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Family Law & Divorce Lawyers in Mount Holly

Compassionate, Effective Legal Advocacy

When the Courthouse Feels Close to Home

If you are looking for a divorce lawyer in Mount Holly, the legal process may feel especially close because Burlington County family matters are handled right in town. A family law attorney can help you understand what to do before deadlines, documents, and negotiations start shaping your options. For local families, divorce may involve shared homes near established neighborhoods, parenting routines around school and work, and financial questions that need to be handled before the case moves too far.

“I felt respected by her always keeping me informed and encouraged” — Why NJ Trusts Graziano & Flynn

Best Lawyer Around!

Ron surpassed my expectations in my case. He always kept me in the loop, updated me with any change, and answered ALL of my questions.. And I had a ton! He was very knowledgable, honest, supportive, and calm. I was nervous every step of the way and he listened to each and every one of my concerns. He was always available by phone and email; He responded very promptly to every email I sent (I sent a ton!). Ron is an extremely trustworthy lawyer. Listen to what he says and have faith in him, you will be as impressed as I am! I couldn’t have dreamed of a better outcome in my case. I wouldn’t have wanted anyone else to represent me, I highly recommend him to anyone looking for an amazing lawyer!! His staff is amazing as well!!

– Gia

I am a Father and my daughter wanted to live with me and attend school closer to my home (I wanted to enroll her into private school) so that would mean I would need to become the primary parent of residence. I thought it would be impossible to get that changed because I also have a career as a firefighter so my work schedule rotates and its 24 hour shifts. I contacted Robyn and she was upfront and honest provided me with possible outcomes. Robyn was outstanding! She had to do the work of two attorneys because the defendants’ attorney would not submit paperwork to the court in a timely manner and that would’ve slowed the process. The case went to trial and having the experienced attorney really showed! I am now the primary parent of residence my daughter and I couldn’t be happier. She always answered my calls, emails and was on time. Both parents were found to be fit by the judge yet a change of custody was still granted in my favor.

– Delvin C.

I couldn’t be more pleased with my attorney Ron Graziano, when it came down to understanding and knowing his area of expertise there is no doubt that this Law Firm is everything plus that. Ron was very easy to talk with and clearly knew how to approach my case. I went to court for a child support/custody situation and it could not have worked out more satisfying for me if i had not had the Graziano & Flynn firm representing me in the most professional and knowledgeable way possible. I did not have to speak with the Judge not one time, i was represented absolutely well by my attorney Ron, he’s the best and i will continue to use him, if need be; Thank you so much.

– Barber B

The Family Law Decisions That Need Careful Handling

Divorce Representation

Divorce often begins with more questions than answers. Before you agree to temporary terms, move out of the home, or make financial concessions, it helps to understand how each decision could affect the rest of the case. Our attorneys help organize the immediate issues, including parenting time, support, property division, and financial disclosures. The goal is to move with control, not panic.

Child Custody and Parenting Time

A parenting plan needs to work outside the courtroom. For families in Mount Holly, that may mean coordinating school schedules, after-school activities, shift work, and travel between homes in nearby communities like Lumberton, Hainesport, Westampton, or Mount Laurel. Vague custody terms often create new conflict later. A stronger plan gives both parents clear expectations and keeps the focus on the child’s stability.

Child Support

Child support is based on more than one parent’s paycheck. Parenting time, childcare expenses, healthcare costs, bonuses, overtime, and irregular income can all affect the calculation. If the numbers are incomplete or misleading, the result may not reflect the family’s real financial picture. We help clients review the details before support terms become part of a court order.

Alimony and Spousal Support

Alimony can become one of the most difficult financial issues in a divorce. Courts consider income, earning ability, health, age, length of marriage, and the lifestyle during the marriage. For many Burlington County households, support is tied to whether the mortgage can be carried, whether retirement savings must be divided, and how both spouses will manage after separation. Those questions need careful planning before settlement.

Marital Property, Homes, and Debt

Equitable distribution means marital property is divided fairly under New Jersey law, not automatically in half. Homes, retirement accounts, vehicles, investments, business interests, and debt all need to be identified and valued. In Mount Holly, where housing can range from older homes near historic areas to more suburban properties nearby, home equity and repair obligations can become important. A clean agreement should account for both assets and liabilities.

Domestic Violence and Restraining Orders

Restraining order matters move quickly and can affect where someone lives, how parents communicate, and what happens with children in the short term. Whether you need protection or have been served with allegations, the hearing requires preparation. Evidence, witness issues, prior communications, and safety concerns all matter. The outcome can influence the rest of the family law case.

Changes After a Final Order

Final orders do not always fit life years later. A job change, relocation, new schedule, health issue, or shift in parenting responsibilities may justify a modification request. Enforcement may also be needed if the other party is not following the order. We help clients determine whether the facts support going back to court.

Prenuptial and Postnuptial Agreements

A marital agreement can reduce uncertainty before or during a marriage. These agreements may be useful for second marriages, business owners, inherited property, premarital savings, or families trying to protect specific assets. The agreement must be drafted carefully and supported by proper financial disclosure. If the language is unclear, it may create the dispute it was meant to prevent.

The Route Your Divorce Takes Depends on What Is Still Disputed

When Major Issues Are Still Unresolved

A divorce becomes contested when spouses disagree on custody, support, alimony, property, debt, or other key terms. In Mount Holly, that tension can feel even more immediate when the legal process is unfolding close to home. The priority is to identify what truly needs court involvement and what can be narrowed through records, negotiation, or settlement.

When You Have the Terms Mostly Worked Out

If both spouses agree on the major issues, the process may be less stressful. The final agreement still needs clear language for parenting time, support, property, debt, and future obligations. A smoother divorce only helps if the order is specific enough to prevent problems later.

When Settlement Is Still Possible

Settlement talks can help resolve disputes over support, home equity, parenting schedules, or financial obligations without a trial. For families moving between Mount Holly, Lumberton, Westampton, and Hainesport, practical details like transportation and school schedules often matter. The goal is an agreement that works after everyone leaves court.

When Irreconcilable Differences Apply

Many New Jersey divorces are filed based on irreconcilable differences, meaning neither spouse has to prove misconduct. That can reduce the focus on blame, but it does not eliminate the need to resolve custody, support, alimony, and property division carefully.

How a Case Moves Through the Local Court System

A divorce begins when a Complaint for Divorce is filed. For Mount Holly residents, the court facility on Rancocas Road is part of the local landscape, not a distant courthouse in another part of the state. Once the case is opened, required paperwork, court deadlines, and early decisions start to matter.

The financial side of divorce depends on records, not assumptions. Tax returns, pay stubs, mortgage statements, bank records, retirement account documents, credit card balances, and business information may all become part of the case. A strong record makes it easier to negotiate from facts instead of frustration.

Many financial disputes go through settlement-focused steps before trial, including Early Settlement Panel review and economic mediation. These steps can help narrow disagreements over support, property, and other financial issues. They work best when your documents and goals are organized before the conversation begins.

The divorce is complete when the court enters a Final Judgment of Divorce. That order may address custody, parenting time, support, alimony, property division, debt, and other obligations. Clear terms matter because the final judgment is what both parties must follow after the case ends.

Experienced Guidance From Attorneys Who Know Family Law

Ron Graziano

Ron Graziano has spent nearly 50 years practicing law in Southern New Jersey. His background includes complex family law disputes, trial work, and appellate-level experience. For clients facing serious divorce, custody, or financial issues, that depth can be important when the case requires more than routine negotiation.

Robyn B. Flynn

Robyn B. Flynn has built her practice around family law matters involving divorce, custody, support, and domestic violence. She understands that clients are often making legal decisions while dealing with fear, anger, uncertainty, or grief. Her role is to help clients stay focused on the outcome while still recognizing the human weight of the process.

Why the Right Legal Team Matters Here

A Mount Holly divorce is not just “local” because the town name appears on the page. For many clients, the courthouse, county offices, downtown streets, and family routines are part of the same place where they live, parent, and plan their next chapter. Graziano & Flynn brings more than 100 years of combined family law experience to South Jersey divorce and family law matters, with a practice focused on helping clients through high-stakes personal and financial disputes.

  • Prepared for cases filed right in town: The court facility on Rancocas Road makes local procedure and early preparation especially important for Mount Holly residents.
  • Relevant to how local families actually live: Cases may involve older homes, shared equity, school routines, downtown-area housing, commuter schedules, and parenting logistics between nearby towns.
  • Experienced in serious litigation: Ron Graziano has practiced in Southern New Jersey for nearly 50 years, and the firm notes that he has argued before the New Jersey Supreme Court.
  • Grounded guidance during emotional decisions: Robyn Flynn brings decades of family law experience and a client-focused approach to divorce, custody, support, and domestic violence matters.
  • A larger family law team, not a one-attorney operation: The firm’s team includes Ron Graziano, Robyn B. Flynn, Karina E. Hehn, Scott Schweiger, Johanny Grullon, and Katelynn J. Reilly.

Questions Worth Asking Before You Make Your Next Move

Is Mount Holly where local divorce cases are handled?

Family matters for this county are handled through the court facility in Mount Holly when venue is proper. The right filing location still depends on the facts of the case and New Jersey court rules.

What should I do before moving out of the marital home?

Speak with an attorney first if possible. Moving out can affect parenting schedules, finances, access to records, and negotiation leverage depending on the circumstances.

Can the court consider an older home’s repairs or condition during property division?

Yes. If the marital home needs repairs or has valuation issues, those facts may matter when discussing equity, sale terms, buyouts, or credits between spouses.

What if my spouse is hiding income or account information?

Discovery can be used to request financial records, account statements, tax documents, business records, and other information needed to evaluate income and assets.

Can a custody plan account for travel between Mount Holly and nearby towns?

Yes. Parenting plans can address transportation, school pickups, extracurricular activities, work schedules, and travel between households. Clear terms are especially important when parents live in different school or commute patterns.

Get Your Bearings Before the Case Moves Ahead

Divorce can make everything feel urgent at once. A focused conversation can help you sort what needs attention now, what can wait, and what steps may protect your home, your children, and your financial stability.

We offer free, confidential consultations so you can take the next step with clarity and confidence.

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