Divorce Lawyers & Family Law Attorney in Pennsauken, NJ
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When Separation Starts Affecting the Whole Household
A divorce rarely begins with just one problem. It may start with questions about who stays in the home, how bills get paid, where the children will spend school nights, or what happens if one spouse controls most of the financial information. For someone looking for a divorce lawyer in Pennsauken, those decisions may also involve the realities of Route 130, Route 73, Route 38, Cooper River-area neighborhoods, Merchantville-adjacent streets, and commuting between South Jersey and Philadelphia. A family law attorney can help you avoid rushed choices while you sort through the legal, financial, and parenting issues ahead.
“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!!
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.
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.
Legal Help for the Parts of Divorce That Hit Daily Life
Divorce Representation
The first decisions in a divorce can affect everything that follows. You may need guidance before agreeing to temporary terms, dividing accounts, leaving the home, or responding to your spouse’s proposal. Our attorneys help you focus on the issues that need attention early, including parenting time, support, property division, household expenses, and financial records.
Child Custody and Parenting Time
A parenting schedule should match the way your family actually moves through the week. In Pennsauken, that may mean school routines, work shifts, bridge traffic, public transit, activities, and travel between homes in nearby Cherry Hill, Camden, Merchantville, Collingswood, or Palmyra. Clear terms can reduce conflict around pickups, drop-offs, holidays, and last-minute schedule changes.
Child Support
The support calculation should reflect the full financial picture. Income, overnights, childcare, health insurance, overtime, bonuses, commissions, self-employment income, and changing work schedules can all affect the result. When a parent’s income is irregular or difficult to verify, financial records need close review before support becomes final.
Alimony and Spousal Support
After separation, both households need a realistic financial plan. Spousal support may involve income differences, earning capacity, age, health, length of marriage, and the lifestyle during the marriage. For Pennsauken families, alimony questions may also connect to rent, mortgage affordability, vehicle expenses, household debt, and transportation costs.
Marital Property, Homes, and Debt
Property division starts by identifying what belongs to the marriage and what obligations come with it. That may include a home, vehicles, retirement accounts, credit card balances, business interests, bank accounts, or personal property. In Pennsauken, older homes, repair needs, equity, refinancing, and affordability after separation can become major settlement issues.
Domestic Violence and Restraining Orders
Safety concerns can change the direction of a family law case quickly. A restraining order matter may affect housing, parenting time, communication, and access to belongings. Messages, prior incidents, police involvement, witnesses, and child-related concerns may all become important before the hearing.
Changes After a Final Order
Court orders sometimes stop matching real life. A job loss, relocation, income change, new work schedule, health issue, or change in a child’s needs may support a request to modify custody, support, or alimony. Enforcement may also be needed if the other party is not following the order.
Prenuptial and Postnuptial Agreements
Financial clarity can prevent conflict before it starts. A marital agreement can address premarital assets, inherited property, business ownership, debt, second marriages, savings, and future obligations. Strong agreements depend on clear language, proper disclosure, and careful drafting.
The Kind of Divorce You Have Shapes the Strategy
Contested Divorce
When both spouses are far apart on the terms, the case needs structure quickly. The dispute might be about parenting time, support, the house, debt, or whether all income has been disclosed. In Pennsauken, where work schedules, transportation, and household affordability can all collide, the priority is to build a clear record before negotiations get messy.
Uncontested Divorce
Even when the major terms are worked out, the final agreement needs to leave little room for confusion. It should explain who pays what, when transfers happen, how parenting time works, and what each person must do after the divorce is final. A cooperative case still needs careful language.
Mediation
Mediation gives both sides a place to work through unresolved issues without turning every disagreement into a court fight. It may help with parenting schedules, support, debt, or what happens to the home. For families juggling Route 130 travel, school pickups, and changing work hours, the best agreements are the ones that still function on an ordinary weekday.
No-Fault Divorce
Irreconcilable differences can be enough to file for divorce in New Jersey. That keeps the case from depending on proving who caused the marriage to end. The hard part is usually not the legal reason for divorce, but the decisions about children, money, property, and future responsibilities.
What Happens After a Divorce Case Is Filed
A divorce formally starts when one spouse files the Complaint for Divorce. For Pennsauken residents, the case is typically handled in Camden County when venue is proper. From there, the focus shifts to deadlines, required documents, and the issues that need to be resolved before the divorce can be finalized.
The court process depends on accurate financial information. Each spouse may need to provide proof of income, household expenses, debts, property, retirement accounts, and business interests. This is especially important when overtime, side work, vehicle loans, credit card balances, or shared housing costs are part of the dispute.
Before trial becomes necessary, many cases move through settlement-focused steps. These can give both sides a chance to resolve disputes over support, property, debt, and other financial issues with more structure. The stronger your records are, the easier it is to evaluate whether a proposed settlement is fair.
Once the terms are resolved, they become part of the Final Judgment of Divorce. This document controls what happens next, including custody, support, alimony, property division, and debt obligations. Clear wording matters because this is the order both sides must follow moving forward.
Meet the Attorneys Guiding Your Case
Ron Graziano’s family law work spans nearly five decades, giving clients the benefit of judgment shaped by thousands of difficult decisions, negotiations, and courtroom moments. He has handled matters involving divorce, custody, support, and complex financial disputes throughout South Jersey. In a case where emotions can make every issue feel urgent, that experience helps bring discipline to the strategy.
Robyn B. Flynn approaches family law with the perspective of someone who knows divorce is not just a legal event. It affects routines, parenting, finances, and the way people imagine life after the case is over. Her work with clients is grounded in preparation, direct communication, and a practical understanding of what families need during a difficult transition.
The broader team includes Karina E. Hehn, Scott Schweiger, Johanny Grullon, and Katelynn J. Reilly. You can learn more about the full team.
Why Pennsauken Divorce Cases Need Practical Local Strategy
Pennsauken families often deal with divorce issues that are rooted in everyday logistics. Parenting time may need to work around shift schedules, bridge-area traffic, public transit, school pickups, and homes in different nearby towns. Financial disputes may involve older homes, repairs, vehicle debt, irregular wages, or affordability after one household becomes two. Graziano & Flynn brings decades of South Jersey family law experience to divorce, custody, support, property division, domestic violence, and post-judgment matters.
- Focused on real household finances: Local cases may involve mortgage payments, rent, vehicle loans, credit card balances, retirement accounts, overtime, side work, or self-employment income.
- Practical about parenting logistics: Schedules may need to account for Route 130, Route 73, Route 38, bridge travel, school activities, and movement between nearby communities.
- Prepared for difficult disputes: The firm handles contested divorce, custody disputes, restraining orders, support issues, property division, and enforcement problems.
- Longstanding South Jersey family law experience: Ron Graziano has practiced New Jersey family law since 1974.
- Guidance with personal perspective: Robyn Flynn’s own divorce experience helps shape a practical, client-centered approach during emotionally difficult cases.
Trusted Legal Support for Families Across New Jersey
Questions to Ask Before Filing for Divorce in Pennsauken
Can I file for divorce while we still live in the same Pennsauken home?
Yes. New Jersey does not require spouses to live separately before filing based on irreconcilable differences. Legal guidance can help before you decide who stays in the home, how bills are handled, or how parenting time begins.
What if our parenting schedule has to work around shift work or bridge traffic?
Parenting plans can account for work hours, transportation, school pickups, extracurricular activities, and travel between households. Clear terms are especially important when schedules change from week to week.
How are overtime, side work, or irregular wages handled in divorce?
Income may need closer review through pay records, tax returns, bank statements, business documents, or employment history. This helps determine support and whether income has been accurately disclosed.
What happens if the home needs repairs before it can be sold or refinanced?
Repairs, valuation, sale terms, credits, and refinance deadlines can all be addressed in the divorce settlement. The agreement should explain who is responsible and how costs will be handled.
What if my spouse is not sharing financial records?
Discovery can be used to request missing documents, including account statements, tax returns, pay information, business records, and debt records. This helps create a clearer financial picture before settlement or trial.
Take the First Step Before Things Get Harder to Untangle
You may not know exactly what your divorce will involve yet. That is okay. The first conversation is about getting oriented, understanding what could affect your case, and leaving with a practical sense of what to do next.