Jurisdiction
You must be able to show that you or your ex has a connection (or link) with England or Wales in order to start divorce proceedings or proceedings to end a civil partnership. A court only has the legal power to deal with your case if you can show this link. ‘Jurisdiction’ is the legal word for this power.
The application asks you for information that will enable the court to decide whether it has the legal power to deal with your case.
You need to confirm your connection to England or Wales. For many people this will be that they both usually live in England or Wales (the law calls this being ‘habitually resident’). In the online application you need to answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the question about if your lives are mainly based in England or Wales. If you do the paper application you need to decide if you can tick the box that says In this situation you tick the box against the words: ‘both parties to the marriage/civil partners are habitually resident in England and Wales’.
Many people will be able to answer ‘yes’ to this question and then move on to the next section. If you answer ‘no’, you will need to answer more questions to see if you have a different connection to England or Wales. This could be that one of you usually lives in England or Wales or that England or Wales is the country you consider to be your permanent home (the law calls this ‘domicile’).
If you are not sure how to answer these questions, or you think this option does not apply to you try and get some legal advice, see the section called More help and advice for more details.
Personal details for you and your ex
You need to provide your personal contact details and say how you would like the court to contact you. If you are applying by yourself, you need to provide your ex’s postal address. If you have it, it would also help to provide a current email address for your ex too. This is so your ex can be sent, or ‘served with’, your application.
If you cannot get a postal address for your ex you will need to apply to the court for permission to tell your ex about the application in a different way. The online service will explain how to do this, with a link to follow. If you are doing a paper application you will need to fill in Form D11. There is an extra fee of £53 to make this application - online or by paper.
If you are applying together, as applicant 1, you just need to provide your ex’s email address and then your ex will be asked to fill in their details and approve the answers given in the application before the court looks at it.
Financial orders
You need to say whether you want to apply for a financial order. We suggest that you tick the box to show that you do. If you have children, tick the box that applies to them as well. This does not commit you to making an application now or in the future but protects your ability to do so.
Importantly, it stops you losing your ability to apply for a financial order if you remarry or register a new civil partnership. Your ex can make their own claim for any of these orders too - against you. So a respondent can apply for a financial order in the same way that a petitioner can.
The court can make more than one of these orders at the same time. Next, we explain what all these different orders mean. For more details on sorting out finances with your ex, see our guide to sorting out your finances when you get divorced.
We explain the different types of financial orders next.
An order for maintenance pending suit
‘Maintenance’ is money paid to help support you or your ex. ‘Pending suit’ means that the money is paid in the short term, up until you get your final divorce order. Maintenance is paid regularly at a particular time, for example, monthly.
A periodical payments order
‘Periodical payments’ is another term for maintenance. ‘Periodical’ just means the money is paid regularly at a particular time, for example, monthly. The difference between ‘maintenance pending suit’ and a ‘periodical payments order’ is that a ‘periodical payments order’ provides for maintenance to go on being paid after you get your final order. The amount paid can be the same as or different to the amount paid as maintenance pending suit.
A secured provision order
This is also an order for maintenance but one where the person paying the money has to give some 'security'. A security is a right over something valuable belonging to them, for example an investment property or inheritance. This means that if they do not pay the maintenance, the person who was due to get it has another way of getting the money they are owed. These orders are rare.
A lump sum order
This is an order that you or your ex pay a fixed amount of money, for example £2,000 or £20,000. The court can order you or your ex to pay a lump sum in one go or in instalments. The court can only make this kind of order if you or your ex has the money to pay it.
A property adjustment order
This order sets out what is to happen to any property you and your ex own separately or together, for example, your home.
The court can make a wide variety of property adjustment orders. For example, it can transfer property from you to your ex or from your ex to you or order the sale of a property and divide the profit between you equally or in a different way. The court can also transfer a tenancy (including council and housing association tenancies), for example, from your joint names into your sole name or the sole name of your ex.
If your ex is the sole owner or sole tenant of the family home, then it is critical you do not formally end your relationship by getting your final divorce order before you transfer the tenancy or ownership of the family home into your name – if that is what you want. In particular, you may want to register your interest in the property with the Land Registry. This is a tricky area. If you are in this position, get some legal advice as soon as possible. See More help and advice.
A pension sharing order
This order sets out what percentage, if any, of a pension belonging to you or your ex must be transferred to the other.
A pension attachment order
This order sets out what proportion of any pension income or lump sum belonging to you or your ex must be paid to the other.
A pension compensation sharing order
This is an order stating that any compensation from the Pension Protection Fund must be shared.
A pension compensation attachment order
If you or your ex are due compensation from the Pension Protection Fund, this order sets out what percentage of it must be paid directly to the other.
Payment for legal services order
This is an order that you or your ex pay the other money to help with their legal costs. Legal costs are what you spend on a lawyer. The court will only make this kind of order if you can show that you have no other way of paying for your legal costs, for example, by getting a loan. The court will not make an order if it means that you or your ex would not be able to pay your own legal fees, or if it would cause you or your ex undue hardship.
Statement of truth and submitting the application
At the end of the application you need to fill in a statement of truth. This is where you confirm that all the information you have provided is true to the best of your knowledge and belief. This is important - if you are found to have knowingly stated something is true when it is not, you can be found in contempt of court. This is punishable by a fine, unpaid work or a prison sentence of up to two years, or all three!
Sole application
If you are doing the application by yourself you need to check your answers and pay the court fee (or add in your help with fees code - for a reminder on this see the section called Family court fees. Then, you click on the submit button (if you are checking later and notice a mistake, you can correct it when you apply for the conditional order. Don’t panic!). When you have done this you get a summary page to tell you about anything more you need to do and where you are up to in the process.
If you are applying on paper, you need to follow the instructions at the end of the form about how many copies are needed and which court address to send all the documents to.
Joint application
If you are applicant 1, you fill in the statement of truth and the court sends your answers to applicant 2 to check and approve. At this stage your ex can suggest changes to the application. When your ex has suggested changes or agreed to what it says in the application, you get a notification to check it over again. When the wording is agreed by both of you, you, as applicant 1, need to pay the fee and submit it to the court. When you have done this you get a summary page to tell you about anything more you need to do and where you are up to in the process.