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AI Divorce Lawyer

Free AI divorce and family law advisor for child custody, child support calculations, alimony, and property division. Get state-specific guidance 24/7 with no appointment needed.

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What Divorce & Family Copilot Does

The Divorce & Family Copilot provides detailed, state-specific guidance on every aspect of divorce and family law proceedings. From calculating estimated child support obligations using your state's guidelines to explaining the difference between community property and equitable distribution states, this copilot gives you the knowledge that family law attorneys charge $250 to $450 per hour to explain.

Divorce affects a massive number of Americans every year. According to the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, approximately 630,000 divorces are granted annually in the United States. The American Bar Association (ABA) reports that family law is one of the most heavily litigated areas of civil law, with the majority of family court dockets consisting of divorce, custody, and support matters. The American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML) estimates that the average contested divorce costs between $15,000 and $30,000 in attorney fees alone, and complex cases involving business valuations, hidden assets, or contested custody can exceed $100,000.

Unlike generic AI tools, this copilot understands the nuances of family court. It knows that California uses an income shares model for child support (Family Code Section 4055), that Texas is a community property state but allows for "just and right" division, and that Florida eliminated permanent alimony in 2023 under SB 1416. It walks you through parenting plan requirements, explains how judges evaluate "best interests of the child" factors, and helps you understand what discovery documents you need to gather before your first hearing. The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) maintains a comprehensive database of child support guideline models by state, and the copilot applies the correct model for your jurisdiction.

The copilot can help you draft parenting plans, calculate estimated support obligations, understand property classification (separate vs. marital), and prepare for mediation sessions. It explains temporary orders, protective orders, and the timeline you should expect from filing to final decree. According to the Institute for Divorce Financial Analysts (IDFA), the number one cause of divorce in the United States is basic incompatibility (43%), followed by infidelity (28%) and money issues (22%). Regardless of the cause, the legal process follows state-specific procedures that the copilot helps you navigate.

Most uncontested divorces cost $1,500 to $3,500 in attorney fees alone. Contested cases regularly exceed $15,000 to $30,000. The Legal Services Corporation (LSC) reports that 86% of civil legal problems faced by low-income Americans receive inadequate or no legal help. This copilot helps you understand the process so you can make informed decisions about when you truly need an attorney and when you can handle steps yourself. For a broader look at how our AI copilots work across all domains, visit our How It Works page.

If you are also dealing with housing instability during separation, the Tenant Rights Copilot can help you understand your lease obligations and rights. For dividing business assets, the Business Formation Copilot can clarify entity structures and valuation basics. The Estate Planning Copilot is critical during divorce for updating wills, beneficiary designations, and powers of attorney.

family-law  - Attorney Hourly Rates
family-law - Attorney Hourly Rates

Example Conversation

Live Example

Here is a real example of Divorce & Family Copilot helping someone understand child support and custody in Texas:

You
My spouse and I are separating in Texas. We have two kids, ages 6 and 10. I make $85,000/year and my spouse makes $52,000. What should I expect for child support?
Copilot

In Texas, child support follows statutory guidelines under Texas Family Code Chapter 154. The Office of the Attorney General of Texas publishes detailed guideline information. For the higher-earning parent (the obligor) with two children, the guideline amount is 25% of net monthly resources, capped at a certain income threshold.

Here is how the calculation works for your situation:

Your gross monthly income: approximately $7,083

After estimated taxes, Social Security, and Medicare deductions, your net monthly resources are roughly $5,600 to $5,900

Guideline child support for two children: 25% of net resources

Estimated monthly obligation: approximately $1,400 to $1,475

However, several factors can adjust this amount:

1

Health insurance costs for the children are typically added on top of the base amount. Under Texas Family Code Section 154.182, the court orders one or both parents to provide health insurance, and the cost is factored into support calculations.

2

Travel expenses if parents live more than 100 miles apart

3

Special needs of either child, including medical, educational, or therapeutic expenses

4

The court can deviate from guidelines if the obligor's net resources exceed $9,200/month (the current cap, which is periodically updated per Texas Family Code Section 154.125)

Since your income falls below the cap, the guidelines will likely apply directly. The NCSL child support guidelines database confirms that Texas uses a percentage-of-income model, which is simpler than the income-shares model used by most other states.

You
What about custody? I want 50/50 but my spouse is saying she wants primary.
Copilot

Texas uses the term "conservatorship" rather than "custody." The State Bar of Texas Family Law Section provides public resources explaining this distinction. Most Texas courts start with a Standard Possession Order (SPO) outlined in Family Code Section 153.312, which gives the non-primary parent roughly 42-45% of overnights. However, 50/50 arrangements are increasingly common, especially in urban counties like Harris, Travis, and Dallas.

To support a 50/50 arrangement, you will want to demonstrate:

Geographic proximity (both parents living within the same school district helps significantly). The AAML notes that proximity is one of the strongest predictors of whether courts approve equal parenting time.

Historical involvement in daily childcare, school activities, and medical appointments. Document your participation: school pickups, doctor visits, homework help, extracurricular activities.

A workable proposed schedule (common 50/50 schedules include week-on/week-off or 2-2-3 rotations). The copilot can help you build a detailed parenting plan with provisions for holidays, school breaks, and special occasions.

Willingness to co-parent and communicate effectively. Courts increasingly use tools like OurFamilyWizard for documented co-parent communication.

Texas courts evaluate the "best interest of the child" using the Holley factors (Holley v. Adams, 1976). Key factors include each parent's plans for the child, the child's emotional and physical needs, the stability of each proposed home, and any history of family violence. According to the National Parents Organization, 35 states now have some form of presumption favoring shared parenting, reflecting a nationwide trend toward equal parenting time.

You
How long does this whole process take?
Copilot

Texas has a mandatory 60-day waiting period from the date of filing before a divorce can be finalized (Family Code Section 6.702). In practice:

Uncontested divorce (you agree on everything): 60 to 90 days. The Texas Law Help website offers free resources for filing uncontested divorces without an attorney.

Contested with mediation: 6 to 12 months. The Association for Conflict Resolution reports that mediation resolves approximately 80% of family law disputes.

Fully litigated: 12 to 24 months or longer, depending on court docket congestion and case complexity.

Texas requires mediation before trial in most counties. Mediation costs $200 to $500 per hour, typically split between parties, and sessions run 4 to 8 hours. About 80% of cases settle at mediation. According to the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution, mediated divorces cost an average of 40-60% less than fully litigated cases and resolve 3-6 months faster.

A family law attorney in Texas charges $250 to $400 per hour. An uncontested divorce with an attorney runs $1,500 to $3,000. A contested case can cost $10,000 to $50,000 or more depending on complexity. The Salary Copilot can help you understand how income changes during divorce affect support calculations.

Common Use Cases

Use CaseWhat You GetTypical Professional Cost
Child support calculationState-specific estimates using actual guideline formulas$200-$400 attorney consultation
Parenting plan draftCustomized schedule with provisions for holidays, travel, communication$500-$1,500 attorney drafting
Property division analysisCommunity vs. separate property classification guidance$300-$600 per hour attorney time
Divorce filing checklistStep-by-step filing requirements for your state and county$250-$500 initial consultation
Alimony/spousal support estimateDuration and amount estimates based on state formulas$200-$400 consultation
Mediation preparationIssue identification, position summaries, negotiation strategies$500-$1,000 attorney prep session
Modification requestsGuidance on changing existing orders due to changed circumstances$1,500-$3,000 modification filing
Prenuptial/postnuptial reviewUnderstanding enforceability and key provisions$1,000-$2,500 attorney drafting

Child support calculations are one of the most common reasons people consult this copilot. Every state uses either an income shares model (used by 41 states according to the NCSL) or a percentage of income model (used by 9 states including Texas and Wisconsin), and the formulas can be surprisingly complex once you factor in healthcare costs, daycare expenses, and split custody arrangements. The copilot walks you through your specific state's approach and helps you understand what documentation you will need. The Office of Child Support Services (OCSS) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports that approximately $34 billion in child support is collected annually through formal channels.

Property division is another area where the copilot saves significant time and money. Understanding whether your state follows community property rules (like California, Texas, Arizona, Nevada, and five other states) or equitable distribution (like New York, Florida, and most other states) fundamentally changes your strategy. The American Bar Association's Family Law Section notes that equitable distribution does not mean equal, and courts consider factors like marriage length, each spouse's earning capacity, contributions to marital property, and economic circumstances. The copilot helps you classify assets, understand valuation concepts, and identify issues like commingling or transmutation that could affect your case.

Alimony and spousal support have undergone major reforms in recent years. The AAML tracks state-by-state alimony changes, noting that Florida eliminated permanent alimony in 2023, Massachusetts implemented durational limits in 2011, and many states are moving toward formulaic calculations rather than judicial discretion. The copilot applies your state's current law to estimate duration and amount based on marriage length, income disparity, and other relevant factors. This helps you set realistic expectations before entering negotiations.

For those going through business ownership disputes during divorce, the Business Formation Copilot can help clarify entity valuation concepts. If estate planning needs arise from the separation, the Estate Planning Copilot can guide you on updating wills, beneficiaries, and powers of attorney. The Consumer Rights Copilot covers credit protection during divorce, including how to freeze joint accounts and separate credit reports.

family-law  - Custody Arrangements
family-law - Custody Arrangements

How It Works

Step 1: Describe your family situation. Tell the copilot your state, marital status, number and ages of children, income details for both parties, and the primary issues you need help with. The copilot uses this to identify which state laws and guidelines apply to your situation and tailors every response accordingly. Family law is among the most state-dependent areas of law in the United States. The American Bar Association emphasizes that every state has its own statutes, case law, and procedural requirements, making jurisdiction-specific guidance essential.

Step 2: Get state-specific legal guidance. The copilot explains the relevant statutes, court procedures, filing requirements, and timelines for your jurisdiction. It breaks down concepts like equitable distribution, parenting time calculations, and support guidelines using your actual numbers rather than generic explanations. It references specific code sections (like Texas Family Code Chapter 154 for child support or California Family Code Section 4320 for spousal support factors) so you can verify the information independently through your state's legislative website or resources like FindLaw.

Step 3: Generate documents and checklists. Based on your situation, the copilot creates parenting plan drafts, financial disclosure checklists, property classification worksheets, and preparation guides for mediation or hearings. These are tailored to your state's specific requirements and court expectations. The National Center for State Courts provides resources on self-represented litigant forms by state, and the copilot helps you understand which forms you need and how to complete them correctly.

Step 4: Prepare for next steps. The copilot helps you identify when self-representation is realistic versus when you need an attorney, what to expect at each stage of proceedings, and how to organize your documents. It provides specific questions to ask during attorney consultations so you maximize the value of paid legal time. The American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers recommends that even self-represented litigants consult an attorney for at least a one-hour review session before mediation or hearings. Visit our How It Works page to learn more about the technology behind all our copilots.

family-law  - Divorce Costs
family-law - Divorce Costs

Why Divorce & Family Copilot Beats ChatGPT

ChatGPT

State-specific child support formulasGives generic percentages without state specifics
Current law awarenessOften cites outdated or incorrect statutes
Custody terminologyMixes terminology across jurisdictions
Cost estimatesVague or absent cost information
Document generationGeneric templates that may not meet court requirements
Cross-referencingNo awareness of related legal domains
Statutory referencesRarely provides verifiable legal citations
Mediation preparationGeneric advice about being cooperative

Divorce & Family Copilot

State-specific child support formulasApplies your state's actual calculation method with current caps and deductions
Current law awarenessReferences recent changes like Florida's 2023 alimony reform (SB 1416)
Custody terminologyUses correct legal terms (conservatorship in TX, parental responsibility in FL, parenting time in CO)
Cost estimatesProvides realistic attorney and court fee ranges by region and case type
Document generationCreates state-appropriate parenting plans and financial disclosure checklists
Cross-referencingLinks to related legal copilots for connected issues (estate planning, tenant rights)
Statutory referencesCites specific code sections (Texas Family Code 154, California Family Code 4055)
Mediation preparationBuilds issue-by-issue position summaries with negotiation ranges

Family law is one of the most state-dependent areas of law in the United States. Child support formulas vary dramatically. Texas uses a flat percentage of the obligor's income. California uses a complex algebraic formula factoring in both parents' incomes and timeshare percentage. New York applies a percentage to combined parental income up to a cap, then uses judicial discretion above it. The NCSL documents 41 states using income shares, 9 using percentage of income, and 1 (DC) using a hybrid model. Getting the wrong formula does not just give you a bad estimate; it can lead you to make poor decisions about settlement negotiations.

Custody law is equally variable. Some states presume joint custody, while others start from a primary custodian model. Relocation rules, grandparent rights, and modification standards all differ. The Uniform Law Commission has proposed uniform standards through the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), adopted by all 50 states, but individual state implementations still vary significantly. The Divorce & Family Copilot understands these distinctions and applies them correctly.

Perhaps most importantly, family law changes frequently. The National Conference of State Legislatures tracks hundreds of family law bills each legislative session. Florida overhauled its alimony statutes in 2023. Kentucky adopted a presumption of equal parenting time in 2023. Several states are currently considering child support guideline revisions. ChatGPT's training data may not reflect these recent changes, while the Divorce & Family Copilot stays current. See the full comparison across all categories, or explore our complete copilot directory.

family-law  - Mediation Vs Litigation
family-law - Mediation Vs Litigation

Who Divorce & Family Copilot Is For

People considering or filing for divorce. Whether you are just starting to think about separation or have already been served with papers, this copilot helps you understand the process, timeline, and likely outcomes in your state. The American Psychological Association (APA) reports that 40-50% of marriages in the United States end in divorce, and the emotional stress of the process is compounded by legal complexity. You can explore your options privately before committing to expensive attorney consultations.

Parents navigating custody arrangements. If you need to create a parenting plan, understand how custody evaluations work, or figure out how child support is calculated, this copilot provides the specific guidance you need. The Association of Family and Conciliation Courts (AFCC) publishes research showing that children adjust best to divorce when parents can agree on consistent, predictable parenting schedules. The copilot is especially useful for parents trying to negotiate agreements outside of court.

People seeking to modify existing orders. Life changes. If you have lost a job, relocated, or your children's needs have changed, this copilot explains the legal standard for modifying support and custody orders in your state and what evidence you will need. The Office of Child Support Services reports that approximately 30% of child support orders are modified at least once, and the copilot guides you through the material change in circumstances standard that most states require.

Self-represented litigants. The National Center for State Courts reports that approximately 70-80% of family court litigants in many jurisdictions appear without an attorney. If you are handling your own case, this copilot helps you understand court procedures, document requirements, and what judges expect. It is the difference between walking into court prepared versus confused. The Legal Services Corporation emphasizes that even basic legal information access dramatically improves outcomes for self-represented parties.

People preparing for attorney consultations. Even if you plan to hire a lawyer, understanding the basics first means you spend less billable time on education and more on strategy. Many family law clients spend their first $500 to $1,000 in attorney fees just learning what the copilot can teach you in minutes. The AAML recommends coming to your first consultation with a clear understanding of your state's basic divorce process, your financial picture, and your custody goals.

Grandparents and extended family. Grandparent visitation rights vary significantly by state. The AARP provides resources on grandparent rights, and the copilot explains your state's specific statute, standing requirements, and the legal standard for obtaining court-ordered visitation.

Related Copilots

Explore specialized copilots for issues that commonly arise during divorce:

Tenant Rights Copilot - If separation means moving out of a shared home, understand your lease obligations, security deposit rights, and options for breaking a lease early without damaging your credit.

Estate Planning Copilot - Divorce is one of the most important times to update your will, beneficiary designations, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. This copilot walks you through the process state by state.

Employment Law Copilot - If workplace issues are contributing to your family situation, or if you need to understand how income calculations work for support purposes including bonuses, stock options, and commissions.

Consumer Rights Copilot - Dealing with joint debt, credit reporting issues, or financial fraud during divorce. This copilot covers your consumer protection rights and helps you separate joint financial obligations.

Small Claims Copilot - For smaller financial disputes that arise during or after separation, such as recovering personal property or resolving shared expense disagreements.

Budgeting Copilot - Transitioning from a dual-income to single-income household requires careful budgeting. This copilot helps you build a realistic post-divorce financial plan.

Looking for help in a different area? Browse our complete copilot directory or see how Copilotly compares to ChatGPT across all domains.

Pricing and Value

Free Plan: Ask basic questions about divorce processes, get general information about family law in your state, and explore common custody arrangements. Includes limited conversations per month. No credit card required.

Pro Plan ($29/month): Unlimited conversations, detailed child support and alimony calculations using your state's actual formulas, parenting plan drafting assistance, property division analysis with community property versus equitable distribution guidance, mediation preparation guides, financial disclosure checklists, and document preparation support. This is less than the cost of 10 minutes with most family law attorneys.

Enterprise: Custom solutions for legal aid organizations, family mediation centers, court self-help centers, and law firms looking to provide clients with self-service legal education tools. Contact us for pricing.

The Math on Legal Costs: The American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers reports that the average contested divorce costs $15,000 to $30,000 in attorney fees. Even uncontested divorces run $1,500 to $3,500. The Legal Services Corporation estimates that for every client served by legal aid, another person is turned away due to insufficient resources. At $29/month, the Pro plan costs less than a single hour of attorney time in most markets. While this copilot does not replace an attorney for complex litigation, it can dramatically reduce the hours you need and help you identify which issues truly require professional representation versus which you can navigate with proper guidance.

Important: Divorce & Family Copilot provides legal information and educational guidance. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. For matters involving domestic violence, complex asset valuation, or contested custody, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. If you are in immediate danger, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.

See all pricing details or get started for free. Browse all 131 copilots, explore task guides, or find copilots for your industry.

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