What to Do Before Filing for Divorce: A 7-Step Checklist
Before you file for divorce, there are 7 critical steps that will protect your finances, your children, and your future. Here's exactly what to do first.
Not Legal Advice
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every situation is different. For advice specific to your case, consult a licensed family law attorney in your state.
Divorce is one of the most emotionally overwhelming experiences a person can go through — and when the emotions are high, it's easy to make expensive, reversible mistakes. The good news: taking a few deliberate steps before you file can make the entire process significantly smoother, faster, and less costly.
This checklist is designed to help you get organized and protect yourself — financially, legally, and practically — before anything is officially set in motion. JustiPal™ is here to help you organize your documents and case information, not replace an attorney. Think of us as your preparation layer.
Ready to go deeper on how the divorce filing process actually works? See our related guide: How to File for Divorce: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026 →
Step 1: Gather Financial Documents
Courts divide marital assets and debts — and they need documentation to do it accurately. Gathering financial records early is one of the highest-leverage things you can do. You want to have these in hand before the process starts, while access to joint accounts is uncomplicated.
- ✓Bank statements — At least 3 years of statements for all joint and individual accounts
- ✓Tax returns — Last 3 years of federal and state returns for both spouses
- ✓Mortgage or lease documents — Current statements, original loan documents, and title/deed if applicable
- ✓Retirement account statements — 401(k), IRA, pension statements — these are often subject to division
- ✓Investment account statements — Brokerage accounts, stock options, mutual funds
- ✓Credit card statements — 3 years of statements for all joint and individual cards
Step 2: Document Property and Assets
Beyond financial accounts, you need a clear picture of all marital property. Courts will want a complete inventory — and having it documented early protects you if assets go missing or valuations are disputed later.
- ✓Real property — Home address, approximate market value, current mortgage balance
- ✓Vehicles — Make, model, year, rough value, any liens or loans
- ✓Personal property of value — Jewelry, artwork, electronics, collectibles, furniture
Practical tip: Walk through your home with your phone and take photos or video of valuable items. A timestamped visual record is difficult to dispute later.
Step 3: Understand Your State's Residency Requirements
You cannot file for divorce just anywhere. Most states require that you (or your spouse) have lived in the state for a minimum period — typically 3 to 6 months — before you can file. Some states require up to a full year. Filing before you meet the residency requirement will result in your case being dismissed.
Check your state's official court website or contact the family court clerk in your county to confirm the exact requirement before you do anything else.
Contested vs. Uncontested — Know Before You File
An uncontested divorce means both spouses agree on all terms (property, alimony, custody, support). It is faster and far less expensive. A contested divorce means at least one issue is disputed — and a judge will decide. Knowing which path you're likely on affects every decision you make from here.
Step 4: Decide on Grounds for Divorce
Every divorce requires legal grounds — the stated reason for ending the marriage. There are two categories:
No-fault divorce
The most common path. Based on “irreconcilable differences” — you don't need to prove anyone did anything wrong. All 50 states now accept no-fault divorce.
Fault-based divorce
Based on specific misconduct: adultery, abandonment, abuse, or cruelty. In some states, fault can affect asset division or alimony. Less common and more complex to litigate.
For most people, a no-fault approach is simpler and less contentious. If fault-based grounds are relevant to your situation, discuss the implications with a family law attorney.
Step 5: Think Through Child Custody and Support
If children are involved, this becomes the most important dimension of the entire process. Courts in every state apply one standard above all others: the best interest of the child.
Understanding the basic custody concepts helps you approach negotiations more clearly:
- ✓Physical custody — Where the child primarily lives. Can be sole (one parent) or joint (shared time with both).
- ✓Legal custody — Who makes decisions about education, healthcare, religion. Often shared even when physical custody is sole.
- ✓Child support — Calculated by state formula based on each parent's income and the custody arrangement.
If children are involved, an attorney is strongly recommended — regardless of how amicable the separation seems. Custody agreements have long-term consequences that are difficult to modify after the fact.
Step 6: Open a Separate Bank Account
Financial independence is critical once a divorce is in motion. Open a personal checking account in your name only — before any papers are served, if possible. Move a reasonable amount of money for living expenses. Avoid clearing out joint accounts or making large withdrawals, which courts scrutinize closely.
Why this matters
Once divorce proceedings begin, courts often issue automatic temporary orders restricting the transfer of marital assets. Having your own account with accessible funds for attorney fees, housing deposits, or everyday expenses gives you stability and flexibility when you need it most.
Step 7: Organize Your Case Information
This is where JustiPal™ helps directly. Whether you end up working with a document preparer, a paralegal, or a full attorney, the cleaner and more organized your information is, the faster and cheaper the process will be.
The Divorce Intake Workflow guides you through organizing all your case information step by step: personal details, spouse information, financial disclosures, property inventory, custody preferences, and document uploads. At the end, you get a clean case packet ready to hand off to whoever helps you next.
Get Organized Before You File
JustiPal™ walks you through every item on this checklist — guided step by step. Upload your documents, answer intake questions, and prepare a clean packet before you ever pay an attorney's hourly rate.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
A few missteps before or during a divorce can create serious legal and financial consequences. Avoid these:
- ✕Posting on social media — Anything you post can be used as evidence. Photos, check-ins, venting posts — all discoverable. Go dark or stay strictly neutral.
- ✕Moving out without consulting anyone — Leaving the marital home before understanding the legal implications can affect property rights and custody arrangements in some states.
- ✕Making large purchases or transfers — Courts look at financial behavior before and during proceedings. Unusual spending or transferring assets to family members raises red flags.
- ✕Not disclosing assets — Failing to disclose financial assets is a form of fraud in divorce proceedings. Courts take it seriously and it can significantly harm your case.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a lawyer to file for divorce?
You are not required to have an attorney to file for divorce. Many people file pro se (representing themselves). JustiPal™ helps you organize your case information and documents so you can approach the process with clarity — but we are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice. For complex situations involving significant assets or contested custody, consulting a licensed family law attorney is recommended.
How long does divorce take?
Timeline varies widely by state and whether the divorce is contested. Uncontested divorces with full agreement can finalize in 30–90 days in many states. Contested divorces can take 1–3 years. States with mandatory separation periods add additional time before you can even file.
What documents do I need to file for divorce?
Required documents vary by state, but typically include: a Petition for Dissolution of Marriage, a Summons, a Financial Disclosure form, a Marital Settlement Agreement (if uncontested), and parenting plan documents if minor children are involved. JustiPal™'s guided intake helps you identify and organize the documents relevant to your situation.
The Bottom Line
You can't control how long the process takes or how your spouse responds — but you can control how prepared you are. Gathering documents, understanding your state's rules, and organizing your case information before anything is filed puts you in the strongest possible position.
JustiPal™ is built for this exact preparation phase. Our guided Divorce Intake Workflow walks you through each item on this list, helps you upload your documents, and produces a clean case packet you can take anywhere.
JustiPal™ is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. This article is for informational purposes only. For questions, contact team@justipal.madethis.app.