Travel time can affect parenting
Parenting schedules should account for school locations, activities, exchange points, winter driving, work routes, and moves between nearby communities.

Divorce in Erin
Sawan Law House LLP helps Erin clients approach divorce with practical advice on parenting, support, property, disclosure, documents, settlement, and court steps.
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Erin clients may face divorce issues that involve distance, property, parenting logistics, and financial records. A practical plan should account for how the family actually lives, not only the paperwork.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Erin clients organize the divorce process before major decisions are made. We review the separation history, parenting concerns, income records, property documents, and any proposed agreement or court materials.
Some clients need help completing a divorce after the main issues are settled. Others need broader advice because parenting, support, property, the matrimonial home, or disclosure remains unresolved.
We focus on clear advice and terms that can work outside the lawyer’s office.
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
Parenting schedules should account for school locations, activities, exchange points, winter driving, work routes, and moves between nearby communities.
Homes, land, vehicles, debts, pensions, investments, and family contributions can all affect settlement.
Employment income, seasonal work, overtime, self-employment, and special expenses should be reviewed before support terms are accepted.
Expenses, occupancy, parenting time, and communication may need interim arrangements while the broader divorce issues are resolved.
Erin Focus
Erin clients may be balancing separation with school routines, property decisions, longer drives, work schedules, and family support.
We help clients identify what records are available and what disclosure should still be requested.
We help clients review terms so parenting, support, property, and expenses are clear enough to follow.
How We Help
We help prepare, review, start, or respond to simple, joint, and contested divorce documents.
We assist with parenting time, decision-making responsibility, exchanges, holidays, travel, school routines, and communication.
We help review income disclosure, support issues, special expenses, arrears, and payment records.
We help organize records involving the matrimonial home, land, accounts, debts, pensions, investments, vehicles, and household costs.
We help assess proposed terms for missing details, unclear assumptions, and long-term risk.
If formal steps are needed, we help prepare applications, answers, affidavits, financial documents, and strategy.
Our Process
We start with separation history, children, living arrangements, income, property, debts, and urgent concerns.
We identify available documents and what disclosure may still be needed.
We explain whether negotiation, agreement review, filing, responding, or court materials are appropriate.
We help clients move forward with organized documents and practical legal advice.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
Yes. Many first steps can begin by phone, video, and electronic document review.
Yes. Exchange locations, timing, transportation, school routines, and travel flexibility can be addressed.
Property should be reviewed carefully before timing decisions are made. The right sequence depends on the facts and documents.
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