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Divorce Lawyer & Family Law in Marlton

Compassionate, Experienced Legal Guidance

When Divorce Starts Reshaping Your Life

If you need a divorce lawyer in Marlton, you are likely facing urgent decisions under real pressure. A family law attorney can help you understand what matters now and what could affect you later. For families in Evesham Township, divorce often involves parenting schedules, school routines, home equity, retirement accounts, and work commutes along Routes 70 and 73.

What Our Clients Say About Our Services

A friend recommended Graziano & Flynn for my divorce settlement, and I couldn’t be more grateful. I had the pleasure of working with Robyn and her entire team, and I always felt confident in their hands. Robyn was incredibly supportive and readily available whenever I needed assistance.

Legal Help for the Family Issues That Come With Separation

Divorce Representation

A divorce case should begin with clarity. Our attorneys help you identify the issues that need attention first, including temporary support, parenting time, property division, and financial disclosures. When settlement is possible, we work toward resolution, but every case is prepared with Burlington County court expectations in mind.

Child Custody and Parenting Time

Custody plans need to reflect how your child actually lives. That may include school schedules, activities, transportation, and each parent’s work obligations. For parents whose routines cross Marlton, Mount Laurel, Medford, or Cherry Hill, a workable schedule also needs to account for traffic, pickups, and realistic travel between homes.

Child Support

Child support depends on income, parenting time, childcare costs, health insurance, and other financial details. Disputes can become more complicated when a parent is self-employed, earns bonuses, or has irregular income. We help make sure the numbers reflect the family’s real circumstances.

Alimony and Spousal Support

Alimony can affect both spouses long after the divorce is final. Courts look at income, earning capacity, length of marriage, health, age, and the marital lifestyle. In many Burlington County households, support disputes connect closely to mortgage obligations, retirement savings, and whether one spouse can afford to stay in the home.

Division of Marital Assets and Debts

New Jersey divides marital property through equitable distribution, which means fair, not always equal. The marital home, retirement accounts, investments, vehicles, business interests, and debts all need to be reviewed carefully. For homeowners in Evesham Township, home equity is often one of the largest financial issues in the divorce.

Domestic Violence and Restraining Orders

Domestic violence cases move quickly and can affect safety, housing, custody, and communication between the parties. Whether you are seeking protection or responding to allegations, preparation matters. The hearing can also affect the direction of the broader family law case.

Post-Judgment Modifications

A final order may need to change when life changes. Job loss, relocation, income changes, health issues, or shifts in parenting responsibilities may justify revisiting custody, child support, or alimony. The court will expect a clear reason before modifying an existing order.

Prenuptial and Postnuptial Agreements

A marital agreement can clarify financial rights before conflict begins. These agreements are often useful for business owners, professionals, second marriages, or spouses protecting inherited property. Proper disclosure and careful drafting are essential.

Choosing the Right Path Through Divorce

Contested Divorce

A contested divorce means spouses disagree on one or more major issues, such as custody, support, alimony, or property division. These cases often require discovery, settlement conferences, and court involvement. Strong preparation early can help narrow disputes before they grow.

Uncontested Divorce

An uncontested divorce can be more efficient when both spouses agree on the major terms. The agreement still needs to be complete, enforceable, and specific. Legal review helps prevent avoidable problems after the divorce is final.

Mediation

Mediation can help resolve disputes without putting every issue before a judge. It is often useful for parenting schedules, support, and financial disagreements. It works best when you understand your rights before negotiating.

No-Fault Divorce

Many New Jersey divorces are based on irreconcilable differences. This means neither spouse has to prove fault to end the marriage. Custody, support, alimony, and property division still need to be resolved.

What to Expect Once Your Case Reaches Burlington County Court

A divorce begins when a Complaint for Divorce is filed with the court. For local residents, family matters are handled through the Burlington County Court Facility in Mount Holly. The filing starts the legal process and sets the framework for the issues that follow.

Both spouses must provide accurate financial information. This may include tax returns, pay stubs, mortgage records, bank statements, retirement accounts, business records, and debt information. Reliable financial disclosure is essential before settlement discussions can be productive.

Many contested financial issues go through settlement-focused procedures before trial. New Jersey’s Early Settlement Program allows experienced family law attorneys to review unresolved financial disputes and recommend a resolution. If issues remain, economic mediation may follow.

The Final Judgment of Divorce legally ends the marriage and sets the final terms. It may address custody, child support, alimony, property division, and other obligations. Clear language matters because both parties must follow the order after the case ends.

A Team Committed to Protecting What Matters Most

Ron Graziano

Ron Graziano has practiced family law for nearly 50 years and has handled complex divorce and custody matters throughout South Jersey. He is a certified trial attorney, has argued before the New Jersey Supreme Court, and holds an AV Preeminent rating. His courtroom background is especially valuable when the stakes are high.

Robyn B. Flynn

Robyn B. Flynn brings more than 25 years of family law experience to divorce, custody, and support matters. Having personally gone through divorce, she understands the emotional weight of the process while keeping clients focused on strategy. She is known for strong litigation work in complex custody and high-conflict family matters.

Why Work With Graziano & Flynn for a Marlton Divorce?

When your case is tied to Burlington County family court, local preparation matters. Graziano & Flynn is based nearby in Maple Shade and represents clients across South Jersey, including Marlton, Mount Holly, and Mount Laurel. The firm brings nearly 50 years of South Jersey legal experience through Ron Graziano, who was a certified trial attorney for 25 years and has argued before the New Jersey Supreme Court. Robyn Flynn adds more than 30 years of family law experience and personal understanding of divorce as a divorced mother of two.

  • Close enough to understand the local court process: The firm’s Maple Shade office is a practical fit for clients whose cases are handled through the Burlington County Court Facility in Mount Holly.
  • Built for serious family law disputes: The team handles divorce, custody, child support, alimony, asset division, domestic violence, and related family matters.
  • Experienced beyond routine negotiation: Ron Graziano has argued before the New Jersey Supreme Court, and several of his cases have resulted in published appellate opinions.
  • Personal and practical guidance: Robyn Flynn’s approach is shaped by both litigation experience and her own divorce, which supports a more grounded view of the emotional and financial stakes.
  • A larger South Jersey family law team: The firm describes itself as one of the largest groups of divorce lawyers in South Jersey, with attorneys including Ron Graziano, Robyn Flynn, Karina Hehn, Scott Schweiger, Johanny Grullon, and Katelynn Reilly.

What Families Often Need to Know Before Taking the Next Step

Can I file for divorce in Burlington County if I live in Marlton?

Yes. Marlton is part of Evesham Township in Burlington County, so divorce and related family matters are typically handled through the Burlington County court system when venue is proper.

How much does a divorce lawyer cost in Marlton?

The cost depends on whether the case is contested, how many issues are disputed, and whether mediation, experts, or court appearances are needed. A consultation can help you understand what may affect the total cost.

Can I keep the house during a divorce?

Possibly. It depends on equity, mortgage affordability, income, other marital assets, and whether keeping the home is practical after divorce.

What if my spouse controls most of the financial information?

Your attorney can use discovery to request missing records, including income documents, account statements, business records, and asset valuations.

Can parenting time account for school and commute schedules?

Yes. Parenting plans can account for school routines, work schedules, transportation, and the child’s best interests. The more specific the plan is, the easier it is to follow and enforce.

Get Clear Before the Conflict Gets Bigger

You do not need every answer before you ask for help. A focused conversation can help you understand what to do next, what to avoid, and how to protect the parts of your life that feel most uncertain right now.

Lawyer pointing out to a woman where she has to sign paperwork

Katelynn J. Reilly, Esq.
Cherry Hill Family Law Lawyer

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