A separation agreement is a legally binding contract between two people who are ending their relationship. It settles the major questions, property, debt, support, and parenting, without going to court. When it's signed and reviewed by lawyers, it has the same practical effect as a court order for most purposes.
Most people don't know this is an option. They assume divorce means litigation. It doesn't. The majority of separating couples in North America resolve their affairs through negotiation, not trial. A separation agreement is the document that captures that resolution.
What goes into a separation agreement?
A complete separation agreement covers several areas. Property division addresses how assets accumulated during the relationship are split: the matrimonial home, savings accounts, investments, retirement funds, vehicles, and personal property. Debt division clarifies who is responsible for mortgages, credit cards, lines of credit, and any joint obligations.
If there are children, the agreement covers parenting arrangements, who has the children when, and how decisions get made, and child support, the monthly payment calculated from guideline formulas. If one spouse was economically dependent on the other, spousal support may also be addressed.
A well-drafted separation agreement anticipates the future. The best ones address not just how things are divided now, but what happens if circumstances change: a parent relocates, one partner remarries, or income changes significantly.
Does a separation agreement hold up in court?
Yes, if it's properly executed. For a separation agreement to be enforceable, both parties must have received independent legal advice before signing, both must have fully disclosed their financial circumstances, and neither party can have signed under duress or without understanding what they agreed to.
This is why FairWell always recommends that both parties have a lawyer review the agreement before signing. Not to negotiate it to pieces, just to confirm that each person understands what they're agreeing to and that the agreement meets their jurisdiction's requirements.
How long does it take?
That depends almost entirely on how aligned you and your co-parent are. Couples who communicate well and have straightforward finances can have a signed agreement within a few weeks. Couples with complex assets, businesses, or significant disagreements often take months. Contested litigation can take years.
FairWell's approach is to get the structural work done upfront: financial disclosure, clear priorities, and a working draft. That cuts the time you spend in a lawyer's office significantly.
What it costs
A contested divorce through lawyers averages $40,000 per spouse in North America. An uncontested divorce, where both parties agree on all terms, can be completed for a fraction of that. FairWell's separation agreement builder costs $499. Add two lawyer review consultations, typically $300 to $600 total, and you're still well under $1,000 for a legally enforceable agreement.
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