Your fast and affordable way to get divorced in Washington, 100% online – no court appearances or office visits required! The entire divorce process is completed online.
Your 100% online, fast, and affordable way to get divorced in Washington – no court appearances required! Everything required to divorce can be completed online.
We submit everything to the Circuit Court; in most cases, no court hearing is required to complete the divorce.
You and your spouse can review, sign, notarize, and exchange the required documents online without leaving home.
Our online attorney reviews your details and creates all the legal documents, ensuring they are accurate and court-ready.
The lawyer prepares all your documents. Just two payments of $99.
Review, sign, notarize, and exchange all your documents online. Only $88 per spouse.
We file your paperwork with the court. $75 service fee.
Mandatory court fees for filing for divorce in Washington are $344 regardless of the county. However, if you request an indigent determination and the court grants a waiver, you will only need to pay $100.
You don’t have to pay everything upfront. You pay as you go through the process and on your schedule.
Complete your divorce 100% online – no office visits, no court visits.
We guide you from start to finish.
We assist around 15,000 people yearly via Washington Divorce Service and have offered online divorce services for over 10 years.
Although less common, if you want to do some of the work yourself, that’s no problem. Some people choose to have the lawyer draft their documents and then do the remaining steps themselves.
Washington Divorce Service is an easy and affordable solution if you and your spouse agree and are ready to move forward. No hassle, no courtrooms – just a fast, virtual divorce.
Three steps to getting your Washington divorce:
Answer questions online, and then the attorney prepares your documents.
Review the drafted documents then sign and notarize your documents from anywhere.
We file your documents for you. Your divorce is granted after the judge signs your divorce decree.