Which route is right for you?

FairWell vs. everything else.

An honest comparison of every way to handle a separation, costs, timelines, what each option actually delivers, and when to use which.

We're not going to pretend FairWell is right for every situation. It isn't. Some separations genuinely need a lawyer in the room. This page will help you figure out which one yours is.
The cost reality

What it actually costs.
Per spouse, in practice.

These are real ranges from Canadian and US family law averages, not best-case estimates. Complexity, jurisdiction, and how cooperative both parties are all affect the final number.

Contested Litigation
$15K–$100K+
per spouse · 1–3 years
Collaborative Divorce
$8K–$25K
per spouse · 6–18 months
Mediation
$3K–$10K
per couple · 3–12 months
FairWell + Lawyer Review
$500–$2K
per couple · days to weeks

Canadian and US averages. Costs vary by jurisdiction, complexity, and level of conflict. Source: Canadian Bar Association, American Bar Association family law surveys.

Route 1

FairWell vs.
Hiring a family lawyer.

A family lawyer is the right choice when there's genuine legal complexity, significant contested assets, or abuse or safety concerns involved. For most separating couples, it's a very expensive way to handle what is fundamentally an information and drafting problem.

Factor FairWell + Lawyer Review Full Representation (2 lawyers)
Typical cost per couple$500 – $2,000$30,000 – $200,000+
TimelineDays to a few weeks6 months to 3 years
Document qualityCustom-drafted from your actual terms by our specialist system, reviewed and signed off by a qualified family lawyerLawyer-drafted, reviewed by opposing counsel, typically thorough but expensive
Control over termsHigh, you define the terms, FairWell structures themModerate, your lawyer advocates, but negotiation is indirect and slow
Emotional impactLower, less adversarial by designHigh, litigation is inherently adversarial and escalates conflict
Best forCooperative to moderately conflicted separations, with or without children, across all asset levelsGenuinely contested disputes, safety concerns, significant business or international assets
Lawyer involvementOne lawyer per party for ILA and sign-off, typically 1–2 hours eachOngoing hourly billing throughout the entire process

Use FairWell when:

  • Both parties can communicate, even if imperfectly
  • There's no active safety or abuse concern
  • You want to understand your situation before spending on lawyers
  • The separation is cooperative to moderately difficult
  • You want to control the outcome and timeline
  • You have children and want a parenting plan built collaboratively

Use a lawyer directly when:

  • There's domestic violence or abuse in the relationship
  • One party is hiding assets or refusing financial disclosure
  • International assets or cross-border custody are involved
  • A business valuation is actively contested
  • Court proceedings are already underway
  • One party refuses to engage at all

Use both when:

  • FairWell handles the drafting and financial organization
  • A lawyer reviews and advises on your specific document
  • You attend ILA as a prepared, informed client
  • You save 80–90% of typical lawyer costs
  • The agreement is signed off by qualified counsel
Route 2

FairWell vs.
DIY templates.

A $29 template is tempting. It's also one of the most expensive decisions you can make. Agreements that don't hold up get challenged. Challenged agreements cost $20,000–$80,000 to fix in court.

Factor FairWell DIY Template
Upfront cost$179 – $999$0 – $49
Total risk-adjusted cost$500 – $2,000 (with lawyer review)$0–$49 upfront, $20K–$80K if it fails
Jurisdiction-specificYes, province and state logic built inRarely, most templates are generic or US-only
Built from your actual termsYes, every detail comes from your specific situation, not a generic templateNo, you fill blanks into a standard form
Catches common errorsYes, flagged during intake and document reviewNo, errors aren't visible until challenged
Lawyer-readyYes, structured for efficient ILA reviewOften not, lawyers frequently reject or heavily revise
EnforceabilityHigh, when reviewed by qualified counselLow to moderate, commonly challenged successfully
Guidance on what's negotiableBuilt into the processNone, you're entirely on your own
The hidden cost of a cheap template

A separation agreement drafted without jurisdictional knowledge, proper financial disclosure, and clear language around contested terms is not a document, it's a liability. Courts across Canada and the United States routinely set aside DIY agreements for procedural failures that proper guidance prevents. The $29 you save becomes the $40,000 you spend later.

Route 3

FairWell vs.
Mediation.

Mediation and FairWell are not competing options, they work best together. If you need mediation, FairWell makes it significantly cheaper and more productive. If you're already cooperating, you may not need mediation at all.

Factor FairWell (+ Mediation Prep if needed) Mediation (without FairWell)
Typical cost$199 – $1,348 (FairWell) + mediator if needed$3,000 – $10,000 per couple for mediator fees alone
Mediator involvementOptional add-on for specific contested issuesRequired for all sessions, billed hourly
Preparation qualityHighly structured, both parties arrive with organized financials, ranked priorities, and a BATNA on each issueTypically low, parties often arrive unprepared, wasting expensive session time
Sessions requiredFewer, organized clients resolve issues fasterMore, disorganized clients often need 4–8+ sessions
Document outputFull lawyer-ready agreement drafted from your actual termsMemorandum of Understanding, still needs to be drafted into a formal agreement separately
Best use casePrimary process for cooperative to moderately conflicted separationsSpecific contested issues where both parties need a neutral third party to reach agreement

The most effective combination

Use FairWell first. Organize your finances, understand your options, and build the agreement framework. If specific issues, the house, a business, a custody schedule, can't be resolved between you, add a mediator for just those sessions.

Our Mediation Prep Package is specifically designed for this: you arrive at your first mediator session with your priorities ranked, your BATNA documented on each issue, and a clear agenda. Mediators consistently report that prepared clients reach agreements 60–70% faster.

Your decision

Not sure which route fits?
Answer four questions.

Your honest answers will point you in the right direction. This isn't a sales funnel, we'll tell you if you need a lawyer directly.

01
Is there active domestic violence or abuse?
If yes → Get a lawyer immediately. FairWell is not the right tool when safety is at risk.
02
Is your ex hiding assets or refusing to disclose finances?
If yes → A lawyer can compel disclosure through court. FairWell can't do that.
03
Are there international assets, business valuations, or cross-border custody issues?
If yes → FairWell can still help you organise, but you need specialist legal input on those specific issues.
04
Can you both communicate, even if it's difficult?
If yes → FairWell is almost certainly the right starting point. You'll save significant money and reduce the time and conflict it takes to reach an agreement.
Common questions

Comparison FAQ

No, and we're clear about this. FairWell produces structured, lawyer-ready documents. Those documents need to be reviewed by a qualified family lawyer in your province or state before you rely on them. What FairWell eliminates is most of the billable time before that review: gathering financials, drafting from scratch, basic legal education. The lawyer review becomes 1–2 hours instead of 20–40.
Yes. Asset complexity affects which products you use and how much lawyer review time you need, it doesn't change whether FairWell is appropriate. A couple with a house, two pensions, shared investments, and a business can use FairWell to organize all of that and produce a comprehensive draft. What changes is that you'll likely want more than just a basic ILA review, you may want a lawyer's input on specific valuations or pension splitting. FairWell reduces the cost of that engagement significantly.
The solo Agreement Builder ($999) is designed for exactly this. You complete your intake independently. The document reflects your terms and financial disclosure. Disputed items are flagged. Your partner doesn't have to participate in FairWell, they participate in the negotiation and sign-off process, with or without their own lawyer. Many people use FairWell to understand their position before any negotiation begins.
Most online divorce services are glorified form-fillers. They populate a fixed template with your details and output a document. FairWell generates an agreement from your actual inputs, your specific financial figures, your agreed terms, your parenting arrangements, and produces a document that reflects your situation, not a standard form. The difference is significant when a lawyer reviews it. Template documents typically require extensive revision; FairWell documents typically need minimal modification.
They serve different functions. FairWell gives you a structured framework for reaching agreement. Mediation gives you a neutral third party to facilitate when you can't reach agreement between yourselves. They work best together: use FairWell to organize and narrow the issues, then use a mediator only for the specific ones you can't resolve. This is significantly cheaper than entering mediation unprepared and working through everything in session.

Start with the free assessment.
Know where you stand.

15 minutes. No credit card. Get a personalized roadmap and financial snapshot, then decide which route makes sense for your situation.

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