Scots Family Law
Marriage, divorce, civil partnership, financial provision, and children — Scots family law and how it differs from the position in England & Wales.
Introduction
Family law in Scotland is largely devolved and differs materially from England & Wales. The Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006 modernised cohabitation rights — Scotland recognises certain remedies for unmarried cohabitants on separation or death (s.28 / s.29) which have no English equivalent. Divorce grounds were reformed (irretrievable breakdown; the period before consent-based divorce is 1 year with consent, 2 years without). The Children (Scotland) Act 1995 (largely operationally still in force, with significant amendments by the Children (Scotland) Act 2020) governs parental responsibilities and rights, child welfare, and the Children's Hearings system — Scotland's unique welfare-based youth justice and care system, hearing children up to 16 before lay panels rather than courts.
In Brief
Scots family law is largely devolved and differs from England. Divorce is on irretrievable breakdown (1 year with consent, 2 without). Cohabitants have statutory financial-provision rights on separation (s.28) and from a deceased's estate (s.29) — no direct English equivalent. Children's Hearings system handles most child welfare matters before lay panels rather than courts.
Core Principles
Divorce — irretrievable breakdown demonstrated by 1 year separation with consent (Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006 s.11) or 2 years without consent.
Financial provision on divorce — Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985: fair sharing of matrimonial property; 'matrimonial property' is defined narrowly (acquired during marriage with limited exceptions).
Cohabitation rights — Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006 s.28 (financial provision on separation) and s.29 (provision from a deceased cohabitant's estate). No direct English equivalent.
Parental responsibilities and rights — Children (Scotland) Act 1995, modernised by Children (Scotland) Act 2020.
Children's Hearings — Scotland's welfare-based system; lay panels hear cases involving children up to 16 (or 18 in some cases). Children's Hearings (Scotland) Act 2011 is the operative statute.
Marriage equality — Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Act 2014.
Key Statutes
Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985
Children (Scotland) Act 1995
Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006
Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Act 2014
Children (Scotland) Act 2020
Leading Cases
Gow v Grant
[2012] UKSC 29
Wallis v Wallis
1993 SC (HL) 49
Sheriff v Sheriff
1991 SLT 248
Whaley v Lord Watson of Invergowrie
2000 SC 340
Frequently Asked Questions
How long must we be separated to divorce in Scotland?
If both parties consent, 1 year of non-cohabitation. Without consent, 2 years of non-cohabitation. Other facts (e.g. adultery, behaviour) are also available but rarely used given the shorter no-fault routes — Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006 s.11.
Can unmarried cohabitants claim financial provision on separation in Scotland?
Yes — the Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006 s.28 gives cohabitants a right to apply to the Sheriff Court for financial provision based on economic advantage/disadvantage during the relationship. There is a strict 1-year time limit from separation. England has no equivalent (the long-discussed 'cohabitation rights' bill has not passed).
What is the Children's Hearings system?
Scotland's distinctive welfare-based system for dealing with children in need of compulsory measures of supervision (because of offending, non-attendance at school, lack of parental care, etc.). Lay panel members hear cases informally and make decisions in the child's best interests. The Children's Hearings (Scotland) Act 2011 is the operative statute.
What To Do Next
Get Professional Help