Divorce Court Forms and Required Documents
Divorce proceedings in the United States require the filing of specific court forms and supporting documents at each stage of the case, from initial petition through final decree. The exact documents required vary by state and county, but a common structural framework applies across jurisdictions because divorce is governed exclusively by state law. Understanding which forms are mandatory, which are conditional on case facts, and how document requirements shift between contested and uncontested proceedings is essential for navigating the divorce filing process correctly.
Definition and Scope
Court forms in divorce cases are official, court-prescribed instruments that initiate, advance, or conclude a domestic relations action. They are distinct from evidentiary exhibits or financial disclosure schedules, although those supporting documents travel alongside them. Each state's judicial branch — operating under that state's family code or domestic relations statute — publishes its own mandatory form set. California's Judicial Council, for example, produces a standardized statewide form library under California Rules of Court, rule 1.35, including forms such as FL-100 (Petition for Dissolution) and FL-110 (Summons). Texas operates under the Texas Family Code and the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, with forms managed at the county level, making uniformity less consistent than in California.
At the federal level, no unified divorce form system exists because federal courts do not exercise jurisdiction over divorce matters (state vs. federal divorce law). The relevant regulatory authority is therefore always the state judiciary and, at a granular level, the local rules of the specific county superior or district court where the action is filed.
Forms fall into three broad classification tiers:
- Initiating documents — Petition, Summons, and any required civil cover sheet
- Service and response documents — Proof of Service, Respondent's Answer or Response, and waiver forms in uncontested cases
- Financial and ancillary disclosure documents — Income and Expense Declarations, Asset and Debt Schedules, Preliminary and Final Declarations of Disclosure
The third tier is consistently the most document-intensive and the source of most procedural deficiencies flagged by court clerks.
How It Works
The document workflow in a divorce case follows a sequential filing logic tied to procedural deadlines.
Phase 1 — Petition and Summons
The petitioner (the spouse who initiates the action) files a Petition for Dissolution of Marriage and an accompanying Summons. Most states mandate a civil case information sheet or a domestic relations cover sheet at this stage. The divorce petition must identify the parties, state the grounds for divorce, and list relief sought — custody, support, property division, name change — even if details are resolved later. Filing fees vary by county; California Superior Court filing fees for a divorce petition were set at $435 as of the 2023 fee schedule published by the California Judicial Council.
Phase 2 — Service of Process
After filing, the petitioner must serve the respondent according to the rules governing divorce summons and service of process. A Proof of Service form, completed by the process server or sheriff, is then filed with the court. Failure to file proof of service within the court's deadline can result in the case being dismissed.
Phase 3 — Financial Disclosures
California's Family Code §2100–2113 requires both parties to exchange a Preliminary Declaration of Disclosure (FL-140) and an Income and Expense Declaration (FL-150) regardless of whether the divorce is contested. Most states impose analogous mandatory financial disclosure requirements. The Income and Expense Declaration requires documentation including pay stubs, tax returns (typically the 2 most recent years), bank statements, and mortgage or lease agreements.
Phase 4 — Resolution Documents
In uncontested cases, the parties file a Marital Settlement Agreement or Stipulated Judgment alongside the Judgment form. In contested cases, the court issues a Judgment after trial. Either path concludes with filing the final Judgment of Dissolution, which produces the divorce decree.
Common Scenarios
Uncontested Divorce with No Minor Children
This scenario involves the smallest document set: Petition, Summons, Proof of Service (or Respondent's Appearance, Stipulation, and Waivers form), financial disclosures, Marital Settlement Agreement, and Judgment. Many states publish self-help packets specifically for this scenario. The National Center for State Courts (NCSC) tracks the availability of these self-help resources across all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Contested Divorce with Child Custody Disputes
This scenario adds a substantial document layer: a proposed Parenting Plan (required in states including Washington, Florida, and Colorado under their respective family codes), a Child Custody and Visitation Application, declarations or affidavits supporting the best-interest analysis, and, if applicable, a Guardian ad Litem appointment order. The parenting plan legal requirements create the heaviest documentation burden in this category.
High-Asset Divorce with Business Interests
Beyond standard financial disclosures, this scenario requires business valuation reports, pension and retirement account statements, and — when dividing qualified retirement plans — a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). The QDRO is a separate court order prepared under ERISA requirements and submitted to the retirement plan administrator independently of the divorce judgment. A separate QDRO is required for each distinct retirement plan being divided. More detail on this instrument appears at QDRO and retirement assets in divorce.
Pro Se Filers
Litigants representing themselves face the same document requirements as attorney-represented parties. The distinction lies in access to procedural guidance. Courts operating under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the ADA Title II access-to-justice framework are increasingly required to make forms accessible and instructions plain-language compliant. For a structured overview of procedural considerations for self-represented litigants, see pro se divorce legal considerations.
Decision Boundaries
The document set required in any specific divorce case is determined by four variables:
- Jurisdiction — State and county local rules control form versions and supplemental requirements. Forms approved for use in Los Angeles Superior Court may differ in version or content from those used in San Diego Superior Court, even within the same state.
- Contested vs. Uncontested Status — Contested and uncontested divorces diverge sharply in document volume after the initial filing phase. Uncontested cases can close with as few as 6–8 forms; complex contested cases can involve filing hundreds of pages of declarations, exhibits, and motions.
- Presence of Minor Children — The presence of minor children triggers mandatory parenting plan, custody application, and child support calculation worksheet requirements in every U.S. state. Child support calculation methods depend on income documentation filed with the court.
- Asset and Debt Complexity — Cases involving real property require deed or title documentation; cases involving retirement assets require QDRO drafting; cases involving business ownership require valuation expert reports. Each asset class carries its own ancillary document requirement under state family codes and, where applicable, federal law (ERISA for retirement plans, IRC §1041 for interspousal property transfers).
Courts reject filings that use outdated form versions. Each state judicial council or administrative office of the courts publishes effective dates for each form revision. Using a superseded form — even with correct content — is a common procedural error that causes refiling delays.
When a state offers both mandatory and optional forms, mandatory forms must be used exactly as published; optional forms may be substituted with attorney-drafted equivalents that contain all required statutory disclosures. California's Judicial Council maintains this mandatory/optional distinction explicitly in its form catalog, a structure mirrored by the Florida Supreme Court's approved family law form system under Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Rule 12.900.
References
- California Judicial Council — Family Law Forms
- California Family Code §2100–2113 — Disclosure Requirements
- Texas Family Code — Texas Legislature Online
- Florida Supreme Court Approved Family Law Forms — Rule 12.900
- National Center for State Courts (NCSC)
- U.S. Department of Labor — ERISA Overview
- California Rules of Court, Rule 1.35 — Judicial Council Forms