All 67 Florida counties · 100% remote

Florida Uncontested Divorce — $750 Flat Attorney Fee

Florida allows a simplified, no-fault dissolution when both spouses agree the marriage is irretrievably broken (F.S. 61.052) and at least one spouse has lived in Florida for six months (F.S. 61.021). For couples who meet that bar, we remove the expensive parts of divorce while keeping the attorney-drafted settlement agreement. Same flat $750 fee with or without children — attorney-prepared and attorney-reviewed before filing, not DIY forms.

Reviewed June 2026

What's included in the $750 flat fee?

Same $750 flat fee with or without children
100% remote — no office, no court, anywhere in Florida
Attorney-prepared and attorney-reviewed before filing
Court filing fee (about $425) and remote notary are separate
Petition, marital settlement agreement, and required documents
Parenting plan & child support documents when you have children

Every document is reviewed by Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. · Florida Bar #21022 before filing.

Florida Uncontested Divorce — FAQ

What is an uncontested divorce in Florida?

An uncontested divorce is a dissolution of marriage where both spouses agree on every issue — property division, debts, and (if applicable) the parenting plan and child support. Because there is nothing for a judge to decide, Florida lets you file a written marital settlement agreement and finalize without litigation. Under F.S. 61.052, the only required ground is that the marriage is irretrievably broken.

How much does an uncontested divorce cost in Florida?

Our flat attorney fee is $750 for an uncontested divorce anywhere in Florida — 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 court for an uncontested divorce in Florida?

In most uncontested cases, no — the process is 100% remote and no final hearing is required when the court accepts the signed paperwork. Court procedures and judicial review can vary by county; after filing, your county Clerk of Court issues a case number and routes the case according to local procedure.

How long does an uncontested divorce take in Florida?

Florida imposes a 20-day waiting period after the petition is filed before a final judgment can be entered (F.S. 61.19). Most uncontested cases finalize within a few weeks of filing, depending on how quickly both spouses sign and how the county processes the paperwork.

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. The firm represents the purchasing spouse; the other spouse may sign as an unrepresented party and may seek independent legal advice.

Can it still be uncontested if we have significant assets?

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.

What if we have children — is the price still $750?

Yes, the flat $750 attorney fee is the same with or without minor children. When you have children, the package adds the required parenting plan, a child support guidelines worksheet (F.S. 61.30), and a UCCJEA affidavit. Florida uses the terms time-sharing and parenting plan rather than custody.

What makes a Florida divorce uncontested?

It comes down to one thing: do you and your spouse agree on all the terms? If yes, your divorce is uncontested — there is nothing for a judge to decide, so you can file a written settlement agreement and finalize without litigation. If you disagree on any issue, the case is contested and this flat-fee service is not the right fit. You will also need at least one spouse to have met the six-month Florida residency requirement (F.S. 61.021), and uncontested is not appropriate where there is domestic violence, coercion, or a need for emergency relief.

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