01Our Focus

What Is a Florida Uncontested Divorce?


A Florida uncontested divorce is a no-fault dissolution where both spouses agree on every term — property, debts, and (if applicable) the parenting plan and child support. Florida requires only that the marriage be irretrievably broken (F.S. 61.052) and that at least one spouse has lived in Florida for six months (F.S. 61.021). This service is built for spouses who have already reached that agreement and want the paperwork prepared, reviewed, signed, and filed correctly.

Because the scope is narrow and you already agree, the process can be streamlined — and attorney review remains the safeguard at every step.

Learn more: Florida uncontested divorce overview · full service details · pricing

02Included

What's Included in the $750 Attorney Fee


  • Attorney-prepared Petition for Dissolution of Marriage and the required divorce documents
  • Marital Settlement Agreement covering your agreed terms
  • Parenting plan (if you have minor children)
  • Child support guidelines worksheet and guidance (if minor children)
  • UCCJEA affidavit (if minor children)
  • Remote signing and notary coordination
  • E-filing with the Florida court
  • Attorney review before anything is sent for signature or filed
  • Answers to your questions within the uncontested scope

The $750 is the attorney fee only. The court filing fee and the remote online notary are not included — see separate costs below.

03Transparency

Costs That Are Separate


  • Court filing fee — separate, approximately $425, varies by county
  • Remote online notary — separate, paid directly to the independent notary
  • Payment processing/card fee — may apply, shown at checkout
  • Parenting course — may be required when minor children are involved
  • Deeds, QDROs, or other third-party work — not included unless separately arranged
04Fit

Who Qualifies for a Florida Uncontested Divorce?


Who This Is For

  • You and your spouse agree on the divorce
  • Both spouses are willing to sign
  • You agree on how to divide property and debt
  • You agree on alimony — or agree there will be none
  • If you have children, you agree on a parenting plan and child support
  • Your spouse can be reached and will cooperate
  • You want a remote process
  • You want attorney-reviewed documents, not DIY forms

Who This Is Not For

  • Your spouse will not sign
  • You are still negotiating the terms
  • Contested custody or time-sharing
  • Disputed child support, alimony, property, or debt
  • Hidden assets or formal financial discovery is needed
  • Domestic violence, coercion, fear, or any safety concern
  • You need an emergency injunction or motion
  • Relocation is in dispute
  • A business needs to be valued or is in dispute
  • You need contested litigation
  • You want one attorney to represent both spouses
If you feel unsafe, pressured, or afraid to sign, do not use self-checkout. Seek immediate help or contact appropriate safety resources — the National Domestic Violence Hotline is 1-800-799-7233 (call 911 if you are in immediate danger).
05Pricing

Why $750?


You don't need litigation pricing for a non-litigation divorce — but you still need attorney-drafted documents.

Traditional divorce becomes expensive because of conflict. Discovery, hearings, mediation, negotiation, expert issues, and hourly billing are not part of this flat-fee uncontested service.

Because the scope is narrow and both spouses agree, the process can be streamlined. Attorney review remains the safeguard — your documents are prepared and reviewed by a Florida-licensed attorney before anything is signed or filed.

Assets

Have Assets but Still Agree?


Significant assets don't automatically make a case contested — disagreement does. If you agree, your settlement can address the home, mortgage payoff or refinance deadlines, bank accounts, vehicles, debts, retirement (with a QDRO referral where needed), lump-sum payments, voluntarily agreed adult-child expenses, and other agreed obligations.

If valuation, hidden assets, formal discovery, or negotiation is needed, this service may not be the right fit.

Your agreement can cover:

  • The marital home and mortgage
  • Bank and investment accounts
  • Vehicles and personal property
  • Debts and who pays them
  • Retirement accounts (QDRO referral if needed)
  • Lump-sum or installment payments
06Process

How the Process Works


1

Confirm you both agree

Confirm that you and your spouse agree on the divorce and are both willing to sign.

2

Pay the $750 flat attorney fee

Check out securely. A single confirmation that your case is uncontested appears before payment.

3

Sign the engagement agreement

After payment, you sign the engagement agreement that sets the scope of representation.

4

Complete your intake with Victoria

Work through a guided, secure online intake at your own pace — your progress saves automatically.

5

Attorney prepares and reviews

Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. prepares your documents and reviews everything before it goes out.

6

Sign remotely and we file

You and your spouse sign remotely, and the firm files your case with the Florida court.

07Disclosure

Who We Represent


The firm represents the purchasing spouse (the client). Your spouse may cooperate by signing the uncontested documents, but your spouse is not represented by the firm unless there is a separate written agreement. Your spouse may choose to consult an independent attorney before signing.

Anything Else

Our only service is the $750 uncontested divorce. If you're close to agreement but not quite there, talk it through with Victoria. For contested matters, modifications, or other family law needs, we can point you to the vetted attorneys in the Divorce.law network.

08Questions

Frequently Asked Questions


Is this attorney representation or DIY forms?

This is attorney representation, not a DIY form site. Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. (Florida Bar #21022) prepares and reviews your documents before they are sent for signature or filed.

Is the price really the same with children?

Yes. The flat attorney fee is $750 whether or not you have minor children. When children are involved, the work simply includes a parenting plan, a child support guidelines worksheet, and a UCCJEA affidavit at the same fee.

What if we own a home or other assets?

Owning assets does not make a case contested — disagreement does. If you and your spouse agree on how to handle the home, accounts, vehicles, debts, and retirement, your agreement can address those terms. If valuation, hidden assets, or negotiation is needed, this service may not be the right fit.

What if my spouse will not sign?

This service is for couples who already agree and are both willing to sign. If your spouse will not cooperate, the case is contested and we are not the right fit — we can point you toward attorneys in the Divorce.law network who handle contested matters.

Do we have to go to court?

Many uncontested Florida divorces are completed without a contested hearing, and many are finalized without either spouse appearing in court. Whether any brief appearance is needed can vary by county and judge, and court timing varies.

What does the $750 include?

It is the flat attorney fee to prepare, review, and e-file your complete uncontested divorce — including the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage, the Answer and Waiver of Service, the Marital Settlement Agreement, and the Final Judgment package the court needs to finalize your case. If you have minor children, it also includes the parenting plan, child support guidelines worksheet, and UCCJEA affidavit. Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. (Florida Bar #21022) personally reviews every document before it is signed or filed. The $750 does not include the court filing fee or the remote online notary.

Is the $750 the same in every Florida county?

Yes. The flat attorney fee is $750 in all 67 Florida counties — Miami-Dade, Broward, Duval (Jacksonville), Hillsborough, Orange, and everywhere else — with or without minor children. What varies by county is the court's own filing fee (separate, approximately $425, paid to the clerk), not our fee. We handle uncontested cases statewide, 100% online.

What costs are separate?

The court filing fee (separate, approximately $425, varies by county) and the remote online notary (paid directly to the independent notary) are separate from the $750. A payment processing fee may apply, and a parenting course may be required when minor children are involved.

Who does the attorney represent?

The firm represents the purchasing spouse (the client). Your spouse may cooperate by signing the uncontested documents, but is not represented by the firm unless there is a separate written agreement, and may choose to consult an independent attorney before signing.

How fast can this be completed?

Many uncontested cases are finalized in about two weeks when both spouses sign promptly. Florida law sets a 20-day waiting period after the petition is filed before a final judgment can be entered (F.S. 61.19), and court timing still varies by county, so we cannot guarantee a specific date.

What if my case turns out not to be uncontested?

Attorney review is the safeguard. If review shows the case is not truly uncontested, we will tell you so we can discuss options before going further.

What happens to my fee if my spouse will not sign or the case becomes contested?

The best protection is up front: you can talk with Victoria for free before paying to gauge whether your case is genuinely uncontested, and Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq. reviews your case early — so if it turns out not to be truly uncontested, we tell you before going further. The $750 is a flat attorney fee for the limited-scope uncontested service; the terms, including refundability, are set out in the written fee agreement you review and sign before any work begins. We are not the right fit for contested litigation, but we can point you to attorneys in the Divorce.law network who handle those matters.

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