Saraburi
Divorce Lawyer in Saraburi â Uncontested, Contested, Property Division, and Child Custody
Divorce in Thailand has two paths â by mutual consent (registered at the district office) or by court petition (filed at the Juvenile and Family Court). We handle both, alongside related matters: division of matrimonial property, child custody, child support, and temporary protection orders.
Scope of divorce lawyer work in Saraburi
- Uncontested divorce â settlement deed and registration at the amphur
- Contested divorce â Civil and Commercial Code grounds such as adultery or keeping another as spouse, serious misconduct, physical or mental cruelty, desertion, or voluntary separation for the statutory period
- Division of matrimonial property (including overseas assets)
- Child custody, support, and access rights
- Protection orders in domestic-violence cases
- Cross-border matters â visa implications, child nationality
Process
- 1Initial consultation â facts review, choose consent or contested path
- 2Negotiation â property, children, support
- 3If agreed â settlement deed and amphur registration
- 4If not â petition the Juvenile and Family Court and court mediation
- 5Enforcement of support or court-awarded rights
Documents to prepare
- âĒMarriage certificate
- âĒThai ID of spouses and children
- âĒAsset documents (title deeds, vehicle registration, bank accounts)
- âĒEvidence of divorce grounds (for contested cases)
Contact our Saraburi attorneys
We serve clients across Thailand. Initial consultation.
Frequently asked questions â divorce lawyer in Saraburi
3 questions answered
File a contested divorce at the Juvenile and Family Court on statutory grounds (e.g., adultery, cruelty, three-year separation, non-support). We help compile the evidence and prepare the petition.
Property acquired before marriage is 'personal property' and stays with the owner. Property acquired during marriage, plus earned income, is matrimonial and split equally. Proof of origin is critical â we help inventory the assets and gather supporting documentation.
Courts weigh both parents' earning capacity, the child's standard of living, and age-appropriate expenses. If circumstances change later (e.g., the child starts at a private school), a petition to increase support can be filed.