Once you and your spouse reach an agreement, you need to write out and sign the agreement.
Your agreement needs to say that you both agree to end the marriage and what you agreed about property or spousal support.
PRINT EMAILThere are certain words or phrases the court expects to see in the agreement. If those words are not in are not there, the court can’t accept the agreement.
You can also attach court forms to your agreement
Get help to prepare your agreement
If your agreement is about property or support, you'll need to share financial disclosures.Learn more
If you and your spouse have an agreement about your property or support, you will need to complete or waive your final Declarations of Disclosure before or when you write out the agreement.
You can waive them using Stipulation and Waiver of Final Declaration of Disclosure ( form FL-144 ). You and your spouse sign this form. It tells the court you are waiving final declarations.
If you don't waive final disclosures, you will follow the same process you did to share your preliminary disclosures, but you'll check the boxes that say "final" on the forms.
You both need to read the agreement. Double check that it matches what you had talked about and agreed to. If you have any questions about what anything means or if it’s in your best interest, you can ask a lawyer to review it and discuss it with you. Many lawyers will charge an hourly consultation fee.
You both must sign the agreement. If your spouse didn’t file a response in this case, their signature must be notarized. This means an official checks their ID and then has them sign the document in front of them.
How do I get a signature notarized?Once you and your spouse have a signed agreement, you've completed the "make decisions" part of the divorce process.
Now that your agreement is done, you have one last step to complete your divorce. You need to complete the final paperwork (judgment forms), and submit them to the court. If the judge approves them, they’ll be signed and your divorce is complete.