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Ymwadiad: Nid cyngor cyfreithiol yw hwn. Mae deddfwriaeth a chyfraith achosion yn newid. Ymgynghorwch bob amser â chyfreithiwr cymwys ar gyfer eich sefyllfa benodol.

UK Law Reference
All Legal Journeys
Family Law
England & Wales
10 stages
Divorce alone: 6–9 months minimum. Financial remedy: 9–24 months if contested.
Reviewed April 2026

Divorce & Financial Remedy Journey

The complete process for obtaining a divorce under the Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act 2020 (no-fault divorce), together with the financial remedy procedure for resolving financial arrangements on divorce.

Who Uses This Journey

Married couples seeking to end their marriage and resolve the financial consequences, including division of property, pensions, savings, and maintenance arrangements.

Stage-by-Stage Timeline

1

File Divorce Application (D8)

Under the Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act 2020 (in force from April 2022), divorce is 'no-fault'. File form D8 online or by post. One spouse can apply alone (sole application) or both together (joint application). State the marriage has broken down irretrievably — no other facts or blame are required.

Fee: £593 application fee. Fees remission available (EX160).
Forms at This Stage
Evidence Needed
  • Original or certified copy of marriage certificate
  • Spouse's current address (for service if sole application)
  • Details of any children of the family
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Filing before the 1-year anniversary of marriage — not permitted
  • Wrong court — file online at the Family Court portal
  • Not obtaining the marriage certificate first — delays application
2

20-Week Reflection Period

After the divorce application is issued, there is a mandatory 20-week minimum period before the applicant can apply for a Conditional Order. This 'cooling-off' period applies to both sole and joint applications. The respondent acknowledges service during this period.

Deadline: 20 weeks from issue of divorce application
Possible Outcomes
  • Respondent acknowledges service — proceed to Conditional Order application
  • Respondent disputes jurisdiction — court must determine
  • Reconciliation — application withdrawn
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Trying to shorten the 20-week period — it is mandatory and cannot be waived
  • Not serving the respondent correctly — must use correct method of service
3

Apply for Conditional Order

After the 20-week period, the applicant applies for a Conditional Order (formerly Decree Nisi) using the online portal. A district judge reviews the papers. If satisfied, the Conditional Order is pronounced — this is not yet a final divorce.

Deadline: Apply any time after 20 weeks from issue; application expires if not made within 12 months of 20-week period
Fee: Included in application fee
Forms at This Stage
Possible Outcomes
  • Conditional Order pronounced
  • Application rejected — application defective
  • Court raises query — applicant must respond
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Thinking the Conditional Order finalises the divorce — it does not
  • Not resolving finances before applying for Final Order
4

6-Week Wait After Conditional Order

There is a mandatory 6-week wait after the Conditional Order before the Final Order can be applied for. This historically allowed any person to show cause against the divorce. During this period, negotiate and finalise financial matters.

Deadline: Minimum 6 weeks and 1 day after Conditional Order
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Applying for the Final Order before finances are resolved — you lose leverage once divorced
  • Not using this period to finalise a consent order
5

Apply for Final Order

Apply online for the Final Order (formerly Decree Absolute). Once granted, the marriage is legally dissolved. If applying jointly, either party can apply; if sole, only the applicant can apply (unless the respondent applies after 3 months). A sealed copy of the Final Order is the legal proof of divorce.

Deadline: Any time after 6 weeks and 1 day following Conditional Order. If not applied for within 12 months of Conditional Order, court will want explanation.
Fee: Included in application fee
Forms at This Stage
Possible Outcomes
  • Final Order granted — marriage dissolved
  • Delay if financial matters unresolved and application contested
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not having a Consent Order before the Final Order — financial claims survive divorce indefinitely unless court-ordered
  • Remarrying before the Final Order — this is a criminal offence (bigamy)
6

Financial Remedy: Form A — Notice of Intent to Proceed

If financial matters cannot be agreed, either party can issue Form A to start the Financial Remedy procedure. This puts a timetable in place. Alternatively, parties can negotiate via solicitors or mediation and submit an agreed Consent Order (D81 + draft order) at any time.

Deadline: Can be issued at any time during divorce proceedings; must be issued before Final Order if you want court to deal with finances
Fee: £275 application fee (financial remedy proceedings)
Forms at This Stage
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Delaying financial remedy application — capital and pension values change
  • Not considering mediation before issuing — cost effective and often quicker
7

Financial Remedy: Form E (Financial Statement)

Both parties complete Form E — a detailed financial statement disclosing all assets, income, liabilities, pensions, and expenditure. Full and frank disclosure is required. Deliberate concealment is a contempt of court. Form E is exchanged simultaneously.

Deadline: 35 days before the First Appointment
Forms at This Stage
Evidence Needed
  • Last 12 months bank statements for all accounts
  • Mortgage statements and property valuations
  • Pension statements (CETV for all pensions)
  • Business accounts and valuations if self-employed
  • Payslips and P60 for last 3 years
  • Evidence of debts
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Failing to disclose all assets — courts draw adverse inferences
  • Not obtaining up-to-date pension CETs (Cash Equivalent Transfer Values)
  • Understating income from self-employment
8

Financial Remedy: First Appointment (FDA)

A short hearing (30–45 minutes) before a district judge to define the issues, set directions for any valuations or expert evidence, and consider ADR. The judge will not make any orders at this stage but may direct a joint expert for property valuation.

Deadline: Court lists FDA approximately 12–16 weeks after Form A issued
Evidence Needed
  • Concise statement of issues (Form G)
  • Questionnaires exchanged between parties
  • Chronology of the marriage
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Attending without a clear view of the issues
  • Not completing Form G — required 14 days before FDA
9

Financial Remedy: FDR (Financial Dispute Resolution)

The FDR is a without-prejudice hearing designed to promote settlement. The judge gives an indication of the likely outcome ('judicial muscle'). All offers made during FDR are inadmissible at any final hearing. The FDR judge cannot conduct the final hearing.

Deadline: Usually 3–6 months after FDA
Possible Outcomes
  • Settlement agreed at FDR — consent order drawn up
  • No settlement — directions made for final hearing
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not making a genuine 'without prejudice' offer before the FDR
  • Failing to negotiate seriously at FDR — courts take a dim view of parties who don't try
10

Financial Remedy: Final Hearing

If FDR fails, a final hearing is listed (usually 1–3 days). Both parties give evidence and are cross-examined. The judge applies the s.25 MCA 1973 factors: welfare of any child first, then the parties' financial resources, needs, standard of living, age, contributions, and conduct.

Deadline: Usually 3–6 months after FDR
Possible Outcomes
  • Court makes financial remedy order (clean break, periodical payments, property adjustment, pension sharing)
  • Order sealed and binding on both parties
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not settling — final hearing costs can exceed £20,000–£50,000
  • Not filing an up-to-date Form E before the final hearing

Official Sources

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