Property records should come first
Aurora separations can involve a home, mortgage, refinancing questions, investments, pensions, or business interests. Early organization makes negotiation more realistic.

Divorce in Aurora
Sawan Law House LLP helps Aurora clients understand divorce options, organize documents, address parenting and support issues, and move forward with a practical family law strategy.
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Divorce for Aurora clients can involve more than ending the marriage on paper. There may be a home to address, investments to disclose, children with established routines, support questions, and a need to keep daily life functioning while the legal issues move forward.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Aurora clients slow the process down enough to make informed decisions. We review what has been agreed, what remains disputed, and what documents are needed before a settlement position or court response is prepared.
Some matters can move through a simple or joint divorce process. Others need careful disclosure, parenting terms, support calculations, or property analysis before the divorce itself should be treated as straightforward.
We focus on giving clients a practical route through the uncertainty: what to gather, what to avoid, what to respond to, and how to protect long-term interests.
This page provides general information only and is not legal advice. Divorce and family law issues are fact-specific, and you should speak with a lawyer about your circumstances before taking or delaying any step.
Local Planning Notes
Aurora separations can involve a home, mortgage, refinancing questions, investments, pensions, or business interests. Early organization makes negotiation more realistic.
If either spouse owns a business, works through a corporation, or has variable income, support discussions usually require more than a pay stub. We help identify the records that matter.
School terms, extracurriculars, travel, exchanges, and special occasions should be mapped before a schedule is proposed. A vague plan can create avoidable disputes.
If support, property, or disclosure is still unresolved, rushing the divorce step may not serve the broader case. We help clients understand what should be settled or protected first.
Aurora Focus
Aurora clients may be dealing with school routines, commuting, business interests, property decisions, and extended family responsibilities. Divorce planning should reflect those realities.
Family property issues can become document-heavy. We help clients organize financial records before taking positions on equalization, debts, or the matrimonial home.
A divorce step should not be rushed simply to create movement. We help identify what can be resolved first and what may require court assistance.
How We Help
We help with simple, joint, and contested divorce documents, including the surrounding issues that may affect timing.
We assist with parenting time, decision-making responsibility, exchanges, extracurricular activities, travel, and school-related terms.
We help review child support, spousal support, income disclosure, special expenses, and payment histories.
We help clients understand how the home, mortgage, carrying costs, occupancy, sale discussions, and property records may affect the case.
We help prepare and review settlement terms that are clear, complete, and realistic before they are signed.
If you have been served, we help identify deadlines, prepare responses, and avoid procedural missteps.
Our Process
We gather the separation history, children's needs, property picture, income information, and any immediate concerns.
We identify the financial and parenting documents needed to evaluate the issues properly.
We help decide whether the next step should be negotiation, a separation agreement, a divorce application, an answer, or court materials.
We work toward terms that address the full family picture, not just the divorce order itself.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
They can. Divorce, property, support, and parenting are connected in many cases. Property disclosure should be reviewed before deciding the safest timing.
A separation agreement can help, but it should be reviewed to confirm what has been resolved and whether anything remains outstanding before divorce steps continue.
Missing disclosure is common in family law. The next step may involve formal requests, negotiation, conference materials, or court orders depending on the situation.
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