Central Florida · Ninth Judicial Circuit
Osceola County Uncontested Divorce Lawyer — $750 Flat Fee
For Osceola County couples who agree, we remove the expensive parts of divorce while keeping the attorney-drafted settlement agreement. Same flat $750 attorney fee with or without children — 100% remote, attorney-prepared and attorney-reviewed before filing.
$750 flat attorney fee
Same price with or without children. No retainer, no hourly billing.
Court filing fee — separate
About $425 (includes the card convenience fee), paid to the Osceola County Clerk of Court.
Remote notary — separate
Remote online notarization is separate and paid directly to the independent notary.
Filing your divorce in Osceola County
Osceola County is part of Florida's Ninth Judicial Circuit. Your uncontested dissolution is filed with the Osceola County Clerk of Court through the Florida Courts E-Filing Portal — you never have to visit the courthouse. Court procedures and judicial review can vary by county. After filing, the clerk issues your case number and routes the case according to local procedure.
You don't need litigation pricing for a non-litigation divorce — but you still need attorney-drafted documents. Every document is reviewed by Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. · Florida Bar #21022 before filing. The firm represents the purchasing spouse; your spouse may sign as an unrepresented party and may seek independent legal advice.
By Antonio G. Jimenez | Florida Bar No. 21022 | Last Reviewed: June 2026
# Uncontested Divorce in Osceola County, Florida (2026 Guide)
FloridaDivorce.law handles a flat-fee $750 uncontested divorce for Osceola County residents, prepared and reviewed by a licensed Florida attorney before anything is filed, and done 100% remotely. Your $408 court filing fee is separate and paid to the Osceola Clerk of the Circuit Court. Under Fla. Stat. §61.052, Florida only requires that your marriage is irretrievably broken, so no fault or blame is needed.
Does Your Osceola County Divorce Qualify as Uncontested?
Your divorce qualifies as uncontested when you and your spouse agree on every issue and both are willing to sign the paperwork. That agreement, not the absence of children or property, is what makes a case uncontested. You can own a home, share retirement accounts, or raise children together and still qualify, as long as you have settled how those things are divided.
| Your situation | Likely uncontested? |
|---|---|
| No children and no shared property | Yes — the simplest path to a final judgment |
| Children or property, but full written agreement | Yes — uncontested with a parenting plan and settlement |
| Spouse is non-responsive or cannot be located | Sometimes — may proceed by alternate service, but needs review |
| Active disagreement on money, time-sharing, or assets | No — this is a contested matter and needs different handling |
In my experience, most couples who think their case is "too complicated" for an uncontested divorce are actually already in agreement and simply have not put that agreement into the right Florida forms. The job of the attorney is to translate what you have already decided into documents the court will accept.
How Much Does an Uncontested Divorce Cost in Osceola County?
An uncontested divorce in Osceola County has two predictable costs: the court filing fee paid to the clerk and the attorney fee paid to the firm. There is no hourly billing and no surprise charges with a flat-fee firm.
| Cost item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Court filing fee (petitioner) | $408, paid to the Osceola Clerk of the Circuit Court |
| Service of process | Varies if your spouse must be formally served; often waived when spouses cooperate |
| Parenting course (if minor children) | Required online course, typically a modest separate fee |
| Flat-fee attorney (FloridaDivorce.law) | $750, same price with or without minor children |
The $750 covers document preparation, attorney review, filing with the clerk, and guidance through to your final judgment. The price is identical whether or not you have minor children; cases with children simply add a parenting plan, a child support guidelines worksheet, and the required UCCJEA affidavit.
What Are the Residency Requirements to File for Divorce in Osceola County?
At least one spouse must have lived in Florida for six months before the petition is filed. Fla. Stat. §61.021 sets this six-month residency requirement, and it applies to every Florida county, including Osceola. You prove residency with a Florida driver license, a Florida voter registration card, or the sworn testimony of a corroborating witness.
You do not both need to be Florida residents. As long as one spouse meets the six-month rule, you can file in Osceola County when either of you lives here, in Kissimmee, St. Cloud, or the surrounding communities.
What if I just moved to Osceola County?
If you recently relocated, the clock that matters is your time in Florida, not your time in Osceola County specifically. Once one spouse has been a Florida resident for six continuous months, you can file in the county where either spouse resides. If neither of you has hit the six-month mark yet, you simply wait until one of you does, and we can prepare your documents in the meantime so you are ready to file the day you qualify.
How Do You File for an Uncontested Divorce in Osceola County? (Step-by-Step)
Filing an uncontested divorce in Osceola County follows a clear sequence from preparation to final judgment. Here is the path we walk every client through.
What Forms Do You Need for an Uncontested Divorce in Osceola County?
Florida uses standardized family law forms statewide, so the same forms apply in Osceola County as everywhere else. The exact set depends on whether you use the simplified or regular process and whether you have minor children.
| Form number | Form name | When required |
|---|---|---|
| 12.901(a) | Petition for Simplified Dissolution of Marriage | Both spouses agree, no minor children, and certain rights are waived |
| 12.901(b)(1) / (b)(2) | Petition for Dissolution of Marriage (with / without children) | Regular uncontested dissolution |
| 12.902(b) / 12.902(c) | Family Law Financial Affidavit (short / long form) | Mandatory financial disclosure under Rule 12.285 |
| 12.902(f)(3) | Marital Settlement Agreement | Documents your full agreement on property and support |
| 12.913 | Service of process forms | When your spouse must be formally served |
| 12.990(a) / 12.990(c) | Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage | Entered by the judge to finalize your divorce |
You can review the official, current versions of every form at flcourts.gov. Using the wrong version or filling a section incorrectly is the most common reason a clerk rejects a self-prepared filing.
Not sure if your divorce qualifies as uncontested? Ask Victoria a free question and get an answer in minutes.
How Long Does an Uncontested Divorce Take in Osceola County?
Most uncontested divorces in Osceola County finish within a few weeks once both spouses cooperate. The statutory 20-day waiting period is usually the longest fixed delay, and court scheduling can add time depending on the calendar.
| Stage | Typical timing |
|---|---|
| Document preparation | A few days, faster once both spouses provide their information |
| Filing with the clerk | Same day via myflcourtaccess.com |
| 20-day waiting period | At least 20 days under Fla. Stat. §61.19 |
| Final hearing or review | Scheduled by the court after the waiting period |
| Total realistic range | Roughly 3 to 8 weeks |
Court timing varies by county and even by judge, so treat these figures as realistic estimates rather than guarantees. Osceola County is one of the fastest-growing counties in the Orlando area, and its caseload can affect how quickly a hearing is set.
What Happens at the Final Hearing for an Uncontested Divorce in Osceola County?
The final hearing in an uncontested case is short and straightforward. A judge in the Ninth Judicial Circuit confirms that your marriage is irretrievably broken under Fla. Stat. §61.052, that residency is met, and that your agreement is complete, then signs the final judgment. Where children are involved, the judge reviews the parenting plan and that child support follows the guidelines in Fla. Stat. §61.30; where property is divided, the judge confirms the division is consistent with Fla. Stat. §61.075.
Can the final hearing be waived in Osceola County?
In many uncontested cases, particularly simplified dissolutions, appearance requirements are minimal, and some matters can be concluded with limited or no in-person testimony depending on the judge's procedures. Because practices differ between judges, we prepare every case so it is ready for a hearing and advise you on what the assigned division in Osceola County expects. You will always know in advance what, if anything, is required of you.
Why Osceola County Residents Choose FloridaDivorce.law
Everything is handled remotely, so you never set foot in a law office or wait in a lobby. We work with you by phone, email, and secure online tools, which fits the busy schedules of families across Kissimmee, St. Cloud, and the wider Osceola community. Your documents are prepared, reviewed, and filed without a single office visit.
The fee is a flat $750, and it stays $750. There is no hourly meter, no retainer that drains down, and no surprise billing at the end. You know the total before you begin, which is the predictable cost most people want when a marriage ends and the budget is already stretched.
Victoria, our document assistant, gathers your information and drafts your paperwork in minutes, and then a licensed Florida attorney reviews every page before it is filed. That combination gives you the speed of technology with the judgment of a real lawyer standing behind the filing. You are never handing your case to a form-filling website with no attorney attached.
Here is the clear difference: a flat $750, the same with or without minor children, attorney-prepared and reviewed, 100% remote, and available across all 67 Florida counties, which is a sharp contrast with DIY form sites that leave you on your own and hourly firms that bill by the call. For Osceola County families balancing work near the Orlando attractions corridor with family life, that handled, hands-off approach matters.
Osceola County has grown quickly around Kissimmee and St. Cloud, and many of the people we help moved here for work, family, or a fresh start and simply want their divorce finished cleanly. Because we handle everything remotely, you never drive to Kissimmee or St. Cloud to stand in line at the clerk's office or sit in a waiting room. If your spouse agrees the marriage is over and you both want to move forward, we can take it from here. When you are ready, reach out and let us prepare your filing.
About the Author: Antonio G. Jimenez is a Florida-licensed family law attorney (Bar No. 21022) and founder of FloridaDivorce.law. He handles flat-fee uncontested divorces for clients throughout all 67 Florida counties. All filings are handled remotely, so clients never need to appear at a courthouse or law office.
This article was written by Antonio G. Jimenez, Florida Bar No. 21022, and is intended for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Florida law and court procedures may change. Verify all procedural requirements with the Osceola Clerk of the Circuit Court or a licensed Florida attorney before filing.
Significant assets, but you agree?
Large dollar amounts don't make a case contested — disagreement does. Your marital settlement agreement can cover the home, mortgage payoff or refinance deadlines, deed/title transfer, bank and investment accounts, retirement (QDRO referral if needed), vehicles, debts, and agreed obligations.
How agreed asset division worksThis isn't the right service if…
- your spouse won't sign, or you're still negotiating
- there is domestic violence, coercion, or fear
- you need discovery, an injunction, or emergency relief
- you disagree about parenting, support, alimony, property, or debt
- you want one attorney to represent both spouses
Not sure? Ask Victoria before checkout.
Osceola County Uncontested Divorce — FAQ
How much does an uncontested divorce cost in Osceola County?
Our flat attorney fee is $750 for an uncontested divorce in Osceola County — the same price whether or not you have minor children. The court filing fee (about $425, including the card convenience fee) and the remote online notary are separate. The remote notary is paid directly to the independent notary.
Do I have to go to the Osceola County courthouse?
No — the process is 100% remote. In many uncontested cases, no final hearing is required when the court accepts the signed paperwork. Court procedures and judicial review can vary by county; after filing, the Osceola County Clerk of Court issues your case number and routes the case according to local procedure.
Is this attorney representation or a DIY forms service?
This is attorney representation. Your documents are attorney-prepared and reviewed by Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. (Florida Bar #21022) before anything is signed or filed — not DIY forms.
We have significant assets but we agree. Can it still be uncontested in Osceola County?
Yes. Large dollar amounts don't make a case contested — disagreement does. If you both agree, your marital settlement agreement can cover the home, mortgage payoff or refinance deadlines, deed/title transfer, bank and investment accounts, retirement (with a QDRO referral if needed), vehicles, debts, and agreed obligations.
Which court handles my Osceola County divorce?
Osceola County is part of Florida's Ninth Judicial Circuit. Your dissolution is filed with the Osceola County Clerk of Court through the Florida Courts E-Filing Portal.
Start your Osceola County uncontested divorce
Flat $750 attorney fee, attorney-reviewed before filing. Not sure if you qualify? Ask Victoria first.