|
 |
| To learn more regarding
Divorce vs. Annulment
Click Here |
To learn more regarding hiring
a paralegal for a cheap divorce
Click Here |
Did You Know?
Why are our prices so much
lower than our competition? We do not spend money
on advertising. Instead we rely on word of mouth,
referrals, and search engines; thereby, allowing us to pass
on the savings to you.
Did You Know?
COMMUNITY PROPERTY
is property and profits received by a husband and wife during
the marriage, with the exception of inheritances, specific gifts
to one of the spouses, and property and profits clearly traceable
to property owned before marriage, all of which is separate
property.
Learn More
Did You Know?
A PETITION FOR DIVORCE (or
"DISSOLUTION") must be filed and decided in court. However,
all states have "no-fault divorce" laws that allow couples to
split on the basis of irreconcilable differences without going
to trial and without the requirement of establishing fault.
Learn More
Did You Know?
Read what
Consumer Affairs
has to say about legal kits,
CLICK HERE
|
|
|
|
Washington State Divorce
Frequently Asked
Questions
|
Annulment (Petition for Invalidity),
Divorce (Dissolution of Marriage), & Legal Separation
Questions
 |
Download
a list of available in-office and online services.
View with
Adobe or with
Word. |
|
|
|
| |
Frequently
Asked Questions
|
- What
are the filing fees in Washington State for a divorce, legal
separation or annulment?
-
What are the filing fees in Washington State for a parenting
plan?
- What
are the cost of parenting classes in Washington State?
- What is a
marital dissolution in Washington State?
-
What is the difference between marital dissolution and legal
separation in Washington State?
-
May I get an annulment instead of a divorce in Washington
State?
-
What if I reconcile with my spouse after the decree of legal
separation has been ordered by a Washington State court?
-
How important is timing such as who files first for divorce
in Washington State?
- Are
there any residency requirements for Washington State?
-
What if one spouse has never lived in Washington State?
- What if
I cannot find my spouse?
-
In which Washington State County should my divorce be filed?
- How long does
a Washington State divorce take?
-
Who decides who gets property and who pays debts?
-
When we divorce, will the court divide all of our property
and debts 50/50?
-
How does the court decide what is a just and equitable division
of property and debts?
-
What if I have a prenuptial contract or community property
agreement?
-
I bought our car and most other property with my income,
so shouldn't the court award the car and other property
to me?
-
My spouse owned our house before our marriage, but we both
paid the mortgage. Shouldn't I get part of the house?
-
I think we need to sell our house, but my spouse disagrees.
Can the court order us to sell the house?
-
Is it true that I have no right to my husband's pension
because he earned it?
-
My spouse had an affair that caused our divorce.
-
Since the divorce is my spouse's fault, shouldn't the court
give me more of the property?
-
Since I'm not working right now, will the court order my
spouse to pay me alimony
-
Important
information about marital debts.
- Can't find the question you need
answered, click here!
- Additional options we offer to help
you with your proceedings in a Washington State divorce,
legal separation, or annulment.
|
-
What
are the filing fees in Washington State for a divorce, legal
separation or annulment?
-
All Washington State Counties charge the same filing
fee of $250; however, Lincoln County charges an additional
$20 for the "ex parte" signing of the final Order by
the Judge.
-
In Washington State to have the filing fee waived
you file a "Motion to Proceed in Forma Pauperis".
If you use our services and feel you qualify its included
in the service fee. Our Lincoln County
divorce,
legal separation and
annulment kits also include them. (More on filing
your divorce in
Lincoln County
Superior Court and avoiding a court appearance and
parenting classes as required by all other Washington
State Counties).
| In the morning, a clerk
brings bins and mailbags from the post office full
of new filings for dissolution of marriage. In his
office one floor up, Superior Court Judge Philip
Borst gets writer's cramp signing final decrees
in marathons that can last six hours or more.
|
| This is the quickie-divorce
capital of Washington. It is one of the few counties
in the nation where marriages can be dissolved by
mail without a court appearance. |
| Paralegals and attorneys
from across the state swamp County Clerk Peggy Semprimoznik's
office each week with filings for Washington state
residents desiring to shed their spouses more quickly
and inexpensively than they can in the counties
where they live. |
| To read the entire article,
go:
Article from CNN.com |
[back to top]
-
What are the filing fees in Washington State for a parenting
plan?
[back to top]
-
What
are the cost of parenting classes in Washington State?
[back to top]
-
What is a marital
dissolution in Washington State?
-
In Washington State a marital dissolution is another
word for divorce - it is a court action that you may
file to end your marriage. In Washington State the term
“marital dissolution” is used rather than "divorce."
In most situations, if you are legally married according
to the laws of the state or country in which you were
married; your marriage will be recognized as legal in
the State of Washington.
- Washington State has "no fault" dissolution -- you
do not need to prove that either spouse was "at fault"
in order to get a divorce. One party only has to claim
there is irreconcilable differences (you no longer get
along with each other).
[back to top]
-
What is the difference between marital dissolution and
legal separation in Washington State?
-
In Washington State a legal separation, the court
may grant all of the relief that is available in a marital
dissolution but the court does not actually end the
marriage (in other words, the couple is not divorced
at the end). Sometimes persons will choose to file for
a legal separation instead of a divorce because they
do not want to end the marriage, but they want the other
relief (such as property and debt division) that is
available through a formal legal separation. This may
be the case, for example, where a person's religious
beliefs discourage him from filing for dissolution.
-
There are a few important facts about Washington
State legal separation that you should keep in mind
if you are thinking about filing one:
- In Washington State you do not need to file
a petition for legal separation before filing for
marital dissolution. If you want to make sure that
you are not responsible for debts your spouse may
create after one of you moves out of the house,
you should file a marital dissolution and a motion
for temporary orders.
- In Washington State, if you file a legal separation,
but your spouse files a counter-petition asking
for a marital dissolution, the court will probably
enter a marital dissolution. This is because only
one spouse must show that there are irreconcilable
differences between the spouses in order to get
a dissolution.
- In Washington State, if you file a legal separation,
but you later change your mind and want a marital
dissolution, you will need to file and serve a new
petition for dissolution (unless your spouse has
cross-petitioned for a dissolution) or wait the
six months required and file a Motion and Order
to Convert (see below.)
- In Washington State, if the court enters a legal
separation decree, the legal separation can be easily
changed to a marital dissolution. Keep in mind that,
once the court enters a decree of legal separation,
your spouse can turn it into a divorce without your
consent. Any time after six months have passed after
entry of the decree of legal separation, either
spouse may file a motion with the court to change
the decree of legal separation to a decree of dissolution.
The court must grant the request. All of the other
parts of your legal separation orders (such as the
parenting plan and order of child support) will
not be affected and will stay in effect.
[back to top]
-
May I get an annulment instead of a divorce in Washington
State?
-
There is no legal action called an "annulment" in
Washington State. There is a little-used action called
a petition for a declaration of invalidity, which is
like an annulment in that it declares that the marriage
was void (could not legally exist) from the day it started.
There are very limited circumstances in which you can
have your marriage declared invalid.
-
A Washington State Court can declare a marriage invalid
if it decides that the parties should never have been
married because:
- one or both parties were underage (under 17);
- lack of required parental or court approval
for persons under age 18;
- one or both parties was already married when
the marriage took place;
- the parties are too closely related by blood;
- one spouse lacked capacity to consent to the
marriage (could not give consent), either because
of mental incapacity or because of the influence
of alcohol or drugs;
- a party was induced to enter into the marriage
by force or duress, or by fraud involving the essentials
of marriage.
-
Even if the court finds one of the six factors, the
court will declare the marriage valid unless the petitioner
also proves that the parties have not "ratified" their
marriage (showed that they wanted to continue the marriage)
by voluntarily continuing to live together as husband
and wife after turning 18, or after having the ability
to consent, or after the force or duress stopped or
the fraud was discovered. In addition, only the spouse
who was the victim of force or fraud may petition for
a declaration of invalidity.
[back to top]
-
What if I reconcile with my spouse after the decree
of legal separation has been ordered by a Washington State
Court?
[back to top]
-
How important is timing such as who files first for
divorce or legal separation in Washington State?
- In Washington State the party who files first is
listed as the "petitioner," the other party participates
in the divorce as the "respondent." Under Washington
law, the person to file first should receive no advantage.
However, the person filing first certainly has options
that the other party doesn't. For instance, the filing
party can control when the first court hearing will
occur and has a great influence on what issues will
be addressed. The filing party is the first to be able
to request "ex-parte" relief from the court and often
has the option of where the case where be litigated.
[back
to top]
-
Are
there any residency requirements for a Washington State
divorce, legal separation or annulment?
- You and your spouse do not both have to live in
Washington State in order for you to be able to file
for marital dissolution in Washington. You may file
a marital dissolution in Washington State, IF:
- You live in Washington State; OR
- Your spouse lives in Washington State; OR
- You are a member of the armed forces stationed
in Washington State; OR
- Your spouse is a member of the armed forces
stationed in Washington State AND your spouse will
continue to be stationed in Washington State for
at least ninety (90) days following the date that
you file and serve the marital dissolution.
[back to top]
-
What if one spouse has never lived in Washington State?
- In order for the Washington State court to make
certain types of orders, Washington must have personal
jurisdiction over the responding spouse (the one who
did not file the dissolution).
- Washington State generally will have jurisdiction
over the respondent if:
- The respondent lives in Washington State;
- The respondent lived in Washington State at
some point during your marriage;
- One of your children was conceived in Washington
State;
- You (the petitioner) have continued to live,
or be stationed in the armed forces, in Washington
State.
-
If you are the responding spouse and you have never
lived in Washington State, Washington State will not
have personal jurisdiction over you unless you do something
to give Washington State jurisdiction over you. If Washington
State does not have personal jurisdiction over the responding
spouse, the Washington State court cannot order that
spouse to pay maintenance or any debts, or divide any
property that is not physically in Washington State.
However, the petitioning spouse may still be able to
obtain a divorce even if property issues will not be
heard because of lack of personal jurisdiction over
the responding spouse. You may agree to Washington State
having jurisdiction over you if you would like to do
so.
[back to top]
-
What if
I cannot find my spouse?
- In Washington State, if you are not able to locate
your spouse, you may still be able to file a marital
dissolution and serve your spouse by publication. If
you serve your spouse by publication, you may ask the
Washington State court to end your marriage and divide
any property and debts that are located in Washington
State. You should think carefully before relying on
service by publication, however. First, if you serve
your spouse by publication, you must follow the rules
for service very carefully - if you do not, your court
orders could be set aside years later. Second, service
by publication does not give a Washington State court
personal jurisdiction over your spouse unless you can
prove that your spouse is hiding either inside or outside
Washington State in order to avoid being served, or
to avoid paying debts. If the Washington State court
does not have personal jurisdiction over your spouse,
you will not be able to ask the court to order maintenance
or enter restraining orders.
[back to top]
-
In which Washington State county should my divorce,
legal separation or annulment be filed?
- You may file a petition for dissolution of marriage
in the county where you live, or in the county where
the respondent lives. If the case is filed in the county
where one spouse lives, and the other spouse wants to
move the case to the county where she lives, the court
may (but is not required to) change venue. There is
also the option of filing in
Lincoln County
(no matter which county in Washington either party resides)
where everything is filed through the mail and no court
appearance is required.
| In the morning, a clerk
brings bins and mailbags from the post office full
of new filings for dissolution of marriage. In his
office one floor up, Superior Court Judge Philip
Borst gets writer's cramp signing final decrees
in marathons that can last six hours or more.
|
| This is the quickie-divorce
capital of Washington. It is one of the few counties
in the nation where marriages can be dissolved by
mail without a court appearance. |
| Paralegals and attorneys
from across the state swamp County Clerk Peggy Semprimoznik's
office each week with filings for Washington state
residents desiring to shed their spouses more quickly
and inexpensively than they can in the counties
where they live. |
| To read the entire article,
go:
Article from CNN.com |
[back to top]
-
How long will
my divorce take in Washington State?
- In Washington State you must wait at least 90 days
after you filed the marital dissolution and you have
served it on your spouse before you may enter final
orders. However, marital dissolutions often take longer
than 90 days. If your spouse responds and does not agree
with everything in your petition, the amount of time
that will pass until your case is finished will depend
on your county and how complicated your case is. In
some counties, such as King County, the court will give
you the date for your trial at the beginning of the
case. In most other counties, you will need to file
a request that the court set a trial date after the
other parent has filed a response. If you filed the
papers in
Lincoln County and the respondent either signed
(agreed) the papers or did not file a response, then
the final papers are sent in approximately 1 week before
the 90 days is up and thereafter the Judge will sign
the final documents.
[back to top]
-
Who decides who gets property and who pays debts?
- In a Washington State divorce, each spouse must
tell the court about all of his or her property and
debts - separate and community. The court must divide
all of the spouses' property and debts in the Decree
of Dissolution. Washington State is a community property
state. Generally, in Washington State, all property
that either spouse gets during the marriage is community
property and belongs to both spouses. If property, such
as a house, other real estate or a car, is purchased
during the marriage, the property is probably community
property even if only one spouse is on the title.
Each spouse's earnings, any pension benefits accrued,
and any 401(k) contributions made during the marriage
are community property. Separate property (which belongs
to only one spouse) generally is property that the spouse
got before the marriage, or which was given to that
person by inheritance or gift (whether before or during
the marriage), or which the spouse got after separation.
(However, if you lived together in a stable relationship
before your marriage, the property and earnings that
you had during the time that you lived together may
also be considered community property). Generally, all
debts created by either spouse during the marriage are
community debts, which both spouses are equally responsible
for paying. Separate debts are those that are made before
the marriage or after the date of separation.
[back to top]
-
When we divorce, will the court divide all of our property
and debts 50/50??
-
In Washington State, the court is not required to
award one spouse's separate property to that spouse,
or to divide the community property 50/50.
-
In Washington State, the court can make any division
of property and debts that is just and equitable, after
considering:
- The nature and extent [The nature of the property
means what type of property it is (real estate,
cars, household items, etc). The extent means how
much property there is or how much it is worth.]
of the community property;
- The nature and extent of the separate property;
- The duration of the marriage; and
- The economic circumstances of each spouse at
the time the division of property is to become effective.
[back to top]
-
How does the court decide what is a just and equitable
division of property and debts?
-
In Washington State, how much property the court
awards to each spouse, and who is ordered to pay what
debts, will depend on a number of factors.
-
In Washington State, the main factor the court will
consider is in what type of financial condition will
the division of property and debts leave each spouse
after divorce. The court generally will not want to
leave one spouse extremely wealthy and the other poor.
[However, if the marriage is very short (less than five
years), and there are no children, the court may decide
to return the parties to the financial condition they
had before the marriage, even if that means that one
spouse ends up much better off.] The court will consider
issues such as each party's age, health, education,
and prospects for employment. Thus, for example, in
a long-term marriage in which one spouse has not worked
much outside the home, the court is more likely to award
that spouse more of the community property (or long-term
maintenance) to make sure that spouse does not end up
much poorer than the other spouse. Or, if one
spouse is disabled and will not be able to work, the
court may award the disabled spouse more of the community
property. Likewise, the court may consider which spouse
will be able to afford to pay the debts after dissolution
when deciding who must pay them.
-
In most cases, the court will award each spouse his
or her separate property and order each spouse to pay
his or her separate debts. The court will award one
spouse's separate property or separate debts to the
other spouse only in very unusual circumstances.
[back to top]
-
What if I have a prenuptial contract or community property
agreement?
-
Some people sign a written agreement before they
marry that states how the parties' property and debts
will be divided if they should divorce. This is often
known as a prenuptial or ante nuptial agreement. Other
people sign an agreement during the marriage regarding
their property, which states which property is community
and what is separate. This is known as a Community Property
Agreement. These are sometimes completed as part of
an estate plan. Still others may sign an agreement after
they separate that divides property and debts - an agreement
known as a Property Settlement Agreement or Separation
Contract. In Washington State, this type of contract
or agreement may (but does not always) determine how
the court will divide property and debts in your particular
case.
[back to top]
-
I bought our car and most other property with my income,
so shouldn't the court award the car and other property
to me?
-
Not necessarily. If your car and other property were
purchased with money earned during the marriage, it
is community property. Each spouse's income during the
marriage is community property, so anything that you
buy with either spouse's income belongs to both of you.
It does not matter whose paycheck was used. In Washington
State, the court will divide the car and other property
according to what the court decides is just and equitable
overall.
[back to top]
-
My spouse owned our house before our marriage, but we
both paid the mortgage. Shouldn't I get part of the house?
-
Maybe. In Washington State, the court may award you
an interest in the house (sometimes called an equitable
lien), depending upon a number of factors. Because your
spouse bought the house before your marriage, the house
is your spouse's separate property. Therefore, the house
remains separate, even after you marry (unless the house
is given as a gift to the community, such as could happen
if it is refinanced in both spouse's names). You may
be entitled to an interest in the increase in any value
due to improvements (such as a remodel or new deck)
to the house, plus the community payments toward the
mortgage. However, your community interest would be
reduced by the reasonable rental value of the house
because you had the benefit of living there during the
marriage. Thus, in some cases, the court could rule
that you have no community interest in the house because
your community contributions were offset by the value
you got from living there.
[back to top]
-
I think we need to sell our house, but my spouse disagrees.
Can the court order us to sell the house?
[back to top]
-
Is it true that I have no right to my husband's pension
because he earned it?
-
Not necessarily. In Washington State, retirement
or pension benefits, including 401(k) plans that are
earned during the marriage, are community property in
which both spouses have a legal interest. If a pension
was earned both before and during the marriage, the
portion of the pension earned during the marriage (and
the increase in value of that portion) is community
property. Some disability benefits that substitute for
pension benefits may also be community property in which
both spouses have an interest. You may be able
to get an order entered, called a Qualified Domestic
Relations Order (QDRO), under which your spouse's pension
plan will pay benefits directly to you after your spouse
retires.
[back to top]
-
My spouse had an affair that caused our divorce. Since
the divorce is my spouse's fault, shouldn't the court give
me more of the property?
-
No. Because Washington State has "no fault" divorce,
the court may not consider which spouse "caused" the
dissolution when deciding how to divide the property.
However, the court may consider the conduct of the other
spouse if that spouse wasted assets from the marriage
without the other spouse's consent, or if that spouse
tried to hide assets from the court.
[back to top]
-
Since I'm not working right now, will the court order
my spouse to pay me alimony?
-
Maybe. In Washington State maintenance, or alimony,
is a payment that one spouse makes to the other to provide
financial support. Maintenance is not automatically
awarded to either spouse.
-
The court looks at several factors in deciding whether
a spouse should get maintenance, including:
- length of the marriage;
- financial situation of both spouses given the
division of property and debts, and the other spouse's
ability to pay maintenance;
- time it will take for the spouse asking for
maintenance to get education or training;
- standard of living during the marriage; and
- Age and health of the spouse asking for maintenance.
-
If you have been unemployed for a long time (such
as may be the case if you stayed home to care for the
children), the court may be more likely to award you
maintenance than if you have been laid off temporarily.
On the other hand, even if the spouse seeking maintenance
is capable of working (or is working to support him
or herself), the court may still award maintenance to
that spouse if awarding maintenance will help that spouse
enjoy the standard of living that was usual during the
marriage. The court uses maintenance "not just as a
means of providing bare necessities, but rather a flexible
tool by which the parties' standard of living may be
equalized for an appropriate period of time." Long term
or permanent maintenance is more likely to be ordered
after long marriages and if one spouse is disabled and/or
stayed home to care for the children while the other
worked and is therefore less likely to be able to get
a well-paying job. Unless the Decree of Dissolution
states otherwise, maintenance payments end when the
person receiving the payments remarries or dies.
[back to top]
[back to top]
Services for all
Washington Counties,
including Lincoln County.
Download a list of
available in-office and online services.
View with
Adobe or with
Word.
| In the morning, a clerk
brings bins and mailbags from the post office full
of new filings for dissolution of marriage. In his
office one floor up, Superior Court Judge Philip
Borst gets writer's cramp signing final decrees
in marathons that can last six hours or more.
|
| This is the quickie-divorce
capital of Washington. It is one of the few counties
in the nation where marriages can be dissolved by
mail without a court appearance. |
| Paralegals and attorneys
from across the state swamp County Clerk Peggy Semprimoznik's
office each week with filings for Washington state
residents desiring to shed their spouses more quickly
and inexpensively than they can in the counties
where they live. |
| To read the entire article,
go:
Article from CNN.com |
Washington State Online Divorce, Legal
Separation & Annulment Services
No Costly Attorney Fees!
Does not include court filing fees!
|
|
|
No Children |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $144.95 |
No court appearance! |
|
With Children |
List Price: $299.00 |
Our Price: $194.95 |
No court appearance and
no parenting classes! |
Washington State In-Office Divorce,
Legal Separation & Annulment Services
No Costly Attorney Fees!
Does not include court filing fees!
|
|
 |
No Children |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $168.50 |
No court appearance! |
|
With Children |
List Price: $299.00 |
Our Price: $249.00 |
No court appearance and
no parenting classes! |
| Washington State In-Office Establishing
or Modification of Custody, Support, Parenting
Services.
No Costly Attorney Fees!
Does not include court filing fees!
|
|
 |
Custody or Parenting
Services |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $150.00 |
Court appearance required
unless you file in Lincoln County. |
|
Modification of
Child Support |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $150.00 |
Court appearance required
unless you file in Lincoln County. |
Washington State Online Modification
of Custody, Support, Parenting Services
No Costly Attorney Fees!
Does not include court filing fees!
|
|
 |
Establishing |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $150.00 |
Court appearance required
unless you file in Lincoln County. |
|
Modification |
List Price: $199.00 |
Our Price: $150.00 |
Court appearance required
unless you file in Lincoln County. |
[back to top]
Download a list of
available in-office and online services.
View with
Adobe or with
Word.
Annulment
(Declaration Of Invalidity) Kit, With or
Without Children
Washington StateBy Paralegal Amy L. Wishart & Attorney
Thomas A. Prediletto
|
Purchase one of these Washington State kits by Do
It Yourself Documents and if you find yourself overwhelmed
and decide you do not want to complete your
annulment yourself, we will credit you your
costs plus $10.00 towards our online or in-office
annulment service plus any additional discount we
may be offering. This offer is good for downloadable
versions only. |
 |
Lincoln County |
List Price: $58.95 |
Our Price: $38.95 |
No court appearance, no
parenting classes and no costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
 |
All
Counties |
List Price: $41.95 |
Our Price: $28.95 |
Parenting classes required
if you have dependent children! Court appearance
required! No costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
Washington
State Legal Separation Kit, With or
Without Children
By Paralegal Amy L. Wishart
& Attorney Thomas A. Prediletto
|
Purchase one of these Washington State legal separation
kits by Do It Yourself Documents and if you find
yourself overwhelmed and decide you do not
want to complete your legal separation yourself,
we will credit you your costs plus $10.00
towards our online or in-office legal separation
service plus any additional discount we may be offering.
This offer is good for downloadable versions only. |
 |
Lincoln County, Washington State |
List Price: $58.95 |
Our Price: $38.95 |
No court appearance, no
parenting classes and no costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
 |
Other Washington State Counties |
List Price: $41.95 |
Our Price: $28.95 |
Parenting classes required
if you have dependent children! Court appearance
required! No costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
Washington State
Divorce (Dissolution) Kit, No Children
By Paralegal Amy L. Wishart
& Attorney Thomas A. Prediletto
|
Purchase one of these Washington State divorce kits
by Do It Yourself Documents and if you find yourself
overwhelmed and decide you do not want to
complete your divorce yourself, we will credit
you your costs plus $10.00 towards our online or
in-office divorce service plus any additional discount
we may be offering. This offer is good for
downloadable versions only. |
 |
Lincoln County, Washington State |
List Price: $51.95 |
Our Price: $31.95 |
No court appearance and
no costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
 |
Other Washington State Counties |
List Price: $34.95 |
Our Price: $21.95 |
No costly attorney fees!
Court appearance required! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
Washington
State Divorce (Dissolution) Kit, With Children
By Paralegal Amy L. Wishart
& Attorney Thomas A. Prediletto
|
Purchase one of these Washington State divorce kits
by Do It Yourself Documents and if you find yourself
overwhelmed and decide you do not want to
complete your divorce yourself, we will credit
you your costs plus $10.00 towards our online or
in-office divorce service plus any additional discount
we may be offering. This offer is good for
downloadable versions only. |
 |
Lincoln County, Washington State |
List Price: $58.95 |
Our Price: $38.95 |
No court appearance, no
parenting classes and no costly attorney fees! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
 |
Other Washington State Counties |
List Price: $41.95 |
Our Price: $28.95 |
No costly attorney fees!
Court appearance and parenting classes required! |
| With Instructions!
Available by mail or by download! |
 |
Download a list of available in-office
and online services. View with
Adobe or with
Word. |
At Do It Yourself Documents, our goal is
to be a complete one-stop independent paralegal
resource center for all your needs, whether
it is an annulment, divorce, bankruptcy, business
formation, custody, estate planning, legal separation,
Parenting, probate, real estate, landlord-tenant,
or any other matter that does not require the
hiring of an attorney.
At Do It Yourself Documents, we have always
been dedicated to offering the best forms, books
and kits on the market at the lowest price possible.
Do It Yourself Documents carries the top name
brands from all of the leading publishers nationally,
regionally, and state-by-state. Do It Yourself
Documents offers online services for Washington
State divorce, legal separation, and annulment
and plan to add the other states soon. We also
offer nationwide online services for Chapter
7 Bankruptcy, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, and Emergency
Bankruptcies. So browse our website or visit
us at our store/office in Federal Way or office's
in Renton or Tacoma, Washington to see our endless
list of discounted products and services we
offer and see if we are not the one-stop paralegal
resource center for you! To view our Federal
Way, Renton & Tacoma, Washington in-offices
services,
click here!
|
|
In-Office
Services
Federal Way, Washington - Office/Store
Renton, Washington - Office
Tacoma, Washington - Office
|
- Amendments to Chapter 7
- Amendments to Chapter 13
- Annulment
- Bankruptcy Chapter 7
- Bankruptcy Chapter 13
- Basic Estate Planning
- Business Formation
- Custody
- Divorce (Dissolution)
- Document Assistance
- Emergency Bankruptcy Petition
Chapter 7
- Emergency Bankruptcy Petition
Chapter 13
- Estate Planning (Attorney
Reviewed)
- Legal Separation
- Living Will
- Modification of Child Custody
- Modification of Child Support
- Modification of Parenting Plan
- Notary Services
- Parentage
- Power of Attorney
- Probate
- Trust
- Will
|
|
|
Links to Washington State Counties
|
Adams County, Washington State |
Asotin County, Washington State |
Benton County, Washington State |
Chelan County, Washington State |
|
Clallam County, Washington State |
Clark County, Washington State |
Columbia County, Washington State |
Cowlitz County, Washington State |
|
Douglas County, Washington State |
Ferry County, Washington State |
F | | |