 2009 and in whole at any time 
upon occurrence of certain events affecting their tax or regulatory
capital treatment. Distributions on the trust preferred securities 
are payable quarterly on March 31, June 30, September 30, and December 31 of
each year.
CCBG Capital Trust I also issued 
$
0.9
million of common equity securities to CCBG.
The proceeds of the offering of trust preferred securities and
common equity 
securities were used to purchase a $
30.9
million junior subordinated deferrable interest note issued by the Company,
which has 
terms similar to the trust preferred securities.
On April 12, 2016, the Company retired $
10.0
million in face value of trust 
preferred securities that were auctioned as part of a liquidation of a pooled collateralized
debt obligation fund.
During the second 
quarter of 2025, the Company made a principal payment of $
5.1
million on this note.
The trust preferred securities were 
originally issued through CCBG Capital Trust I. 
In May 2005, CCBG Capital Trust II issued
$
31.0
million of trust preferred securities which represent interest in the assets of the 
trust.
The interest payments are due quarterly and adjusted quarterly to a variable rate
of 
3-month CME Term SOFR
plus a 
margin of 
1.80
%.
The trust preferred securities will mature on 
June 15, 2035
, and are redeemable upon approval of the Federal 
Reserve in whole or in part at the option of the Company and in whole at any time upon
occurrence of certain events affecting 
their tax or regulatory capital treatment.
Distributions on the trust preferred securities are payable quarterly on March 15,
June 
15, September 15, and December 15 of each year.
CCBG Capital Trust II also issued $
0.9
million of common equity securities to 
CCBG.
The proceeds of the offering of trust preferred securities and common
equity securities were used to purchase a $
32.0
million junior subordinated deferrable interest note issued by the Company,
which has terms substantially similar to the trust 
preferred securities.
During the second quarter of 2025, the Company made a principal payment
of $
5.1
million on this note.
The Company has the right to defer payments of interest on the two notes at any time
or from time to time for a period of up to 
twenty consecutive quarterly interest payment periods.
Under the terms of each note, in the event that under certain 
circumstances there is an event of default under the note or the Company has elected
to defer interest on the note, the Company 
may not, with certain exceptions, declare or pay any dividends or distributions
on its capital stock or purchase or acquire any of 
its capital stock.
At December 31, 2025, the Company has paid all interest payments
in full.
The Company has entered into agreements to guarantee the payments of distributions
on the trust preferred securities and 
payments of redemption of the trust preferred securities.
Under these agreements, the Company also agrees, on a subordinated 
basis, to pay expenses and liabilities of the two trusts other than those arising under the
trust preferred securities.
The obligations 
of the Company under the two junior subordinated notes, the trust agreements establishing
the two trusts, the guarantee and 
agreement as to expenses and liabilities, in aggregate, constitute a full and unconditional
guarantee by the Company of the two 
trusts obligations under the two trust preferred security issuances. 
Despite the fact that the accounts of CCBG Capital Trust
I and CCBG Capital Trust II are not included
in the Companys 
consolidated financial statements, the $
15.0
million and $
26.0
million, respectively, in
trust preferred securities issued by these 
subsidiary trusts are included in the Tier 1 Capital of
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. as allowed by Federal Reserve guidelines.
109 
Note 13
INCOME TAXES
The provision for income taxes reflected in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive
Income is comprised of the following 
components:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Current: 
Federal 
$ 
16,482
$ 
13,388
$ 
11,630
State 
2,089
1,568
1,893
18,571
14,956
13,523
Deferred: 
Federal 
1,077
(877)
(391)
State 
673
(116)
(351)
Change in Valuation
Allowance 
(161)
(39)
259
1,589
(1,032)
(483)
Total: 
Federal 
17,559
12,511
11,239
State 
2,762
1,452
1,542
Change in Valuation
Allowance 
(161)
(39)
259
Total 
$ 
20,160
$ 
13,924
$ 
13,040
Income taxes provided were different than the tax expense
computed by applying the statutory federal income tax rate of 
21
% to 
pre-tax income as a result of the following:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Tax Expense at Federal
Statutory Rate 
$ 
17,161
21.0
% 
$ 
13,769
21.0
% 
$ 
13,411
21.0
% 
State Taxes, Net of Federal
Benefit 
(1)
2,021
2.5
1,040
1.6
1,401
2.2
Federal Tax Credits: Renewable
Energy 
(2)
184
0.2
(2,093)
(3.2)
(1,938)
(3.0)
Nontaxable or Nondeductible Items: 
Tax Exempt Interest
Income, Net of Interest Expense 
Disallowance 
(120)
(0.1)
(161)
(0.3)
(259)
(0.4)
Tax-Exempt Cash Surrender
Value
Life Insurance 
Benefit 
(211)
(0.3)
(201)
(0.3)
(187)
(0.3)
Other 
1,309
1.6
1,025
1.6
484
0.7
Changes in Unrecognized Tax
Benefits 
36
0.1
66
0.1
77
0.1
Other Adjustments: 
Noncontrolling Interest 
-
-
340
0.5
293
0.5
Other Items, Net 
(220)
(0.3)
139
0.2
(242)
(0.4)
Actual Tax Expense 
$ 
20,160
24.7
% 
$ 
13,924
21.2
% 
$ 
13,040
20.4
% 
(1)
Comprised primarily of Florida State Taxes 
(2)
Tax credits from renewable
energy tax equity investments accounted for under the
deferral method, which results in tax benefits 
in earlier periods and tax expense in later periods as the investment yield is recognized.
Deferred income tax liabilities and assets result from differences between
assets and liabilities measured for financial reporting 
purposes and for income tax return purposes.
These assets and liabilities are measured using the enacted tax rates and laws that 
are currently in effect.
110 
The net deferred tax asset and the temporary differences comprising
that balance at December 31, 2025 and 2024 are as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Deferred Tax Assets Attributable
to: 
Allowance for Credit Losses 
$ 
7,550
$ 
7,168
State Net Operating Loss and Tax
Credit Carry-Forwards 
1,730
1,976
Other Real Estate Owned 
1,236
964
Accrued SERP Liability 
2,363
2,548
Lease Liability 
6,826
5,639
Net Unrealized Losses on Investment Securities 
3,217
6,779
Investment in Partnership 
796
4,404
Other 
6,451
2,808
Total Deferred
Tax Assets 
$ 
30,169
$ 
32,286
Deferred Tax Liabilities
Attributable to: 
Depreciation on Premises and Equipment 
$ 
3,982
$ 
3,538
Deferred Loan Fees and Costs 
5,070
3,543
Intangible Assets 
2,689
3,378
Accrued Pension/SERP 
3,206
3,302
Accrued Pension Liability 
1,754
1,217
Right of Use Asset 
6,662
5,510
Investments 
469
469
Other 
1,569
1,784
Total Deferred
Tax Liabilities 
25,401
22,741
Valuation
Allowance 
1,730
1,891
Net Deferred Tax Asset 
$ 
3,038
$ 
7,654
In the opinion of management, it is more likely than not that all of the deferred tax
assets, with the exception of certain state net 
operating loss carry-forwards and certain state tax credit carry-forwards expected
to expire prior to utilization, will be realized.
Accordingly, a valuation
allowance of $
1.7
million and $
1.9
million is recorded at December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, 
respectively.
At December 31, 2025, the Company had state loss and tax credit carry-forwards of
approximately $
1.7
million, 
which expire at various dates from 
202
6 through 
2037
. 
The following table presents a reconciliation of the beginning and ending amount
of unrecognized tax benefits:.
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Balance at January 1, 
$ 
316
$ 
233
$ 
136
Additions Based on Tax
Positions Related to Current Year 
47
83
97
Balance at December 31 
$ 
363
$ 
316
$ 
233
Of this total, $
0.3
million represents the amount of unrecognized tax benefits that, if recognized, would favorably
affect the 
effective tax rate in future periods. The Company does not
expect the total amount of unrecognized tax benefits to significantly 
increase or decrease in the next 12 months.
It is the Companys policy to recognize
interest and penalties accrued relative to unrecognized tax benefits in their respective 
federal or state income taxes accounts.
There were 
no
penalties and interest related to income taxes recorded in the Consolidated 
Statements of Income for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024,
and 2023.
There were 
no
amounts accrued in the 
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition for penalties and interest
as of December 31, 2025 and 2024. 
The Company files a consolidated U.S. federal income tax return and a
separate U.S. federal income tax return for CCHL. Each 
subsidiary files various returns in states where its banking offices are
located.
The Company is generally no longer subject to 
U.S. federal or state tax examinations for years before 2022.
111 
Note 14 
STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION
At December 31, 2025, the Company had three stock-based compensation
plans, consisting of the 2021 Associate Incentive Plan 
(AIP), the 2021 Associate Stock Purchase Plan (ASPP), and
the 2021 Director Stock Purchase Plan (DSPP).
These plans, 
which were approved by the shareowners in April 2021, replaced substantially
similar plans approved by the shareowners in 
2011.
Total compensation
expense associated with these plans for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and
2023 was $
3.2
million, $
2.7
million, and $
2.1
million, respectively.
AIP.
The AIP allows key associates and directors to earn various forms of equity-based
incentive compensation.
Under the AIP, 
there were 
700,000
shares reserved for issuance.
On an annual basis, the Company, pursuant
to the terms and conditions of the 
AIP,
will create an annual incentive plan (Plan), under which all participants are
eligible to earn performance shares.
Awards
to 
associates under the 2021 Plan were tied to internally established goals.
At base level targets, the grant-date fair value of the 
shares eligible to be awarded in 2025 was approximately $
1.3
million.
For 2025, a total of 
34,852
shares were eligible for 
issuance, but additional shares could be earned if performance exceeded
established goals.
A total of 
55,049
shares were earned 
for 2025 that were issued in January 2026.
For the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, Directors earned 
8,230
, 
10,870
and 
8,840
shares, respectively, under the
Plan. The Company recognized expense of $
2.5
million, $
1.8
million, and $
1.1
million for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively
,
related to the AIP.
Executive Long-Term
Incentive Plan (LTIP)
.
The Company has established a Performance Share Unit Plan under the 
provisions of the AIP that allows William G. Smith,
Jr., the Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of CCBG, Inc,
Thomas A. 
Barron, the President of CCBG, Inc., and Bethany Corum, the President
of CCB, to earn shares based on the compound annual 
growth rate in diluted earnings per share over a three-year period.
The Company recognized expense of $
0.5
million, $
0.7
million, and $
0.9
million for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
Shares issued under the plan were 
15,092
, 
17,334
, and 
4,909
for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
A total of 
13,436
shares were 
earned in 2025
that were issued in January 2026.
After deducting the shares earned, but not issued, in 2025 under the AIP and
LTIP, 
337,894
shares remain eligible for issuance 
under the 2021 AIP.
DSPP.
The Companys DSPP allows the directors
to purchase the Companys common
stock at a price equal to 
90
% of the 
closing price on the date of purchase.
Stock purchases under the DSPP are limited to the amount of the directors annual retainer 
and meeting fees.
Under the DSPP,
there were 
300,000
shares reserved for issuance.
The Company recognized $
0.1
million in 
expense under the DSPP for each of the years ended December 31, 2025,
2024
and 2023.
The Company issued shares under the 
DSPP totaling 
12,147
, 
14,969
and 
13,090
for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
At December 31, 
2025, there were 
225,455
shares eligible for issuance under the DSPP. 
ASPP.
Under the Companys ASPP,
substantially all associates may purchase the Companys
common stock through payroll 
deductions at a price equal to 
90
% of the lower of the fair market value at the beginning or end of each six-month offering 
period.
Stock purchases under the ASPP are limited to 
10
% of an associates eligible compensation,
up to a maximum of $
25,000
(fair market value on each enrollment date) in any plan year.
Under the ASPP,
there were 
400,000
shares of common stock 
reserved for issuance.
The Company recognized $
0.1
million, $
0.2
million and $
0.1
million in expense under the ASPP for each 
of the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
The Company issued shares under the ASPP totaling 
22,703
, 
37,019
and 
17,651
for the years ended December 31, 2025, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
At December 31, 2025, 
269,400
shares remained eligible for issuance under the ASPP.
Based on the Black-Scholes option pricing model, the weighted average
estimated fair value of each of the purchase rights 
granted under the ASPP was $
5.98
for 2025.
For 2024 and 2023, the weighted average fair value purchase right granted was 
$
4.74
and $
5.32
, respectively.
In calculating compensation, the fair value of each stock purchase right was estimated
on the date 
of grant using the following weighted average assumptions:
2025 
2024 
2023 
Dividend yield 
2.6
% 
3.0
% 
2.3
% 
Expected volatility 
19.0
% 
21.1
% 
22.5
% 
Risk-free interest rate 
3.9
% 
4.8
% 
5.1
% 
Expected life (in years) 
0.5
0.5
0.5
112 
Note 15 
EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
Pension Plan
The Company sponsors a noncontributory pension plan covering
a portion of its associates.
On December 30, 2019, the plan was 
amended to remove plan eligibility for new associates hired after December 31,
2019. There were no amendments to the Plan in 
2020 or 2021. The Plan was also amended in December 2022, effective
January 1, 2020, increasing the required minimum 
distribution age to 
72
, per the SECURE Act 1.0. During 2023 and effective January 1, 2023, the Plan
was amended increasing the 
required minimum distribution age to 
73
, per the SECURE Act 2.0. Benefits under this plan generally are based on the associates 
total years of service and average of the 
five
highest years of compensation during the 
ten years
immediately preceding their 
departure.
The Companys general funding policy
is to contribute amounts sufficient to meet minimum funding requirements as 
set by law and to ensure deductibility for federal income tax purposes.
The following table details on a consolidated basis the changes in benefit
obligation, changes in plan assets, the funded status of 
the plan, components of pension expense, amounts recognized in the
Companys Consolidated Statements of
Financial Condition, 
and major assumptions used to determine these amounts.
113 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Change in Projected Benefit Obligation: 
Benefit Obligation at Beginning of Year 
$ 
123,019
$ 
120,287
$ 
108,151
Service Cost 
3,441
3,715
3,488
Interest Cost 
6,706
6,097
5,831
Actuarial Loss (Gain) 
2,813
(1,974)
6,936
Benefits Paid 
(2,320)
(4,829)
(3,843)
Expenses Paid 
(368)
(277)
(276)
Settlements 
(12,600)
-
-
Projected Benefit Obligation at End of Year 
$ 
120,691
$ 
123,019
$ 
120,287
Change in Plan Assets: 
Fair Value
of Plan Assets at Beginning of Year 
$ 
140,477
$ 
125,295
$ 
104,276
Actual Return on Plan Assets 
16,956
20,288
19,138
Employer Contributions 
-
-
6,000
Benefits Paid 
(2,320)
(4,829)
(3,843)
Expenses Paid 
(368)
(277)
(276)
Settlements 
(12,600)
-
-
Fair Value
of Plan Assets at End of Year 
$ 
142,145
$ 
140,477
$ 
125,295
Funded Status of Plan and Prepaid Asset Recognized at End of Year: 
Other Assets 
$ 
21,454
$ 
17,458
$ 
5,008
Accumulated Benefit Obligation at End of Year 
$ 
103,427
$ 
105,201
$ 
102,642
Components of Net Periodic Benefit (Income) Costs: 
Service Cost 
$ 
3,441
$ 
3,715
$ 
3,488
Interest Cost 
6,706
6,097
5,831
Expected Return on Plan Assets 
(9,058)
(8,117)
(6,805)
Amortization of Prior Service Costs 
-
-
5
Net (Gain) Loss Amortization 
(1,654)
165
934
Net Gain Settlements 
(1,552)
-
-
Net Periodic Benefit (Income) Cost 
$ 
(2,117)
$ 
1,860
$ 
3,453
Weighted-Average
Assumptions Used to Determine Benefit Obligation: 
Discount Rate 
5.67%
5.82%
5.29%
Rate of Compensation Increase
(1)
4.67%
4.75%
5.10%
Measurement Date 
12/31/25
12/31/24
12/31/23
Weighted-Average
Assumptions Used to Determine Benefit Cost: 
Discount Rate 
5.82%
5.29%
5.63%
Expected Return on Plan Assets 
6.75%
6.75%
6.75%
Rate of Compensation Increase
(1)
4.67%
4.75%
5.10%
Amortization Amounts from Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income: 
Net Actuarial Gain
$ 
(5,085)
$ 
(14,145)
$ 
(5,397)
Prior Service Cost 
-
-
(5)
Net Gain (Loss) 
3,206
(165)
(934)
Deferred Tax Expense 
476
3,628
1,606
Other Comprehensive Income, net of tax 
$ 
(1,403)
$ 
(10,682)
$ 
(4,730)
Amounts Recognized in Accumulated Other Comprehensive (Income)
Loss: 
Net Actuarial (Gain) Loss 
$ 
(14,867)
$ 
(12,988)
$ 
1,322
Deferred Tax Expense
(Benefit) 
3,769
3,293
(335)
Accumulated Other Comprehensive (Income) Loss, net of tax 
$ 
(11,098)
$ 
(9,695)
$ 
987
(1)
The Company utilized an age-graded approach that varies the rate based
on the age of the participants.
114 
During 2025, lump sum payments made under the Companys
defined benefit pension plan triggered settlement accounting, 
which resulted in a $
1.6
million settlement gain in accordance with applicable accounting guidance
for defined benefit plans.
The 
Company recorded 
no
settlement gains or losses during 2024 and 2023. 
The service cost component of net periodic benefit cost is reflected in compensation
expense in the accompanying Consolidated 
Statements of Income.
The other components of net periodic cost are included in other within the noninterest
expense category 
in the Consolidated Statements of Income.
See Note 1 Significant Accounting Policies for additional information. 
The Company expects to recognize $
1.9
million of the net actuarial gain reflected in accumulated other comprehensive
income at 
December 31, 2025 as a component of net periodic benefit cost during 202
6. 
Plan Assets. 
The Companys pension
plan asset allocation at December 31, 2025 and 2024, and the target
asset allocation at 
December 31, 2025 are as follows:
Target 
Percentage of Plan 
Allocation 
Assets at December 31
(1)
2026 
2025 
2024 
Equity Securities 
50
% 
55
% 
73
% 
Debt Securities 
50
% 
42
% 
20
% 
Cash and Cash Equivalents
(2)
-
% 
3
% 
7
% 
Total 
100
% 
100
% 
100
%
(1) 
Represents asset allocation at December 31 which
may differ from the average target
allocation for the year due to the year-
end cash contribution to the plan. 
(2) 
Cash levels will be maintained in the Plan sufficient to fund expected distributions.
The Companys pension plan assets are overseen
by the CCBG Retirement Committee.
Capital City Trust Company acts as the 
investment manager for the plan.
The investment strategy is to maximize return on investments while minimizing risk.
The 
Company believes the best way to accomplish this goal is to take a conservative
approach to its investment strategy by investing 
in mutual funds that include various high-grade equity securities and investment
-grade debt issuances with varying investment 
strategies.
The target asset allocation will periodically be adjusted based
on market conditions.
For the majority of 2025, the 
target asset allocation was within the following investment
allocation ranges: equity securities ranging from 
55
% and 
75
%, debt 
securities ranging from 
17
% and 
37
%, and cash and cash equivalents ranging from 
0
% and 
10
%.
In December 2025, the target 
asset allocation was changed to the following: 
50
% equity securities and 
50
% fixed income.
Cash levels will be maintained in the 
Plan sufficient to fund expected distributions.
The overall expected long-term rate of return on assets is a weighted-average 
expectation for the return on plan assets.
The Company considers historical performance data and economic/financial
data to 
arrive at expected long-term rates of return for each asset category.
The major categories of assets in the Companys
pension plan at December 31 are presented in the following table.
Assets are 
segregated by the level of the valuation inputs within the fair value hierarchy
established by ASC Topic 820
utilized to measure 
fair value (see Note 22 Fair Value
Measurements).
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
Level 1: 
U.S. Treasury Securities 
$ 
10,352
$ 
17,039
Mutual Funds 
121,288
111,426
Cash and Cash Equivalents 
4,417
9,010
Level 2: 
Corporate Notes/Bonds 
6,088
3,002
Total Fair Value
of Plan Assets 
$ 
142,145
$ 
140,477
115 
Expected Benefit Payments.
At December 31, expected benefit payments related to the defined benefit pension
plan were as 
follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2026 
$ 
11,363
2027 
10,680
2028 
9,693
2029 
9,474
2030 
9,225
2031 through 2035 
47,772
Total 
$ 
98,207
Contributions.
The following table details the amounts contributed to the pension plan in 2025
and 2024, and the expected 
amount to be contributed in 2026.
Expected 
Contribution 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2024 
2025 
2026
(1)
Actual Contributions 
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
5,000
(1)
For 2026, the Company will have the option to make a cash contribution
to the plan or utilize pre-funding balances.
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
The Company has a Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (SERP) and
a Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan II 
(SERP II) covering selected executive officers.
Benefits under this plan generally are based on the same service and 
compensation as used for the pension plan, except the benefits are calculated without
regard to the limits set by the Internal 
Revenue Code on compensation and benefits.
The net benefit payable from the SERP is the difference between
this gross benefit 
and the benefit payable by the pension plan.
The SERP II was adopted by the Companys Board
on May 21, 2020 and covers 
certain executive officers that were not covered by
the SERP. 
116 
The following table details on a consolidated basis the changes in benefit
obligation, the funded status of the plan, components of 
pension expense, amounts recognized in the Companys
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, and major assumptions 
used to determine these amounts.
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Change in Projected Benefit Obligation: 
Benefit Obligation at Beginning of Year 
$ 
10,132
$ 
9,204
$ 
10,948
Service Cost 
46
37
18
Interest Cost 
525
454
501
Actuarial Loss 
2,240
198
201
Plan Amendments 
-
239
-
Net Settlements 
-
-
(2,464)
Projected Benefit Obligation at End of Year 
$ 
12,943
$ 
10,132
$ 
9,204
Funded Status of Plan and Accrued Liability Recognized at End of Year: 
Other Liabilities 
$ 
12,943
$ 
10,132
$ 
9,204
Accumulated Benefit Obligation at End of Year 
$ 
11,935
$ 
9,580
$ 
8,943
Components of Net Periodic Benefit Costs: 
Service Cost 
$ 
46
$ 
37
$ 
18
Interest Cost 
525
454
501
Amortization of Prior Service Cost 
102
-
151
Net Gain Amortization 
(117)
(281)
(531)
Net Gain Settlements 
-
-
(291)
Net Periodic Benefit Cost 
$ 
556
$ 
210
$ 
(152)
Weighted-Average
Assumptions Used to Determine Benefit Obligation: 
Discount Rate 
5.24%
5.57%
5.11%
Rate of Compensation Increase
(1)
4.67%
4.75%
5.10%
Measurement Date 
12/31/25
12/31/24
12/31/23
Weighted-Average
Assumptions Used to Determine Benefit Cost: 
Discount Rate 
5.57%
5.11%
5.45%
Rate of Compensation Increase
(1)
4.67%
4.75%
5.10%
Amortization Amounts from Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss: 
Net Actuarial Loss 
$ 
2,240
$ 
198
$ 
201
Prior Service (Cost) Benefit
(102)
239
(151)
Net Gain 
117
281
531
Settlement Gain
-
-
291
Deferred Tax Benefit 
(571)
(183)
(222)
Other Comprehensive Loss, net of tax 
$ 
1,684
$ 
535
$ 
650
Amounts Recognized in Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss (Income): 
Net Actuarial Loss (Gain)
$ 
2,083
$ 
(275)
$ 
(753)
Prior Service Cost 
137
239
-
Deferred Tax (Benefit)
Expense
(563)
9
191
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss (Income), net of tax 
$ 
1,657
$ 
(27)
$ 
(562)
(1)
The Company utilized an age-graded approach that varies the rate based
on the age of the participants.
The Company expects to recognize approximately $
1.1
million of the net actuarial loss reflected in accumulated other 
comprehensive loss at December 31, 2025 as a component of net periodic
benefit cost during 2026.
In June 2023, lump sum retirement distributions to two plan participants
required the application of settlement accounting.
The 
amount of the settlement gain was $
0.3
million.
117 
Expected Benefit Payments
. As of December 31, expected benefit payments related to the SERP were as follows:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2026 
$ 
11,208
2027 
275
2028 
290
2029 
266
2030 
360
2031 through 2035 
1,826
Total 
$ 
14,225
401(k) Plan
The Company has a 401(k) Plan which enables CCB and CCBG associates to defer
a portion of their salary on a pre-tax 
basis.
The plan covers substantially all associates of the Company who meet
minimum age requirements.
The plan is designed to 
enable participants to contribute any amount, up to the maximum annual limit allowed
by the IRS, of their compensation withheld 
in any plan year placed in the 401(k) Plan trust account.
Matching contributions of 
50
% from the Company are made on 
participants contributions
for up to 
6
% of eligible compensation for eligible associates.
Further, in addition to the 
50
% match, all 
associates hired after December 31, 2019, will receive 
3
% of their eligible compensation as a nonelective contribution on each 
payroll period.
For 2025, the Company made total 401(k) contributions of $
2.6
million.
For 2024 and 2023, the Company made 
total 401(k) contributions of $
1.9
million and $
1.7
million, respectively.
The participant may choose to invest their contributions 
into thirty-two investment options available to 401(k) participants, including
the Companys common stock.
A total of 
50,000
shares of CCBG common stock have been reserved for issuance.
Shares issued to participants have historically been purchased in 
the open market.
Effective January 1, 2025, the Company amended
its 401(k) Plan to merge and include associates of the CCHL 401(k) Plan,
at 
which time the CCHL 401(k) Plan was terminated.
The CCHL 401(k) Plan was previously available to all associates employed 
by CCHL.
Prior to the termination, the plan allowed participants to contribute any amount, up
to the maximum annual limit 
allowed by the IRS, of their compensation withheld in any plan year placed
in the 401(k) Plan trust account.
A discretionary 
matching contribution was determined annually by CCHL.
For 2024
and 2023, matching contributions were made by CCHL up 
to 
3
% of eligible participants compensation
totaling $
0.4
million for each respective year.
Other Plans
The Company has an Amended and Restated Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the
DRIP). The DRIP is an Open Market Only 
plan, which means that shares that participants receive under the DRIP will only
be purchased by the plan agent in the open 
market. The Company did 
no
t issue any new shares under the DRIP in 2025, 2024 and 2023.
Note 16 
EARNINGS PER SHARE
The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings
per share:
(Dollars and Per Share Data in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Numerator: 
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
Denominator: 
Denominator for Basic Earnings Per Share Weighted
-Average Shares 
17,055
16,943
16,987
Effects of Dilutive Securities Stock Compensation
Plans 
47
26
36
Denominator for Diluted Earnings Per Share Adjusted Weighted
-Average
Shares and Assumed Conversions 
17,102
16,969
17,023
Basic Earnings Per Share 
$ 
3.61
$ 
3.12
$ 
3.08
Diluted Earnings Per Share 
$ 
3.60
$ 
3.12
$ 
3.07
118 
Note 17 
REGULATORY
MATTERS
Regulatory Capital Requirements
.
The Company (on a consolidated basis) and the Bank are subject to various regulatory
capital 
requirements administered by the federal banking agencies.
Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can initiate certain 
mandatory and possible additional discretionary actions by regulators that,
if undertaken, could have a direct material effect on 
the Company and Banks financial statements.
Under
capital
adequacy guidelines
and the
regulatory framework
for
prompt 
corrective action
, 
the Company and the Bank must meet specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative
measures of their 
assets, liabilities and certain off-balance sheet items as calculated under
regulatory accounting practices.
The capital amounts and 
classification are also subject to qualitative judgments by the regulators about
components, risk weightings, and other factors.
Prompt corrective action provisions are not applicable to bank holding
companies.
A detailed description of these regulatory 
capital requirements is provided in the section captioned Regulatory
Considerations Capital Regulations section on page 14. 
Management believes, at December 31, 2025 and 2024, that
the Company and the Bank meet all capital adequacy requirements to 
which they are subject.
At December 31, 2025, the most recent notification from the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation 
categorized the Bank as well capitalized under the regulatory framework for prompt
corrective action.
To be categorized as well 
capitalized, an institution must maintain minimum common equity
Tier 1, total risk-based, Tier
1 risk based and Tier 1 leverage 
ratios as set forth in the following tables.
There are no conditions or events since the notification that management believes have 
changed the Banks category.
The Company and Banks actual capital
amounts and ratios at December 31, 2025 and 2024 are 
presented in the following table.
119 
To Be Well
- 
Capitalized Under 
Required 
Prompt 
For Capital 
Corrective 
Actual 
Adequacy Purposes 
Action Provisions 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Amount 
Ratio 
Amount 
Ratio 
Amount 
Ratio 
2025 
Common Equity Tier 1: 
CCBG 
$
464,340
18.56%
$ 
112,675
4.50%
* 
* 
CCB 
431,958
17.27%
112,634
4.50%
$ 
162,694
6.50%
Tier 1 Capital: 
CCBG 
505,340
20.20%
150,233
6.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
431,958
17.27%
150,179
6.00%
200,238
8.00%
Total Capital: 
CCBG 
536,638
21.45%
200,311
8.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
463,246
18.52%
200,238
8.00%
250,298
10.00%
Tier 1 Leverage: 
CCBG 
505,340
11.77%
171,789
4.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
431,958
10.06%
171,733
4.00%
214,667
5.00%
2024 
Common Equity Tier 1: 
CCBG 
$
412,445
15.54%
$ 
119,437
4.50%
* 
* 
CCB 
405,313
15.24%
119,708
4.50%
$ 
172,912
6.50%
Tier 1 Capital: 
CCBG 
463,445
17.46%
159,249
6.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
405,313
15.24%
159,611
6.00%
212,814
8.00%
Total Capital: 
CCBG 
494,851
18.64%
212,332
8.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
436,719
16.42%
212,814
8.00%
266,018
10.00%
Tier 1 Leverage: 
CCBG 
463,445
11.05%
167,764
4.00%
* 
* 
CCB 
405,313
9.67%
167,627
4.00%
209,533
5.00%
*
Not applicable to bank holding companies.
Dividend Restrictions
.
In the ordinary course of business, the Company is dependent upon dividends
from its banking subsidiary 
to provide funds for the payment of dividends to shareowners and to provide
for other cash requirements.
Banking regulations 
may limit the amount of dividends that may be paid.
Approval by regulatory authorities is required if the effect of dividends 
declared would cause the regulatory capital of the Companys
banking subsidiary to fall below specified minimum levels.
Approval is also required if dividends declared exceed the net profits of
the banking subsidiary for that year combined with the 
retained net profits for the preceding two years.
In 2026, the bank subsidiary may declare dividends without regulatory approval 
of $
49.2
million plus an additional amount equal to net profits of the Companys
subsidiary bank for 2026 up to the date of any 
such dividend declaration.
120 
Note 18 
ACCUMULATED OTHER
COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
FASB Topic
ASC 220, Comprehensive Income requires that certain transactions
and other economic events that bypass the 
Consolidated Statements of Income be displayed as other comprehensive
income.
Total comprehensive income
is reported in 
the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (net of
tax) and Changes in Shareowners Equity (net of tax).
The following table shows the amounts allocated to accumulated other
comprehensive loss.
Accumulated 
Securities 
Other 
Available 
Interest Rate 
Retirement 
Comprehensive 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
for Sale 
Swap 
Plans 
Loss 
Balance as of January 1, 2025 
$ 
(20,179)
$ 
3,971
$ 
9,722
$ 
(6,486)
Other comprehensive income (loss) during the period 
10,649
(1,295)
(281)
9,073
Balance as of December 31, 2025 
$ 
(9,530)
$ 
2,676
$ 
9,441
$ 
2,587
Balance as of January 1, 2024 
$ 
(25,691)
$ 
3,970
$ 
(425)
$ 
(22,146)
Other comprehensive income during the period 
5,512
1
10,147
15,660
Balance as of December 31, 2024 
$ 
(20,179)
$ 
3,971
$ 
9,722
$ 
(6,486)
Balance as of January 1, 2023 
$ 
(37,349)
$ 
4,625
$ 
(4,505)
$ 
(37,229)
Other comprehensive income (loss) during the period 
11,658
(655)
4,080
15,083
Balance as of December 31, 2023 
$ 
(25,691)
$ 
3,970
$ 
(425)
$ 
(22,146)
Note 19 
RELATED PARTY
TRANSACTIONS
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, certain officers and directors were indebted
to the Bank in the aggregate amount of $
5.3
million 
and $
4.8
million, respectively.
During 2025 and 2024, $
1.7
million and $
0.7
million in new loans were made, respectively,
and 
repayments totaled $
1.2
million and $
2.2
million, respectively.
These loans were all current at December 31, 2025 and 2024. 
Deposits from certain directors, executive officers, and
their related interests totaled $
40.9
million and $
42.7
million at December 
31, 2025 and 2024, respectively. 
The Company leases land from a partnership (Smith Interests General
Partnership L.L.P.)
in which William G. Smith, Jr.
has an 
interest.
The Company made lease payments totaling $
0.1
million in 2025, $
0.1
million in 2024, and $
0.2
million in 2023.
In 
December 2023 the lease payments adjusted to $
0.1
million annually due to a reduction in the size of the parcel leased by the 
Company.
The payments under the lease agreement provide for annual lease payments of approximately
$
0.1
million annually 
through December 2033, and thereafter,
increase by 
5
% every 
10
years until 2053 at which time the rent amount will adjust based 
on reappraisal of the parcel rental value.
The Company then has 
four
successive options to extend the lease for 
five years
each 
with rental increases of 
5
% at each extension. Further, in accordance with
this lease agreement, the Company made payments of 
$
0.5
million in May 2024 and $
0.2
million in July 2025 to the lessor as reimbursement for a portion of the costs related to the 
development of subject property to support the construction of a new banking
office by the Company.
William G. Smith, III, the son of our Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer, William
G. Smith, Jr., is employed as
Chief Lending 
Officer at Capital City Bank.
In 2025, William G. Smith, IIIs
total compensation (consisting of annual base salary,
annual 
bonus, and stock-based compensation) was determined in accordance
with the Companys standard employment
and 
compensation practices applicable to associates with similar responsibilities
and positions.
121 
Note 20 
OTHER NONINTEREST EXPENSE 
Components of other noninterest expense in excess of 
1
% of the sum of total interest income and noninterest income, which are 
not disclosed separately elsewhere, are presented below for each of
the respective years.
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Legal Fees 
$ 
1,867
$ 
1,724
$ 
1,721
Professional Fees 
5,816
6,311
6,245
Telephone 
3,030
2,857
2,729
Advertising 
3,190
3,111
3,349
Processing Services 
9,580
8,411
6,984
Insurance Other 
2,990
3,137
3,120
Pension Other 
(3,489)
(1,675)
76
Pension Settlement 
(1,552)
-
(291)
Other 
10,459
12,736
11,643
Total 
$ 
31,891
36,612
35,576
Note 21 
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
Lending Commitments
.
The Company is a party to financial instruments with off-balance
sheet risks in the normal course of 
business to meet the financing needs of its clients.
These financial instruments consist of commitments to extend credit and 
standby letters of credit.
The Companys maximum exposure
to credit loss under standby letters of credit and commitments to extend credit is 
represented by the contractual amount of those instruments.
The Company uses the same credit policies in establishing 
commitments and issuing letters of credit as it does for on-balance sheet instruments.
At December 31, the amounts associated 
with the Companys off-balance
sheet obligations were as follows:
2025 
2024 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Fixed 
Variable 
Total 
Fixed 
Variable 
Total 
Commitments to Extend Credit
(1)
$ 
188,834
$ 
456,328
$ 
645,162
$ 
184,223
$ 
479,191
$ 
663,414
Standby Letters of Credit 
7,828
-
7,828
7,287
-
7,287
Total 
$ 
196,662
$ 
456,328
$ 
652,990
$ 
191,510
$ 
479,191
$ 
670,701
(1)
- Commitments include unfunded loans, revolving lines of credit, and off-balance sheet residential loan commitments.
Commitments to extend credit are agreements to lend to a client so long as there is no violation of
any condition established in 
the contract. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other
termination clauses and may require payment of a fee. 
Since many of the commitments are expected to expire without being drawn
upon, the total commitment amounts do not 
necessarily represent future cash requirements. 
Standby letters of credit are conditional commitments issued by the
Company to guarantee the performance of a client to a third 
party.
The credit risk involved in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that involved
in extending loan facilities. In 
general, management does not anticipate any material losses as a result of
participating in these types of transactions.
However, 
any potential losses arising from such transactions are reserved for in the same manner
as management reserves for their other 
credit facilities. 
For both on- and off-balance sheet financial instruments, the Company
requires collateral to support such instruments when it is 
deemed necessary.
The Company evaluates each clients
creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis.
The amount of collateral 
obtained upon extension of credit is based on managements
credit evaluation of the counterparty.
Collateral held varies but 
may include deposits held in financial institutions; U.S. Treasury
securities; other marketable securities; real estate; accounts 
receivable; property,
plant and equipment; and inventory. 
The allowance for credit losses for off-balance sheet credit commitments
that are not unconditionally cancellable by the Bank is 
adjusted as a provision for credit loss expense and is recorded in other liabilities.
The following table shows the activity in the 
allowance.
122 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
Beginning Balance 
$ 
2,155
$ 
3,191
$ 
2,989
Provision for Credit Losses 
(48)
(1,036)
202
Ending Balance 
$ 
2,107
$ 
2,155
$ 
3,191
Other Commitments
.
In the normal course of business, the Company enters into lease commitments
which are classified as 
operating leases.
See Note 7 Leases for additional information on the maturity of the Companys
operating lease commitments.
The Company has an outstanding commitment of up to $
1.0
million in a bank tech venture capital fund focused on finding and 
funding technology solutions for community banks. At December 31,
2025, the amount remaining to be funded for the bank tech 
venture capital commitment was $
0.3
million. 
Contingencies
.
The Company is a party to lawsuits and claims arising out of the normal course of business.
In managements 
opinion, there are 
no
known pending claims or litigation, the outcome of which would, individually
or in the aggregate, have a 
material effect on the consolidated results of operations,
financial position, or cash flows of the Company. 
Indemnification Obligation
.
The Company is a member of the Visa U.S.A. network.
Visa U.S.A believes that its member
banks 
are required to indemnify it for potential future settlement of certain litigation
(the Covered Litigation) that relates to several 
antitrust lawsuits challenging the practices of Visa
and MasterCard International.
In 2008, the Company, as a member
of the Visa 
U.S.A. network, obtained Class B shares of Visa,
Inc. upon its initial public offering.
Since its initial public offering, Visa,
Inc. 
has funded a litigation reserve for the Covered Litigation resulting in a reduction in the
Class B shares held by the Company.
During the first quarter of 2011, the Company
sold its remaining Class B shares.
Associated with this sale, the Company entered 
into a swap contract with the purchaser of the shares that requires a payment to the counterparty
in the event that Visa, Inc. makes 
subsequent revisions to the conversion ratio for its Class B shares.
Fixed charges included in the swap liability are payable 
quarterly until the litigation reserve is fully liquidated and at which time the
aforementioned swap contract will be terminated.
Conversion ratio payments and ongoing fixed quarterly charges
are reflected in earnings in the period incurred.
Quarterly fixed 
payments totaled $
0.6
million for 2025, $
0.7
million for 2024, and $
0.8
million for 2023.
Conversion ratio payments totaled $
0.3
million in 2025 due to a revision to the share conversion rate related to
additional funding by VISA of the merchant litigation 
reserve.
There was a $
0.2
million counterparty payment accrued and payable at December 31, 2025 due to a revision to the share 
conversion rate related to additional funding by VISA of the merchant
litigation reserve.
At December 31, 2024, there was 
no
amounts payable.
Note 22 
FAIR VALUE
MEASUREMENTS
The fair value of an asset or liability is the exchange price that would be received
were the Bank to sell that asset or paid to 
transfer that liability (exit price) in an orderly transaction occurring in the principal
market (or most advantageous market in the 
absence of a principal market) for such asset or liability.
In estimating fair value, the Company utilizes valuation techniques that 
are consistent with the market approach, the income approach and/or
the cost approach.
Such valuation techniques are 
consistently applied.
Inputs to valuation techniques include the assumptions that market participants would
use in pricing an asset 
or liability.
ASC Topic 820 establishes a fair value
hierarchy for valuation inputs that gives the highest priority to quoted prices 
in active markets for identical assets or liabilities and the lowest priority to unobservable
inputs.
The fair value hierarchy is as 
follows: 
Level 1 Inputs - 
Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the reporting
entity has 
the ability to access at the measurement date
.
Level 2 Inputs - 
Inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability,
either 
directly or indirectly.
These might include quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets, quoted prices 
for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active,
inputs other than quoted prices that are 
observable for the asset or liability (such as interest rates, volatilities, prepayment
speeds, credit risks, etc.) or inputs that 
are derived principally from, or corroborated, by market data by correlation
or other means
.
Level 3 Inputs - 
Unobservable inputs for determining the fair values of assets or liabilities that reflect an
entitys own 
assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would
use in pricing the assets or liabilities. 
123 
Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value
on a Recurring Basis
Securities Available for Sale.
U.S. Treasury securities are reported at fair value
utilizing Level 1 inputs.
Other securities 
classified as AFS are reported at fair value utilizing Level 2 inputs.
For these securities, the Company obtains fair value 
measurements from an independent pricing service.
The fair value measurements consider observable data that may include 
dealer quotes, market spreads, cash flows, the U.S. Treasury
yield curve, live trading levels, trade execution data, credit 
information and the bonds
terms and conditions, among other things. 
In general, the Company does not purchase securities that have a complicated structure.
The Companys entire portfolio consists 
of traditional investments, nearly all of which are U.S. Treasury
obligations, federal agency bullet or mortgage pass-through 
securities, or general obligation or revenue based municipal bonds.
Pricing for such instruments is easily obtained.
At least 
annually, the Company
will validate prices supplied by the independent pricing service by comparing them
to prices obtained 
from an independent third-party source. 
Equity Securities. 
Investments securities classified as equity securities are carried at cost and the share of
earnings or losses is 
reported through net income as an adjustment to the investment balance.
These securities are not readily marketable and therefore 
are classified as a Level 3 input within the fair value hierarchy. 
Loans Held for Sale
. The fair value of residential mortgage loans held for sale based on Level 2 inputs is determined,
when 
possible, using either quoted secondary-market prices or investor commitments.
If no such quoted price exists, the fair value is 
determined using quoted prices for a similar asset or assets, adjusted for
the specific attributes of that loan, which would be used 
by other market participants. The Company has elected the fair value option
accounting for its held for sale loans.
Mortgage Banking Derivative Instruments. 
The fair values of IRLCs are derived by valuation models incorporating
market 
pricing for instruments with similar characteristics, commonly referred
to as best execution pricing, or investor commitment 
prices for best effort IRLCs which have unobservable inputs, such as an
estimate of the fair value of the servicing rights expected 
to be recorded upon sale of the loans, net estimated costs to originate the loans, and the pull-through
rate, and are therefore 
classified as Level 3 within the fair value hierarchy.
The fair value of forward sale commitments is based on observable market 
pricing for similar instruments and are therefore classified as Level 2 within
the fair value hierarchy. 
Interest Rate Swap. 
The Companys derivative positions are
classified as Level 2 within the fair value hierarchy and are valued 
using models generally accepted in the financial services industry and
that use actively quoted or observable market input values 
from external market data providers. The fair value derivatives are determined
using discounted cash flow models. 
Fair Value
Swap
.
The Company entered into a stand-alone derivative contract with the purchaser of
its Visa Class B shares.
The 
valuation represents the amount due and payable to the counterparty based upon
the revised share conversion rate, if any,
during 
the period.
There was $
0.2
million counterparty payment accrued and payable at December 31, 2025 and 
no
amounts payable at 
December 31, 2024.
124 
A summary of fair values for assets and liabilities at December 31 consisted
of the following:
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Level 1 
Level 2 
Level 3 
Total
Fair 
Inputs 
Inputs 
Inputs 
Value 
2025 
ASSETS: 
Securities Available for
Sale: 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
333,264
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
333,264
U.S. Government Agency 
-
172,114
-
172,114
States and Political Subdivisions 
-
34,911
-
34,911
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
-
52,004
-
52,004
Corporate Debt Securities 
-
43,532
-
43,532
Equity Securities 
-
-
2,069
2,069
Loans Held for Sale 
-
21,695
-
21,695
Residential Mortgage Loan Commitments ("IRLC") 
-
-
464
464
LIABILITIES: 
Forward Sales Contracts 
-
84
-
84
2024 
ASSETS: 
Securities Available for
Sale: 
U.S. Government Treasury 
$ 
105,801
$ 
-
$ 
-
$ 
105,801
U.S. Government Agency 
-
143,127
-
143,127
State and Political Subdivisions 
-
39,382
-
39,382
Mortgage-Backed Securities 
-
55,477
-
55,477
Corporate Debt Securities 
-
51,462
-
51,462
Equity Securities 
-
-
2,399
2,399
Loans Held for Sale 
-
28,672
-
28,672
Interest Rate Swap Derivative 
-
5,319
-
5,319
Forward Sales Contracts
-
96
-
96
Residential Mortgage Loan Commitments ("IRLC") 
-
-
248
248
Mortgage Banking Activities.
The Company had Level 3 issuances and transfers related to mortgage banking
activities of $
7.7
million and $
16.9
million, respectively,
for the year ended December 31, 2025.
The Company had Level 3 issuances and 
transfers related to mortgage banking activities of $
7.1
million and $
14.1
million, respectively, for the year
ended December 31, 
2024.
Issuances are valued based on the change in fair value of the underlying mortgage
loan from inception of the IRLC to the 
statement of financial condition date, adjusted for pull-through rates and
costs to originate.
IRLCs transferred out of Level 3 
represent IRLCs that were funded and moved to mortgage loans held for sale, at fair
value.
Assets Measured at Fair Value
on a Non-Recurring Basis
Certain assets are measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis (i.e., the
assets are not measured at fair value on an ongoing 
basis but are subject to fair value adjustments in certain circumstances).
An example would be assets exhibiting evidence of 
impairment.
The following is a description of valuation methodologies used for assets measured on a non-recurring
basis.
Collateral Dependent Loans
.
Impairment for collateral dependent loans is measured using the fair
value of the collateral less 
selling costs.
The fair value of collateral is determined by an independent valuation
or professional appraisal in conformance with 
banking regulations.
Collateral values are estimated using Level 3 inputs due to the volatility in the real
estate market, and the 
judgment and estimation involved in the real estate appraisal process.
Collateral dependent loans are reviewed and evaluated on 
at least a quarterly basis for additional impairment and adjusted accordingly.
Valuation
techniques are consistent with those 
techniques applied in prior periods.
Collateral dependent loans had a carrying value of $
6.4
million with a valuation allowance of 
$
0.1
million at December 31, 2025.
Collateral dependent loans had a carrying value of $
3.6
million with a valuation allowance of 
$
0.1
million at December 31, 2024. 
125 
Other Real Estate Owned
.
During 2025 and 2024, certain foreclosed assets, upon initial recognition, were measured
and reported 
at fair value through a charge-off to the allowance
for credit losses based on the fair value of the foreclosed asset less estimated 
cost to sell.
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, these assets were recorded at fair value, which
is determined by an independent 
valuation or professional appraisal in conformance with banking regulations.
On an ongoing basis, we obtain updated appraisals 
on foreclosed assets and record valuation adjustments as necessary.
The fair value of foreclosed assets is estimated using Level 3 
inputs due to the judgment and estimation involved in the real estate valuation process.
Mortgage Servicing Rights
. Residential mortgage loan servicing rights are evaluated for impairment
at each reporting period 
based upon the fair value of the rights as compared to the carrying amount.
Fair value is determined by a third-party valuation 
model using estimated prepayment speeds of the underlying mortgage loans
serviced and stratifications based on the risk 
characteristics of the underlying loans (predominantly loan type and note
interest rate).
The fair value is estimated using Level 3 
inputs, including a discount rate, weighted average prepayment speed,
and the cost of loan servicing.
Further detail on the key 
inputs utilized are provided in Note 4 Mortgage Banking Activities.
At December 31, 2025 and 2024, there was 
no
valuation 
allowance for mortgage servicing rights. 
Other Fair Value
Disclosures 
The Company is required to disclose the estimated fair value of financial instruments,
both assets and liabilities, for which it is 
practical to estimate fair value and the following is a description of valuation
methodologies used for those assets and liabilities. 
Cash and Short-Term
Investments.
The carrying amount of cash and short-term investments is used to approximate
fair value, 
given the short time frame to maturity and as such assets do not present unanticipated
credit concerns. 
Securities Held to Maturity
.
Securities held to maturity are valued in accordance with the methodology previously
noted in the 
caption Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value
on a Recurring Basis Securities Available
for Sale. 
Other Equity Securities. 
Other equity securities are accounted for under the equity method (Topic
323) and recorded at cost. 
These securities are not readily marketable securities and are reflected in
Other Assets on the Statement of Financial Condition. 
Loans.
The loan portfolio is segregated into categories, and the fair value of each loan category
is calculated using present value 
techniques based upon projected cash flows and estimated discount
rates.
Pursuant to the adoption of ASU 2016-01, 
Recognition 
and Measurement of Financial Assets and Financial
Liabilities
, the values reported reflect the incorporation of a liquidity 
discount to meet the objective of exit price valuation.
Deposits.
The fair value of Noninterest Bearing Deposits, NOW Accounts, Money Market
Accounts and Savings Accounts are 
the amounts payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of fixed
maturity certificates of deposit is estimated using 
present value techniques and rates currently offered for deposits of similar remaining
maturities. 
Subordinated Notes Payable. 
The fair value of each note is calculated using present value techniques,
based upon projected cash 
flows and estimated discount rates as well as rates being offered
for similar obligations. 
Short-Term
and Long-Term
Borrowings.
The fair value of each note is calculated using present value techniques,
based upon 
projected cash flows and estimated discount rates as well as rates being offered
for similar debt. 
126 
A summary of estimated fair values of significant financial instruments at December
31 consisted of the following:
2025 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Carrying 
Level 1 
Level 2 
Level 3 
Value 
Inputs 
Inputs 
Inputs 
ASSETS: 
Cash 
$ 
62,189
$ 
62,189
$ 
-
$ 
-
Fed Funds Sold and Interest Bearing Deposits 
467,782
467,782
-
-
Investment Securities, Held to Maturity 
377,446
129,268
240,052
-
Other Equity Securities
(1)
2,848
-
2,848
-
Mortgage Servicing Rights 
924
-
-
1,359
Loans, Net of Allowance for Credit Losses 
2,515,117
-
-
2,416,937
LIABILITIES: 
Deposits 
$ 
3,662,312
$ 
-
$ 
3,662,466
$ 
-
Short-Term
Borrowings 
50,092
-
50,092
-
Subordinated Notes Payable 
42,582
-
40,116
-
Long-Term Borrowings 
680
-
680
-
2024 
(Dollars in Thousands) 
Carrying 
Level 1 
Level 2 
Level 3 
Value 
Inputs 
Inputs 
Inputs 
ASSETS: 
Cash 
$ 
70,543
$ 
70,543
$ 
-
$ 
-
Short-Term Investments 
321,311
321,311
-
-
Investment Securities, Held to Maturity 
567,155
361,529
182,931
-
Other Equity Securities
(1)
2,848
-
2,848
-
Mortgage Servicing Rights 
933
-
-
1,616
Loans, Net of Allowance for Credit Losses 
2,622,299
-
-
2,457,883
LIABILITIES: 
Deposits 
$ 
3,671,977
$ 
-
$ 
3,046,926
$ 
-
Short-Term
Borrowings 
28,304
-
28,304
-
Subordinated Notes Payable 
52,887
-
42,530
-
Long-Term Borrowings 
794
-
794
-
(1) 
Accounted for under the equity method not readily
marketable securities reflected in other assets.
All non-financial instruments are excluded from the above table.
The disclosures also do not include goodwill.
Accordingly, the 
aggregate fair value amounts presented do not represent the underlying
value of the Company.
127 
Note 23 
PARENT COMPANY
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
The following are condensed statements of financial condition of the parent company
at December 31: 
Parent Company Statements of Financial Condition
(Dollars in Thousands, Except Per Share
Data) 
2025 
2024 
ASSETS 
Cash and Due From Subsidiary Bank 
$ 
84,338
$ 
70,721
Equity Securities 
713
622
Investment in Subsidiary Bank 
519,386
483,632
Goodwill and Other Intangibles 
-
3,678
Other Assets 
199
4,072
Total Assets 
$ 
604,636
$ 
562,725
LIABILITIES 
Subordinated Notes Payable 
$ 
42,582
$ 
52,887
Other Liabilities 
9,203
14,521
Total Liabilities 
51,785
67,408
SHAREOWNERS EQUITY 
Common Stock, $
0.01
par value; 
90,000,000
shares authorized; 
17,084,386
and 
16,974,513
shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively 
171
170
Additional Paid-In Capital 
41,650
37,684
Retained Earnings 
508,443
463,949
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss), Net of Tax 
2,587
(6,486)
Total Shareowners
Equity 
552,851
495,317
Total Liabilities and Shareowners
Equity 
$ 
604,636
$ 
562,725
128 
The operating results of the parent company for the three years ended December
31 are shown below: 
Parent Company Statements of Operations
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
OPERATING INCOME 
Income Received from Subsidiary Bank: 
Administrative Fees 
$ 
8,364
$ 
6,334
$ 
6,367
Dividends 
37,000
35,000
30,000
Other Income 
1,261
306
453
Total Operating
Income 
46,625
41,640
36,820
OPERATING EXPENSE 
Salaries and Associate Benefits 
6,635
5,433
4,257
Interest on Subordinated Notes Payable 
1,924
2,450
2,427
Professional Fees 
1,187
1,842
859
Advertising
261
234
214
Legal Fees 
685
794
683
Other 
1,527
1,667
1,670
Total Operating
Expense 
12,219
12,420
10,110
Earnings Before Income Taxes
and Equity in Undistributed 
Earnings of Subsidiary Bank 
34,406
29,220
26,710
Income Tax Benefit 
(234)
(828)
(650)
Earnings Before Equity in Undistributed Earnings of Subsidiary Bank 
34,640
30,048
27,360
Equity in Undistributed Earnings of Subsidiary Bank 
26,917
22,867
24,898
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
129 
The cash flows for the parent company for the three years ended December 31 were
as follows: 
Parent Company Statements of Cash Flows
(Dollars in Thousands) 
2025 
2024 
2023 
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES: 
Net Income Attributable to Common Shareowners 
$ 
61,557
$ 
52,915
$ 
52,258
Adjustments to Reconcile Net Income to Net Cash Provided By 
Operating Activities: 
Equity in Undistributed Earnings of Subsidiary Bank 
(26,917)
(22,867)
(24,898)
Gain on sale of subsidiary 
(773)
-
-
Stock Compensation 
2,324
1,801
1,468
Amortization of Intangible Asset 
107
160
160
Increase in Other Assets 
4,206
6,686
(117)
Increase in Other Liabilities 
(5,016)
(6,191)
(1,557)
Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities 
$ 
35,488
32,504
27,314
CASH FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES: 
Purchase of Equity Securities 
$ 
-
$ 
(52)
(369)
Decrease in Investment in Subsidiaries 
1,781
-
-
Net Cash Received for Divestitures 
2,375
-
-
Net Cash (Used in) Provided by Investing Activities 
$ 
4,156
$ 
(52)
$ 
(369)
CASH FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES: 
Principal Payments of Subordinated Notes 
(10,305)
-
-
Dividends Paid 
(17,063)
(14,906)
(12,905)
Issuance of Common Stock Under Compensation Plans 
1,341
1,501
937
Payments to Repurchase Common Stock 
-
(2,330)
(3,710)
Net Cash Used In Financing Activities 
$ 
(26,027)
$ 
(15,735)
$ 
(15,678)
Net Increase in Cash and Due from Subsidiary Bank 
13,617
16,717
11,267
Cash and Due from Subsidiary Bank at Beginning of Year 
70,721
54,004
42,737
Cash and Due from Subsidiary Bank at End of Year 
$ 
84,338
$ 
70,721
$ 
54,004
Note 24 
SEGMENT REPORTING
The Company operates a single reportable business segment that is comprised
of commercial banking within the states of Florida, 
Georgia, and Alabama.
The Companys CEO is deemed
the Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM). The CODM evaluates 
the financial performance of the Company by evaluating revenue streams, significant
expenses, and budget to actual results in 
assessing the Companys
single reporting segment and in the determination of allocating resources. The CODM uses consolidated 
net income to benchmark the Company against peers and to evaluate performance
and allocate resources.
Significant revenue and 
expense categories evaluated by the CODM are consistent with the presentation
of the Consolidated Statement of Income and 
components of other noninterest expense as presented in Note 20.
130 
Item 9.
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
None. 
Item 9A.
Controls and Procedures
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls
and Procedures
for 2025.
At December 31, 2025, the end of the period covered by this 
Annual Report on Form 10-K, our management, including our Chief
Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer,
evaluated the 
effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined
in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934). 
Based upon that evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer
and Chief Financial Officer each concluded that our disclosure controls 
and procedures were effective as of December 31, 202
5.
Managements
Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. 
Our management is responsible for establishing and 
maintaining effective internal control over financial
reporting (as such term is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934).
Internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable
assurance regarding 
the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements
for external purposes in accordance with U.S. 
generally accepted accounting principles. 
Internal control over financial reporting cannot provide absolute assurance
of achieving financial reporting objectives because of 
its inherent limitations. Internal control over financial reporting is a process
that involves human diligence and compliance and is 
subject to lapses in judgment and breakdowns resulting from human failures.
Internal control over financial reporting can also be 
circumvented by collusion or improper management override. Because of such
limitations, there is a risk that material 
misstatements may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis by internal
control over financial reporting. However, these 
inherent limitations are known features of the financial reporting
process. Therefore, it is possible to design into the process 
safeguards to reduce, though not eliminate, this risk. 
Management is also responsible for the preparation and fair presentation
of the consolidated financial statements and other 
financial information contained in this report. The accompanying consolidated
financial statements were prepared in conformity 
with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and include, as necessary,
best estimates and judgments by management. 
Under the supervision and with the participation of management, including
the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial 
Officer, we conducted
an evaluation of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting based
on the framework in 
Internal ControlIntegrated Framework issued by the Committee of
Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway
Commission 
(2013 framework) (the COSO criteria).
Based on this evaluation under the framework in Internal Control -
Integrated 
Framework, our management has concluded that our internal control over financial
reporting, as such term is defined in Exchange 
Act Rule 13a-15(f), was effective as of December 31, 2025.
Forvis Mazars, LLP,
an independent registered public accounting firm, has audited our consolidated
financial statements as of and 
for the year ended December 31, 2025, and opined as to the effectiveness
of internal control over financial reporting at December 
31, 2025, as stated in its report, which is included herein on page 131.
Change in Internal Control.
There have been no changes in our internal control during our most recently completed
fiscal quarter 
that materially affected, or are likely to materially affect,
our internal control over financial reporting.
131 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
Shareowners, Board of Directors, and Audit Committee
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
Tallahassee, Florida 
Opinion on the Internal Control Over Financial Reporting 
We have audited
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.s (Company) internal
control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025 
based on criteria established in Internal Control Integrated Framework:
(2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring 
Organizations of the Treadway
Commission (COSO). In our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material
respects, effective 
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025, based
on criteria established in Internal Control Integrated 
Framework: (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations
of the Treadway Commission (COSO). 
We also have audited,
in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United
States) 
(PCAOB), the consolidated financial statements of the Company
as of December 31, 2025 and 2024, and for each of the three 
years in the period ended December 31, 2025, and our report dated February
27, 2026 expressed an unqualified opinion on those 
consolidated financial statements. 
Basis for Opinion 
The Companys management is responsible
for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting
and for its 
assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial
reporting, included in the accompanying Managements
Report 
on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on the Companys internal
control over 
financial reporting based on our audit. 
We are a public
accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with
respect to the Company in 
accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and
regulations of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission and the PCAOB. 
We conducted
our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require
that we plan and perform the 
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal
control over financial reporting was maintained in all 
material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal
control over financial reporting, assessing the risk 
that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating
effectiveness of internal control based on the 
assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other procedures as we considered
necessary in the circumstances. We 
believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. 
Definitions and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting 
A companys internal control over
financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding
the 
reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of reliable consolidated
financial statements in accordance with accounting 
principles generally accepted in the United States of America. A companys
internal control over financial reporting includes 
those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records
that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect 
the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide
reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as 
necessary to permit preparation of consolidated financial statements in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted 
in the United States of America, and that receipts and expenditures of the
company are being made only in accordance with 
authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide
reasonable assurance regarding prevention, or timely 
detection and correction of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition
of the companys assets that could have
a material effect 
on the consolidated financial statements. 
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting
may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, 
projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future
periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate 
because of changes in conditions or that the degree of compliance with the policies or
procedures may deteriorate. 
/s/ Forvis Mazars, LLP 
Little Rock, Arkansas 
February 27, 2026
132 
Item 9B.
Other Information 
During the three months ended December 31, 2025, 
none
of our directors or officers (as defined in Rule 16a-1(f) under the 
Exchange Act) adopted or 
terminated
any contract, instruction or written plan for the purchase or sale of our securities that was 
intended to satisfy the affirmative defense conditions of
Rule 10b5-1(c) under the Exchange Act or 
any
non-Rule 10b5-1 
trading
arrangement as defined in Item 408(c) of Regulation S-K. 
Item 9C.
Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections
None. 
133 
Part III 
Item 10.
Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance 
The information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference
to the Proxy Statement for the Registrants 2026
Annual 
Meeting of Shareowners, which will be filed with the SEC no later than 120 days
after December 31, 2025. 
Insider Trading Policy 
The Company has 
adopted
insider trading policies and procedures governing the purchase, sale, and/or
other dispositions of the 
Companys securities by
directors, officers, associates, and agents, or the Company itself, that are reasonably
designed to promote 
compliance with insider training laws, rules and regulations, and any listing standards
applicable to the Company. A copy of
the 
Companys Insider Trading
Policy has been filed as Exhibit 19 to this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Item 11.
Executive Compensation 
The information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference
to the Proxy Statement for the Registrants
2026
Annual 
Meeting of Shareowners, which will be filed with the SEC no later than 120 days
after December 31, 2025. 
Item 12.
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related
Shareowners Matters.
The information required by this item is incorporated herein by
reference to the Proxy Statement for the Registrants
2026
Annual 
Meeting of Shareowners, which will be filed with the SEC no later than 120 days
after December 31, 2025. 
Item 13.
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions,
and Director Independence 
The information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference
to the Proxy Statement for the Registrants
2026
Annual 
Meeting of Shareowners, which will be filed with the SEC no later than 120 days
after December 31, 2025. 
Item 14.
Principal Accountant Fees and Services
The information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference
to the Proxy Statement for the Registrants
2026
Annual 
Meeting of Shareowners, which will be filed with the SEC no later than 120 days
after December 31, 2025. 
134 
PART
IV
Item 15.
Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
The following documents are filed as part of this report 
1.
Financial Statements 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition at the End of Fiscal Years
2025
and 2024 
Consolidated Statements of Income for Fiscal Years
2025, 2024, and 2023 
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income for Fiscal Years
2025, 2024, and 2023 
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareowners Equity for
Fiscal Years
2025, 2024, and 2023 
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for Fiscal Years
2025, 2024, and 2023 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
2.
Financial Statement Schedules 
Other schedules and exhibits are omitted because the required information
either is not applicable or is shown in the 
financial statements or the notes thereto. 
3.
Exhibits Required to be Filed by Item 601 of Regulation S-K 
Reg. S-K 
Exhibit
Table 
Item No.
Description of Exhibit 
3.1 
[Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation - incorporated hereinby reference to Exhibit 3.1 of](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000234/i21280_ex3-1.htm)
[the Registrants Form 8-K(filed 5/3/21) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000234/i21280_ex3-1.htm)
3.2 
[Amended and Restated Bylaws - incorporated herein by referenceto Exhibit 3.1 of the Registrants](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000362/i24482_ex3-1.htm)
[Form 8-K (filed 12/20/2024) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000362/i24482_ex3-1.htm)
4.1
See Exhibits 3.1 and 3.2 for provisions of Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation
and 
Amended and Restated Bylaws, which define the rights of the Registrants
shareowners. 
4.2 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. 2021 Director Stock Purchase Plan - incorporatedherein by reference to](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-3.htm)
[Exhibit 4.3 of the Registrants FormS-8 (filed 5/14/21) (No. 333-256134).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-3.htm)
4.3 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. 2021 Associate Stock Purchase Plan - incorporatedherein by reference](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-4.htm)
[to Exhibit 4.4 of the Registrants FormS-8 (filed 5/14/21) (No. 333-256134).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-4.htm)
4.4
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. 2021 Associate Incentive Plan- incorporated herein by reference to](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-5.htm)
[Exhibit 4.5 of the Registrants FormS-8 (filed 5/14/21) (No. 333-256134).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000726601/000117120021000238/i21385_ex4-5.htm)
4.5
In accordance with Regulation S-K, Item 601(b)(4)(iii)(A) certain instruments
defining the rights of 
holders of long-term debt of Capital City Bank Group, Inc. not exceeding 10%
of the total assets of 
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries have
been omitted. The Registrant 
agrees to furnish a copy of any such instruments to the Commission upon request. 
10.1 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. Amended and Restated Dividend ReinvestmentPlan - incorporated](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000071/i24130_ex10-1.htm)
[herein by reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the RegistrantsForm 8-K (filed 3/21/2024) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000071/i24130_ex10-1.htm)
10.2 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. Supplemental Executive RetirementPlan - incorporated herein by](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660103000002/exhibit10d.txt)
[reference to Exhibit 10(d) of the RegistrantsForm 10-K (filed 3/27/03) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660103000002/exhibit10d.txt)
10.3 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan incorporatedherein by reference to Exhibit](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/0000726601-97-000017.txt)
[4.3 of Registrants Form S-8(filed 09/30/97) (No. 333-36693).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/0000726601-97-000017.txt)
10.4 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. Supplemental Executive RetirementPlan II - incorporated herein by](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660120000021/exhibit101.htm)
[reference to Exhibit 10.1 of the Registrant's Form 10-Q (filed 8/3/2020) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660120000021/exhibit101.htm)
10.5 
[Form of Participant Agreement for Long-TermIncentive Plan incorporated herein by reference to](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660123000009/exhibit106.htm)
[Exhibit 10.6 of the Registrants Form10-K (filed 3/1/2023)(No.0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660123000009/exhibit106.htm)
135 
10.6 
[Assignment of Membership Interests, dated as of November 15, 2024, byand between Capital City](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000335/i24448_ex10-1.htm)
[Bank and BMGBMG, LLC incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit10.1 of the Registrants Form](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000335/i24448_ex10-1.htm)
[8-K (filed 11/19/2024) (No. 0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000117120024000335/i24448_ex10-1.htm)
19 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. Insider TradingPolicy.*](exhibit19.htm)
21 
[Capital City Bank Group, Inc. Subsidiaries, as of December 31,2025.*](exhibit21.htm)
23 
[Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.*](exhibit231.htm)
31.1 
[Certification of CEO pursuant to Securities and Exchange Act Section 302of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act](exhibit311.htm)
[of 2002.*](exhibit311.htm)
31.2 
[Certification of CFO pursuant to Securities and Exchange Act Section 302of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act](exhibit312.htm)
[of 2002.*](exhibit312.htm)
32.1 
[Certification of CEO pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuantto Section 906 of the](exhibit321.htm)
[Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.*](exhibit321.htm)
32.2 
[Certification of CFO pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuantto Section 906 of the](exhibit322.htm)
[Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.*](exhibit322.htm)
97 
[Clawback Policy incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 97of the Registrants Form 10-K (filed](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660124000007/exhibit97.htm)
[3/13/2024)(No.0-13358).](http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/726601/000072660124000007/exhibit97.htm)
101.SCH
XBRL Taxonomy
Extension Schema Document* 
101.CAL
XBRL Taxonomy
Extension Calculation Linkbase Document* 
101.LAB
XBRL Taxonomy
Extension Label Linkbase Document* 
101.PRE
XBRL Taxonomy
Extension Presentation Linkbase Document* 
101.DEF
XBRL Taxonomy
Extension Definition Linkbase Document* 
104
Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained
in Exhibit 101) 
* 
Filed electronically herewith.
Item 16.
Form 10-K Summary 
None. 
136 
Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this 
report to be signed on February 27, 2026, on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized. 
CAPITAL CITY
BANK GROUP,
INC. 
/s/ William G. Smith, Jr.
William G. Smith, Jr. 
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 
(Principal Executive Officer) 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been
signed on February 27, 2026 by the 
following persons in the capacities indicated. 
/s/ William G. Smith, Jr.
William G. Smith, Jr. 
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 
(Principal Executive Officer) 
/s/ Jeptha E. Larkin
Jeptha E. Larkin 
Executive Vice President
and Chief Financial Officer 
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) 
137 
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this 
report to be signed on February 27, 2026, on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized. 
Directors: 
/s/ Robert Antoine 
/s/ Bonnie J. Davenport 
Robert Antoine 
Bonnie J. Davenport 
/s/ Thomas A. Barron 
/s/ William Eric Grant 
Thomas A. Barron 
William Eric Grant 
/s/ William F.
Butler 
/s/ Laura L. Johnson 
William F.
Butler 
Laura L. Johnson 
/s/ Stanley W. Connally,
Jr. 
/s/ John G. Sample, Jr. 
Stanley W.
Connally, Jr 
John G. Sample, Jr 
/s/ Marshall M. Criser III 
/s/ William G. Smith, Jr. 
Marshall M. Criser III 
William G. Smith, Jr. 
/s/ Kimberly A. Crowell 
/s/ Ashbel C. Williams 
Kimberly A. Crowell 
Ashbel C. Williams