Mediating Your Divorce Without Lawyers: What Works, and Where I'd Tell You to Be Careful
Here's a question I get weekly, usually asked a little sheepishly: "Do we have to have lawyers for this?" And the answer is no — Florida law does not require you to be represented at mediation. Plenty of couples mediate their entire divorce without attorneys, sign an agreement, and finalize things for a small fraction of what two retainers would have cost. I've watched it work beautifully. I've also watched situations where I privately wished someone in the room had a lawyer. Let me give you the honest version of both.
First, what I can and can't do for you
I'm a lawyer, but in your mediation I am a neutral — which means there are hard limits, and you should know them going in:
- I can explain the process, structure the negotiation, help you both get real about your alternatives, and make sure the agreement you reach gets written clearly.
- I can't tell either of you whether the deal on the table is good for you, what a judge would likely do, or what rights you might be giving up. That would be legal advice to one side — and the moment I do that, I've stopped being neutral.
That gap — "is this a good deal for me?" — is exactly the gap a lawyer fills. Whether you need one filling it depends on your situation.
When self-represented mediation tends to work well
- You both work regular jobs with W-2 income — no businesses to value, no hidden money to hunt.
- The assets are a house, some bank accounts, maybe retirement accounts — substantial, but knowable.
- You agree on the big picture and need help with the details and the paperwork-grade precision.
- You can both speak up in the same building. Not happily — nobody's happy — but functionally.
For couples like this, mediation without counsel is often the most dignified, affordable path through a divorce that exists in Florida.
Where I'd tell you to slow down
Retirement accounts and pensions
Dividing a 401(k) or pension usually requires a special court order with technical requirements, and the difference between "half the account" and "half the marital portion" can be tens of thousands of dollars. You can still mediate — but this is a place where a few hundred dollars of legal review can protect a six-figure asset.
A business, professional practice, or complicated income
If one of you owns a business, the honest question is: do you actually know what it's worth and what the income really is? If not, negotiating without help is negotiating blindfolded.
Support questions with real money attached
Child support has a formula, but the inputs can be argued, and alimony involves judgment calls about need, ability, and duration. If support could be a major number for years, an hour of legal advice before mediation is cheap insurance.
Fear, control, or a history of violence
If you're afraid of your spouse — afraid to disagree, afraid of what happens after — tell me before mediation day. There are real accommodations: separate rooms for the entire session, staggered arrival times, remote attendance by Zoom. And candidly, this is the situation where I most want you to have an advocate. A mediator can balance a process; only your own counsel balances power.
The smart middle path most people don't know exists
You don't have to choose between "two full retainers" and "totally alone." Florida allows limited-scope representation — hiring a lawyer for one defined task. The version I see work over and over: mediate without counsel, and before you sign the marital settlement agreement, pay an attorney of your choosing for an hour or two to review it and tell you, privately, what it means for you. Best of both worlds: mediation's cost and dignity, plus a professional set of eyes on the most important contract you may ever sign.
However you decide to do it — that decision is yours, and either way you'll get the same neutral, the same process, and the same straight answers from me about how it all works.
Thinking about mediating without attorneys?
I mediate for represented and self-represented parties alike — and I'll tell you honestly at intake whether your situation fits. In person in Tampa Bay or by Zoom anywhere in Florida. English & Español.
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