top of page

Represent Yourself In The Family Court

  • Can I represent myself and save money?

  • How do I know what is fair?

  • How do I complete the documents?

  • What documents will I need?

  • What happens in each hearing?

  • What help is available?

  • Templates and Sample Documents

  • Be Prepared. Be Ready. Be Confident.

About Us

Many people want to represent themselves for a number of good reasons, cost usually being the main issue, but also there is often a desire to prove their case for themselves, to have their day in court, or they simply cannot justify the exorbitant costs that Solicitors charge for help.

 

You are perfectly entitled to represent yourself and there is nothing wrong in doing so, thousands of people do it every day, but it needs to be targeted to work well. You wouldn’t try to repair your car with no mechanical knowledge. Understanding the process and having knowledge of the task ahead is a key element in representing yourself and managing your case.

justice-scale.jpg

Available Services

affordable family law logo.png

Children Cases

  • Applications

  • Contact and residence

  • CAFCASS Reports

  • Hearing preparation

  • Court Documents

  • Evidence

  • Challenging CAFCASS

  • Final Hearings

  • Cross examination

  • Appeals

  • Consent Orders

affordable family law logo.png

Financial Cases

  • Applications

  • Form E

  • Court documents

  • Questionnaires

  • Hearing preparation

  • Evidence

  • Section 25 Statements

  • Offers

  • Final Hearings

  • Cross examination

  • Consent Orders

affordable family law logo.png

Domestic Abuse

  • False Allegations

  • First hearing

  • Court documents

  • Scott Schedules and Statements

  • Evidence

  • Fact Finding Hearings

  • Cross examination

bottom of page