I’ve Heard that Divorce Mediation is Cheaper than an Attorney…Check the Fine Print
February 10, 2012 1 Comment
Is divorce mediation cheaper than divorce litigation? There is research and other commentary that suggests that mediation is cheaper, but the common consumer should be aware of the fine print.
Fine Print One: Mediation doesn’t guarantee an agreement. You could pay for mediation and, if no agreement is reached, still have to move forward with litigation.
Fine Print Two: Mediation works when both parties in divorce are reasonable. If one or both spouses cannot control their emotions, making the business-decisions of divorce and the self-less decisions of parenthood may simply be impossible.
Fine Print Three: Mediators will not serve as your attorney. If you have a legal question, you should ask an attorney and not the mediator. Many individuals are unaware that you can use an attorney for counseling (short sessions for specific legal information and advice), litigation (to represent you in all aspects of litigation), and for finite projects (to draft a parenting plan, file the uncontested divorce paperwork, represent you at the mediation only, write a will, etc.). If you arrive at mediation without knowing the legal landscape, you will have arrived unprepared. If you are trying to undercut or minimize legal fees, then use a lawyer wisely and then you may be able to use mediation wisely, too.


Divorce mediators cannot provide either spouse legal advice or financial counsel. However, there are issues after an agreement is made or after the divorce decree is issued that aren’t regularly highlighted. Three of these lesser known “post-divorce hiccups” are noted below: