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Important: DivorcePro provides professional case preparation and organizational services. We are NOT a law firm and do NOT provide legal representation. Our team prepares your case preparation package — your attorney provides the legal counsel.

DivorcePro vs All Competitors Combined

There are many online divorce services. Each promises to make divorce easier. But they all fall into a few categories: filing services, form templates, document prep, and coaching. DivorcePro is the only case PREPARATION tool.

Feature All Competitors Combined DivorcePro
Service Category Filing / Documents / Coaching Case Preparation
Average Price $200-$1,000 $49
Helps Organize Your Case
Identifies Hidden Assets
Works with Any Path
Lifetime Access
One-Time Fee (No Annual)
Works for Contested Divorces
Verdict: Most online services focus on getting paperwork done. DivorcePro focuses on understanding and preparing your case. Use DivorcePro first ($49), then use any filing service for the paperwork.

Who Is This Best For?

DivorcePro is best for anyone considering ANY divorce service. Prepare your case first, then choose your path (DIY, mediation, attorney).

Ready to Start Your Case Preparation?

Start where everyone should start—with a complete case preparation.

Start Now - $49

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between "case preparation" and "filing"?
Case preparation means organizing your assets, identifying risks, gathering evidence, and building your strategy. Filing is the legal service of submitting documents to court. DivorcePro focuses on preparation, so you go into negotiations (or court) fully informed and documented.
Can I use DivorcePro with an attorney?
Absolutely. In fact, many clients use DivorcePro to gather and organize information BEFORE seeing an attorney. This saves you billable hours and ensures you don't miss critical details.
Is DivorcePro specific to my state?
DivorcePro provides national guidance with state-specific notes on key issues like spousal support, asset division, and custody. Always consult your attorney for jurisdiction-specific advice.

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