Parenting arrangements should be clear
School routines, child care, activities, exchanges, holidays, travel, and communication should be written in practical terms.

Divorce in Westgate
Sawan Law House LLP helps Westgate clients move through divorce with practical advice on parenting, support, property, disclosure, settlement terms, and court steps.
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Westgate clients may need divorce advice while sorting through parenting schedules, shared costs, property records, and court papers. It is important to know what each document does before taking the next step.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Westgate clients review what is already settled, what information is missing, and what should happen before filing, responding, or signing a separation agreement.
Some matters are ready for a simple divorce. Others need advice on parenting, support, property, disclosure, or formal court materials.
We focus on clear advice, organized records, and terms that are practical enough to follow after separation.
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
School routines, child care, activities, exchanges, holidays, travel, and communication should be written in practical terms.
Mortgage or rent, utilities, debts, insurance, child expenses, and temporary household costs can affect immediate planning.
Tax records, pay stubs, benefits, overtime, business records, and special expenses should be gathered before support is negotiated.
Document exchange, payment dates, parenting changes, possession dates, and review points should be set out clearly.
Westgate Focus
Westgate clients may be balancing separation with children, work schedules, housing pressure, and extended family support.
We help clients organize court papers, income records, property documents, parenting notes, and draft agreements.
We help identify vague terms, missing deadlines, and details that may create avoidable conflict.
How We Help
We assist with simple, joint, and contested divorce documents, including preparation, review, and response planning.
We help address parenting time, decision-making responsibility, exchanges, school routines, holidays, travel, and communication.
We review income disclosure, special expenses, support calculations, arrears, and payment arrangements.
We help collect information about the home, accounts, loans, pensions, vehicles, investments, and household expenses.
We review proposed separation terms for missing information, unclear wording, and practical risk.
Where court steps are needed, we help prepare applications, answers, financial statements, affidavits, and supporting records.
Our Process
We review parenting concerns, support needs, housing, disclosure, deadlines, served papers, and urgent issues.
We examine financial records, property information, court materials, parenting calendars, communication, and draft terms.
We explain negotiation, agreement review, filing, responding, disclosure, and court preparation options.
We help clients move ahead with organized records and clear 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. Draft terms can be reviewed for disclosure, clarity, practical risk, and missing details.
Temporary or proposed arrangements can be reviewed, but the right step depends on the facts and any existing orders.
Not necessarily. Child support, spousal support, arrears, and expenses may need separate agreement terms or court orders.
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