Viktor Päts (18 April 1906 Pärnu – 4 March 1952 Butyrka Prison, Moscow) was an Estonian politician, lawyer, and son of Estonian president Konstantin Päts.
[1] Viktor Päts studied at the Gustav Adolf Gymnasium in Tallinn, graduating in 1924, then graduating from the Faculty of Law of the University of Tartu and practicing as a lawyer.
In 1931 after the bankruptcy of Dvigatel factory he became the Chairman of the Council of the new AS Eesti Dvigatel enterprise, AS Järvakandi Factories, the Tartu Yeast Factory, the insurance JSC Estonian Lloyd [et], and in 1939 became a Kirjastus-OÜ Culture Society board member.
On 13 April 1937, he was awarded the Latvian Order of the Three Stars 2nd Class.
[2] Viktor Päts was deported in 30 July 1940 after the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states, with his father and family, to Ufa in the Bashkir ASSR.