What is a mutual consent divorce?+
Both spouses agree to end the marriage and on terms like settlement, custody and maintenance. Because nothing is contested, it's the fastest, cheapest and calmest way to part — filed as a joint petition before the family court.
Are you a law firm? Who actually handles my case?+
We're not a law firm — and that's exactly why we're cheaper and faster. We're a service with a panel of carefully selected, experienced advocates. When you reach out, we assign your matter to the right advocate for your case and location.
Every advocate is verified by us, and we take full responsibility for the service end-to-end — if anything goes wrong, that's on us, not on you. You get a vetted advocate plus our oversight, without paying law-firm prices.
More on how we work →
How fast can it really be done?+
Anywhere from 3 days to 6 months. The law provides a 6-month cooling-off period between the first and second motion, but courts can waive it in deserving cases (the Supreme Court has allowed this) — that's how the fastest decrees happen. Jurisdiction, documentation and the facts of your case decide the rest. You'll get an honest estimate in the free call; the court always has the final say.
How much does it cost? Why are you the cheapest?+
From
₹30,000 as a one-shot fee — no hidden charges, no stage payments. Most firms in Bangalore charge ₹40,000–₹45,000 and bill it in 3–4 instalments; we do only mutual consent divorce, so our process is lean and the saving is yours. The exact fee depends on your timeline and case —
talk to us for a clear quote before you commit anything.
What documents do we need?+
Typically: marriage certificate (or proof of marriage like invitation/photos), address proof of both spouses, ID proof (Aadhaar/PAN/passport), passport-size photos, and details for the settlement (assets, maintenance, custody if children). Don't worry if something is missing — we tell you exactly what's needed in the first call and help you arrange it.
What is the actual process?+
Three steps: (1) we draft the joint petition + settlement terms and file the first motion; (2) after the cooling-off period (or its waiver), the second motion is recorded; (3) the court passes the decree of divorce. You typically appear only twice — we handle everything in between.
Do both of us need to come to court?+
Both spouses are needed at the two motion hearings — typically just 2 visits. If one of you lives in another city or abroad, tell us — depending on the court, options like power of attorney or video appearance may be possible for parts of the process.
What about our children — custody and their future?+
You both decide custody, visitation and the child's expenses by agreement — we draft it into the settlement so it's clear and enforceable. Courts respect parents who've agreed amicably; your children never face a courtroom battle.
What about alimony, maintenance and property?+
All settled by mutual agreement and recorded in the petition — one-time settlement or monthly maintenance, return of streedhan, division of assets, whatever you both decide. We make sure the wording protects both of you, permanently.
We married under different laws / religions — does this work for us?+
Mutual consent divorce exists under the Hindu Marriage Act, the Special Marriage Act, the Divorce Act and Muslim law procedures alike. Whatever law your marriage falls under, tell us — we'll file under the right one.
What if my spouse changes their mind midway?+
Consent must continue until the second motion — either spouse can withdraw before that. If that risk worries you, we structure the settlement and timing to minimise it, and advise you honestly about your options if it happens.
When can we remarry?+
Once the decree of divorce is passed in a mutual consent divorce, both of you are legally free to remarry. (In contested divorces there's an appeal period — one more reason the mutual route is cleaner.)
Is everything private? And which areas do you cover?+
Completely private — whatever you share stays between us, no exceptions. We cover Bengaluru and all of Karnataka; tell us where you are and we'll take it from there.