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Home·Resources· Divorce Preparation Checklist

Pittsburgh Divorce Preparation Checklist

Six phases.  Eighty-five items.  Saves automatically.

An attorney-prepared checklist for preparing to file divorce in Allegheny County. Your progress saves automatically as you check items off, so you can return as your situation develops. Print or share with counsel when you're ready.

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Contact Us 412.303.9566

About the Practice

About Scott Levine Why Clients Choose Us Our Practice Differences Client Reviews Recognitions & Awards Office: Bakery Square / East End

Divorce

Divorce Overview Uncontested Divorce High-Asset Divorce Divorce Process Guide How Much Does Divorce Cost? Divorce Hearing Officers Allegheny County Divorce Procedures What Affects Divorce Outcomes What Happens to Debt Separation Prenuptial Agreements For Pittsburgh Professionals International Divorce Divorce & Immigration Same-Sex Divorce

Property & Settlement

Equitable Distribution Equitable Distribution Hearing Marital Settlement Agreements The Marital Home Divorce with Children Post-Divorce Planning Name Change Retirement Accounts Dividing a Business Protecting Assets Must I Leave the Marital Home?

Child Custody

Custody Overview Emergency Custody Custody Modification Relocation Grandparent Rights Paternity Custody Conciliation Strategic Filing Moving Out & Custody PA Custody Laws 2026

Support & Alimony

Spousal Support & Alimony Child Support Support Calculator Guide Complex & High-Income Support Modification Modification Procedure Support Enforcement Support Conference Is Alimony Taxable? How Long Alimony Lasts

Protection from Abuse

PFA Defense PFA for Plaintiffs PFA Hearing Process Temporary PFA Orders Leaving Abusive Marriage

Mediation & Collaborative

Divorce Mediation Collaborative Law

Tools & Worksheets

Divorce Preparation Checklist Divorce Cost Calculator Separation vs. Divorce Guide Date of Separation Calculator Equitable Distribution Worksheet Spousal Support & APL Estimator Child Support Calculator Custody Schedule Visualizer Custody Planning Worksheet Parenting Plan Template

Resources & FAQ

Divorce FAQ Does Cheating Affect Divorce? What Does Support Cover? Do I Need a Lawyer? Ex Won't Follow Order? Can Spouse Take Kids? All Resources Family Law Topics What to Expect in Court Contact Blog (80+ Articles)
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Before You Begin

Make Sure Divorce Is the Right Choice — and That Pennsylvania Is the Right Place to File

A few threshold questions resolve themselves before any document gets filed. Working through them now saves time, money, and second-guessing later.

Pennsylvania Residency. At least one spouse must have resided in Pennsylvania for the six months immediately preceding the filing. The case is filed in the county where either spouse lives. Most of our cases are filed in Allegheny County.

Threshold Decisions

Several have downstream consequences. Work through them before retaining counsel.

The most expensive divorces are usually the most reactive ones — filed in haste, without documentation, without a sense of where the matter is likely to land. Time spent preparing now compresses time and cost later. This is true whether the case ends up settling at the kitchen table or at a Divorce Hearing Officer conciliation.


Phase 1

Financial Preparation

Pennsylvania equitable distribution turns on a complete picture of marital assets, debts, and income. The work of gathering documentation is unglamorous and decisive — settlements track the strength of the financial presentation.

Income Documentation

For both spouses, where accessible. Self-employed and equity-compensated spouses require additional records.

Asset Documentation

Title and date of acquisition matter for separating marital from non-marital property under 23 Pa.C.S. § 3501.

Debt Documentation

Marital debt is divided alongside marital assets. Documentation is the same work, the other direction.

Insurance Information
Financial Protection Steps

Prudent baseline measures while the case is being prepared. None aggressive.

For high-asset matters — closely held businesses, professional practices, executive compensation packages, significant real estate holdings — the document gathering deepens substantially. We work through this with clients during early case planning and can identify what financial experts (forensic accountants, business valuators, vocational experts) the matter is likely to require. See our high-asset divorce and protecting assets pages for context.


Phase 2

Legal Preparation

Choosing counsel is the single most consequential decision in a divorce. The right attorney for one matter is not the right attorney for another. Match the practice to the problem.

Choosing Allegheny County Counsel

Things to evaluate before retaining.

Documents to Locate Before the First Meeting

The first call. The practice has provided free phone consultations for nearly two decades. The first call is for understanding your situation and what your options actually look like — not pressure, not a sales script. If we're not the right fit for the matter, we'll say so. 412.303.9566.


Phase 3

Children & Family Considerations

Where children are involved, custody and support travel alongside the divorce. The documentation work overlaps with financial preparation; the strategic work is its own discipline.

Documents to Gather for Each Child
Documenting Parenting Involvement

Custody decisions in Allegheny County turn on the statutory factors. Documentation of who has actually been doing the parenting work matters more than asserted preferences.

Custody Best-Interest Factors — Dual Framework. Allegheny County applies two statutory frameworks depending on filing date. Cases filed on or after August 29, 2025 are governed by the streamlined twelve-factor test under Act 11 of 2025. Cases filed before that date proceed under the prior sixteen-factor framework. Both frameworks remain operative for active matters. See PA custody laws for the current treatment, or work through our custody planning worksheet.

Children's Needs During the Process

Phase 4

Practical Considerations

Where you live, how you communicate with the other spouse, and what you document during the period before filing all shape what happens after.

Living Arrangements

Pennsylvania does not require physical separation before filing. Many spouses continue to live in the marital home during the proceedings. See our discussion of leaving the marital home.

Communication Protocols
Organizational System

Phase 5

Allegheny County Procedure

Filing and process specifics in Allegheny County. Two buildings carry most of the work: the City-County Building at 414 Grant Street, where divorce filings and Divorce Hearing Officer conciliations occur, and the Family Law Center at 440 Ross Street, which handles related family matters including PFA proceedings.

Where Things Get Filed.
Divorce, custody, and family law documents (other than support): Department of Court Records (DCR) at the City-County Building, 414 Grant Street, Floor 1 — or filed online through the DCR portal.
Support filings: Manor Building (main support prothonotary), with satellite offices in Mt. Lebanon (South Hills) and Penn Hills (East Hills), or online.
PFA filings: Family Law Center at 440 Ross Street, PFA Department directly. Filing window is 8:00 to 11:00 a.m.

Required Programs and Hearings
Discovery and Information Exchange
Settlement Posture

Most matters resolve before trial. The strength of settlement is the strength of the financial and factual presentation.


Phase 6

Finalizing & After

The final review and the post-decree work. Many practical loose ends survive the divorce decree itself.

Settlement Agreement Review
Post-Decree Updates

Some agreements require post-decree implementation work — Qualified Domestic Relations Orders for retirement transfers, property deeds, refinancing of jointly held debt. Building this into the timeline at the agreement stage avoids surprises later. See our post-divorce planning overview.


Reference

What the Timeline Usually Looks Like

Honest ranges, not best-case marketing numbers. Every matter is different; complexity, opposing counsel, and court availability all move the schedule.

Mutual Consent
3–6 months
Both spouses agree. § 3301(c) requires a 90-day waiting period after service.
Contested
12–18 months
§ 3301(d) requires a one-year separation. Equitable distribution typically resolves at DHO conciliation.
High-Conflict
2+ years
Multiple hearings, extensive discovery, expert witnesses, possible appeals.

For a more detailed walkthrough of each step, see our Pittsburgh divorce process guide. For typical cost ranges in each scenario, see our divorce cost guide or work through our divorce cost calculator.


Urgency

When to Seek Counsel Immediately

Some situations don't permit thoughtful, paced preparation. They call for an immediate phone call.

Domestic violence, threats, or coercive control. Protection from Abuse petitions are filed at the Family Law Center PFA Department directly, with a filing window of 8:00 to 11:00 a.m. See our PFA for plaintiffs page. National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233.

You've been served by the other spouse. Response deadlines run from the date of service.

Children removed or threatened with removal from Allegheny County. See emergency custody.

Significant assets being moved, hidden, or transferred. Documentation now matters; injunctive relief may be available.

You're a defendant in a Protection from Abuse petition. See PFA defense.


Related Resources

Continue Your Preparation

This checklist is intended as a preparation tool. It does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. For advice on your specific situation, contact a Pennsylvania family law attorney.
Privacy & Use of This Tool

Your data never leaves your device. This tool runs entirely in your browser. We do not save, store, transmit, view, or monitor anything you enter. Nothing is sent to the firm or any third party. There is no analytics tracking of inputs.

Do not enter sensitive identifiers. Even though the tool doesn't transmit your data, the safer practice is to avoid entering Social Security numbers, account numbers, passwords, or other sensitive personal identifiers. The tool works fine with rounded figures and approximations.

Pennsylvania-specific. Calculations, statutory references, and guidance reflect Pennsylvania law with an emphasis on Allegheny County practice. If you live or are filing in another state, consult an attorney licensed in your own jurisdiction; the outputs here will not apply to you.

Not for use at trial. These tools are educational aids designed to help users prepare for conversations with counsel. They are not intended for use as evidence at trial, in negotiation, or in any adversarial proceeding. Use them in conjunction with professional legal services from an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.

Not legal advice. This tool is educational. Using it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Pennsylvania family law — statutes, guidelines, and local rules — changes regularly; rely on advice from a licensed attorney before making any legal decision.

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