For Couples Ending Marriage And Domestic Partnership
- Are married AND registered domestic partners;
- Want to end both their marriage and domestic partnership at the same time; and
- Qualify for a summary dissolution for both, the marriage and the domestic partnership (see requirements below to see if you qualify).
A summary dissolution is a quick, easy way to get divorced. You will not have to talk to a judge and you may not need to hire a lawyer. But remember: it is in your best interest to see a lawyer about ending your marriage and domestic partnership. If you need help, talk to your family law facilitator, self-help center, or a lawyer. Click for help finding a lawyer.
Not everyone can get a summary dissolution. Most people have to get a regular divorce to end their marriage and their domestic partnership. This section will help you decide if you qualify for a summary dissolution and, if you do, how to file it.
Keep in mind that a summary dissolution is a divorce, NOT a legal separation. Learn about the differences between divorce and legal separation.
IMPORTANT: If you are registered domestic partners, NOT married, click for help filing a summary dissolution for a domestic partnership. If you and your spouse are married (including a same-sex marriage) and NOT registered domestic partners, you click to read the instructions for filing a summary dissolution for a marriage only.
Do You Qualify for a Summary Dissolution?
To qualify for a summary dissolution of your marriage AND your registered domestic partnership you must meet ALL of the following requirements. If either your marriage or your domestic partnership does not meet all of the requirements, you will have to file for a regular divorce and ask to end your marriage and domestic partnership under that regular divorce. Click for help getting a regular divorce.
To qualify for summary dissolution, you and your spouse and domestic partner MUST:
- Have been married for less than 5 years and registered domestic partners for less than 5 years (from the date you got married/entered into the domestic partnership to the date you separated);
- Have no children together born or adopted before or during the marriage and the domestic partnership (and you are not expecting a new child now);
- Do not own any part of land or buildings;
- Do not rent any land or buildings (except for where you now live, as long as you do not have a 1-year lease or option to buy);
- Do not owe more than $6,000 for debts acquired since the date you got married or since the date you registered your domestic partnership (called "community obligations");
- Do not count car loans.
- Click for a worksheet to help you figure your debt.
- Click for a sample with instructions for the worksheet.
- Have less than $41,000 worth of property acquired during the marriage or during the domestic partnership (called "community property");
- Do not count your cars.
- Click for a worksheet to help you figure the value of your property.
- Click for a sample with instructions for the worksheet.
- Do not have separate property worth more than $41,000;
- Do not count your cars.
- Click here for a worksheet to help you figure the value of your separate property.
- Click fo a sample with instructions for the worksheet.
- Agree that neither spouse/partner will ever get spousal or partner support; AND
- Have signed an agreement that divides your property (including your cars) and debts.
- Click to see a fillable property agreement.
- Click to see a sample agreement with instructions.
In addition, either you or your spouse must have lived in California for the last 6 months and in the county where you file for summary dissolution for the last 3 months. If you do not meet the residency requirement, you can still file for a legal separation but you have to go through the regular legal separation process, or wait until you meet the residency requirements for a divorce.
EXCEPTION: Same-sex married couples who got married in California but do not live in California and live in a state (or states) that will not dissolve a same-sex marriage, can file to end their same-sex marriage in California, regardless of these residency requirements. You must file in whichever county you were married. If this is your situation, talk to a lawyer with experience in same-sex marriage laws. Click for help finding a lawyer.
I meet ALL of the requirements to file for summary dissolution; go to the next step.
I do not qualify; help me get a regular divorce.
How-To Guide for Summary Dissolution of Both Marriage And Domestic Partnership
- Read the booklet called Summary Dissolution Information (Form FL-810).
You MUST read this booklet.- The booklet will help you throughout your case.
- You have to swear under “penalty of perjury” that you have read and understood the booklet.
- Find your court.
You have to find the right court to start your case in your county.- The right court for you is based on the counties where you and your spouse and domestic partner live right now.
- Click for a program that will help you figure out where to file for your summary dissolution.
- Fill out your Joint Petition.
Fill out:- Joint Petition for Summary Dissolution (Form FL-800). You must BOTH sign this form.
- Any required local court forms. Some courts ask you to fill out local forms when you ask for a summary dissolution. Check your court's website or contact the court to see if you have to fill out any local forms.
- Fill out your Judgment form.
Fill out the top portion (the caption box) of:- Judgment of Dissolution and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Form FL-825).
- ALERT! Use this form ONLY if you filed your Joint Petition (Form FL-800) on or after January 1, 2011. If you filed Form FL-800 before January 1, 2011, fill out a Request for Judgment, Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage, and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Form FL-820). BUT keep in mind that before January 1, 2011, you could not end a marriage and a domestic partnership at the same time, so if you filed your Joint Petition before then, you will only be able to end the marriage (not the domestic partnership). If that is the case, you can either file Form FL-820 to end your marriage and separately file for summary dissolution of your domestic partnership if you still qualify (which you can do through the secretary of state), OR you can start all over and file a new Joint Petition requesting to end both.
- Judgment of Dissolution and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Form FL-825).
- Fill out your worksheets and financial information and exchange it.
You must EACH fill out and exchange:- An Income and Expense Declaration (Form FL-150),
AND, either:
- The 3 worksheets from your Summary Dissolution Information booklet: the worksheet for Determining Value and Division of Community Property; the worksheet for Determining Value of Separate Property and the worksheet for Determining Community Obligations and Their Division;
OR
- A Declaration of Disclosure (Form FL-140), and a Schedule of Assets and Debts (Form FL-142) or a Property Declaration (Form FL-160), and all attachments to these forms.
As part of your financial information exchange, you each MUST exchange:
- All tax returns you filed in the last 2 years, and
- Information in writing about any investments, businesses or other income-producing opportunities you have had after you separated, as long as those opportunities or investments were made or came up during your marriage and before you separated.
- Fill out your property agreement and attach it to your Joint Petition, Form FL-800.
- You can write up your own agreement or you can use this fillable property agreement. Just fill in the blanks with your information. Both of you must sign and date it. Click for a sample agreement with instructions.
- If you do not have any property or debt to divide, write up an agreement that says that. Both of you must sign and date it.
- Have your forms reviewed.
If your court’s family law facilitator or self-help center helps people with divorce and summary dissolution cases, ask them to review your paperwork. They can make sure you filled it out properly before you move ahead with your case. You can also hire your own lawyer to review your papers or to get legal advice, either with your entire divorce case, or just the parts of it that you may need more help with (called “limited scope representation” or “unbundling”). Click for help finding a lawyer. Click to learn more about “limited scope representation.” - Make at least 2 copies of your forms (including your property agreement).
One copy will be for you; another copy will be for your spouse and domestic partner. The original is for the court. - File your forms with the court clerk.
Turn in your Joint Petition (Form FL-800) (with the property agreement attached) and form FL-825 (or FL-820, if you had to use that one instead) plus your 2 copies of each to the court clerk, together with 2 self-addressed stamped envelopes, one addressed to each spouse. The clerk will file your Joint Petition, keeping the original and returning the copies to you, stamped “Filed.” The clerk will either file and give you copies of Form FL-825 (or FL-820 if you used that instead), or hold on to the original and copies to mail to you later. Ask the clerk how your court handles this process.- You and your spouse will have to pay a filing fee. Find out how much the fee is for your petition (also called “first papers” or “first appearance” fee).
- If you cannot afford the fee, you can ask for a fee waiver. If one of you qualifies for a fee waiver, but the other one does not, the one who does not will have to pay the filing fee. Click for information on fee waivers.
- If you did not get Form FL-825 back right away, wait to receive it, filed and signed by the judge.
The Judgment of Dissolution and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Form FL-825) is your divorce judgment. (If you filed Form FL-820, that will be your divorce judgment). Whether you get it when you first file all your papers or you receive it later by mail, it will have a date on it of 6 months after you first filed your case on Item 1(a). That is the date your divorce is final.- You will NOT be divorced, and you CANNOT get remarried or register a new domestic partnership, until after the date that appears on Form FL-825 as the effective date of your judgment of dissolution (your divorce).
Important: If you decide that you do not want to get a summary dissolution during the 6 months while you wait for your divorce to become final, you must file a Notice of Revocation of Petition for Summary Dissolution (Form FL-830) with the court. The Notice of Revocation can be filed by either spouse. It invalidates (cancels) the summary dissolution case and the judgment on Form FL-825. If you or your spouse still wants to get divorced, you can file for a regular divorce. Click for help getting a regular divorce.
Forms - Summary Dissolution for Marriage AND Domestic Partnership Together
If you are in a domestic partnership only (not also married), click for an easier way to end your partnership.
You may not need all of these forms. Or you may need more forms. If you are not sure which forms to use, talk to your family law facilitator, self-help center, or a lawyer. Click for help finding a lawyer.
To download a form (in PDF format), click on the form number in the table below.
Form Name |
Form Number |
Information/Instructions |
---|---|---|
Joint Petition for Summary Dissolution (Family Law — Summary Dissolution) | FL-800 | Both of you must sign this form. Make sure you answer the questions about both, your marriage AND your registered domestic partnership. |
Summary Dissolution Information | FL-810. Includes instructions for Forms FL-800, FL-820, FL-825 and FL-830. | |
Request for Judgment, Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage, and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Family Law — Summary Dissolution) | FL-820 |
Use this form ONLY if you filed Form FL-800 before 1/1/2011. If you filed it after 1/1/2011, use Form FL-825 instead. ALERT: If you filed Form FL-800 before 1/1/2011, keep in mind the law did not allow you to end your marriage AND domestic partnership at the same time, so you will only be able to end your marriage and will have to separately end your domestic partnership (or re-file FL-800, if you still qualify, to end them both at the same time. If you do this, you will have to wait another 6 months.) |
Judgment of Dissolution and Notice of Entry of Judgment (Family Law — Summary Dissolution) | FL-825 | Use this form if you filed Form FL-800 on or after 1/1/2011. |
Notice of Revocation of Petition for Summary Dissolution (Family Law — Summary Dissolution) | FL-830 | Use this form if you want to stop the summary dissolution process any time between the date you filed FL-800 and 6 months later, when your divorce becomes final. |
Worksheets and Financial Information
Worksheets or Form | Instructions/Samples |
---|---|
Income and Expense Declaration (Form FL-150) |
Each of you must fill one of these out and exchange it. Do NOT file with the court. |
Worksheet for Determining Value and Division of Community Property |
Each of you must fill one of these out and exchange it. Do NOT file with the court. |
Worksheet for Determining Value of Separate Property |
Each of you must fill one of these out and exchange it. Do NOT file with the court. |
Worksheet for Determining Community Obligations and Their Division |
Each of you must fill one of these out and exchange it. Do NOT file with the court. |
OR, you can fill out and exchange these forms instead for your financial disclosure:
Form Name | Form Number | Purpose | Instructions |
---|---|---|---|
Declaration of Disclosure | FL-140 | Cover sheet listing all attachments included with your preliminary disclosure. | Instructions for Form FL-140 |
Income and Expense Declaration |
Gives your financial information to the court and to your spouse or domestic partner. |
|
|
Schedule of Assets and Debts or Property Declaration |
List of your property and debts. You can choose either form. |
Property Agreement
Fill out this property agreement unless you write up your own.
Fillable Agreement | Instructions/Samples |
---|---|
Property Agreement |
Attach a copy of your property agreement to Form FL-800. You must BOTH sign and date the property agreement. |