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Divorce.law is a vertical legal-tech platform for divorce scenarios in the United States and Canada, not a general-purpose enterprise SaaS product. It brings together a legal content library, the Victoria AI assistant, calculators, court resources, uncontested divorce document generation, and attorney matching in a single entry point. The platform clearly states that it is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice, making it better suited as an upfront tool for research, document preparation, and finding an attorney.
The platform emphasizes coverage across 64 jurisdictions, including all 50 U.S. states, Washington, DC, and 13 Canadian provinces/territories. Core modules include a personalized Divorce Roadmap, the Victoria AI legal research assistant, 14,000+ legal pages, 25 calculator tools, court forms and legal aid resources, divorce statistics, and county-level exclusive attorney recommendations. For users pursuing an uncontested divorce, the system can generate court documents through a Q&A flow, provide filing instructions, and support participation by both spouses.
General legal guides, calculators, AI Q&A, roadmaps, and attorney matching are described as free. The uncontested divorce portal costs a one-time fee of $99 and includes 90 days of access, AI support, and a document guarantee. On the attorney side, the platform uses a membership subscription model, with a founder price of $155/month and monthly cancellation. Later pricing is adjusted based on county-level leads, traffic, and conversion value, with example tiers of $150, $350, and $550/month.
Its strengths are that the content is highly vertical and organized by jurisdiction, avoiding generic advice; the $99 document service is clearly priced and attractive for simple uncontested cases; and the attorney-side model of one law firm per county is more focused than traditional directories. The limitations are that it is not suitable for domestic violence, high-conflict custody, complex asset division, or contested cases; there is limited disclosure around enterprise-grade security, APIs, permissions, SLAs, and similar topics; and AI output should still be assessed alongside local court requirements and attorney judgment.
It is suitable for people in the United States or Canada whose divorce terms are largely agreed upon, as well as family law attorneys seeking exclusive county-level exposure. For Chinese users handling divorce matters within China, its legal applicability is limited; local lawyers, legal aid services, or China-based legal service platforms would be more appropriate. The main content does not disclose availability of access or payments from mainland China, so this remains unknown; for payments, only Stripe-related information is visible.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on divorce.law official site.
divorce.law is an United States Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach divorce.law directly.