Beverly Price’s Guide to Successful Divorce Preparation
By Beverly Price • June 26, 2026

Key Points:
- Preparation is not busywork. Divorce ranks second among all life stressors on the classic Holmes-Rahe inventory, and research links a sense of control directly to lower stress. A plan is how you take control back.
- The legal and financial groundwork is concrete: gather your documents, understand your household's full financial picture, and learn your process options before you commit to a path, including mediation versus litigation.
- Emotional preparation is just as real as paperwork. Support systems, self-compassion, and healthy coping measurably change how people come through divorce, and the research backs each one.
- Communication is a preparable skill, not a personality trait. Techniques like the soft startup and BIFF responses can be learned before the hard conversations start.
- You do not have to prepare alone. Research on coaching shows significant gains in coping, well-being, and goal-directed regulation.
Divorce is challenging experience. The emotional turmoil, legal issues, and life changes can feel overwhelming, and the feeling is not an exaggeration. Divorce sits second out of 43 life events, on the Holmes-Rahe Life Stress Inventory.
However, successful preparation can make all the difference. As a Certified Divorce Coach, I've seen how preparation changes outcomes, and the psychology explains why. Research consistently links a person's sense of control to how much stress a situation produces, and divorce is precisely an experience of lost control: over your home, your finances, your time with your children, your future. Preparation is how you take control back, piece by piece, before the process takes it from you. Here is why it's so critical to approach divorce with meticulous planning, and what that planning actually looks like in practice.
1. Your Way Through Legal and Financial Issues
Divorce involves numerous legal and financial considerations. From asset division and spousal support to child custody and legal representation, each decision can have long-lasting effects, and the clients who fare best are the ones who arrive at their first attorney meeting already organized. Here is what that groundwork looks like.
Gather your documents. Start collecting the paper trail of your marriage: several years of tax returns, recent pay stubs for both spouses, statements for every bank, retirement, and investment account, mortgage and property records, vehicle titles, credit card and loan statements, insurance policies, and a list of valuables. If you're not the spouse who handled the money, this step matters doubly, and it's far easier to gather documents calmly now than to subpoena them expensively later.
Understand your full financial picture. Build a simple summary of what your household owns, what it owes, what comes in, and what goes out. Pull your own credit report. Know which accounts are joint and which are individual. You cannot negotiate a fair division of a picture you've never seen whole.
Learn your process options before choosing a path. Divorce is not one process but several: mediation, collaborative divorce, and litigation each carry very different costs, timelines, and levels of conflict. Our guide to mediation versus litigation walks through the tradeoffs. Understanding them before you're in motion helps you choose deliberately rather than defaulting into the most adversarial and expensive route.
Then bring in the right professionals. By gathering all necessary documents, understanding the legal process, and working with a knowledgeable attorney, you can make informed decisions and avoid costly mistakes, and your prepared groundwork means every billable hour goes toward strategy instead of scavenger hunts.
One preparation step people constantly forget: your online life. What you post during a divorce can become evidence, so part of preparing is quieting your accounts and tightening your privacy settings before proceedings begin. Attorney Anne Schmidt's guide to why posting on social media during your divorce can cost you explains exactly what's at stake.
2. Reducing Emotional Stress
The emotional toll of divorce can be immense. Preparation can help alleviate some of this stress by providing a sense of control and clarity, and this is not just coaching intuition: the control research above is the mechanism. When you have a plan in place, you can approach each step of the process with confidence rather than reacting impulsively.
Emotional preparation has its own concrete checklist. Establish your support system now, before the hardest weeks arrive: the research on divorce and health consistently links quality social relationships to better psychological and physical outcomes, and social support is one of the strongest predictors of who adjusts well. Choose the friends and family you'll actually lean on, and consider a therapist, a support group, or both.
Prepare your self-talk. In a study of divorcing adults, those who spoke about their separation with self-compassion recovered measurably better, with the advantage still visible nine months later. You will make mistakes in this process; deciding in advance to treat yourself as you would treat a friend is genuine preparation, not softness.
And set realistic goals for healing. Divorce grief moves in waves, not stages on a schedule, so build a plan that expects hard days rather than one that treats them as failures. Our full guide to mental strategies for a healthier divorce covers the evidence-backed toolkit: movement, journaling, mindfulness, and the rest.
3. Creating a Clear Action Plan
A well-thought-out action plan is essential for navigating the complexities of divorce. This plan should outline your goals, strategies for achieving them, and steps to address potential challenges. Whether it's finding a new place to live, adjusting your budget, or developing a parenting plan, having a clear roadmap helps you stay organized and focused.
Two pieces of coaching advice make action plans actually work. First, start from priorities, not tasks. Before listing what to do, decide what matters most: your children's stability, keeping the house, a clean financial break, your career. When negotiations get hard, your priorities decide for you; without them, every provocation sets the agenda. Second, break everything into small, completable steps. "Sort out finances" stalls; "request credit report Tuesday" gets done, and each completed step rebuilds the sense of control that powers the whole plan. A divorce is navigated the way anything overwhelming is navigated: one finished small thing at a time.
4. Enhancing Communication Skills
Effective communication is crucial during divorce, particularly if children are involved, and the stakes are higher than comfort: research consistently links ongoing conflict between parents to worse outcomes for children, which makes lowering the temperature of your communication a form of child protection.
The encouraging news is that communication under pressure is a learnable skill with named, practiced techniques. Research from the Gottman Institute found that difficult conversations tend to end the way they begin, so preparing a calm, specific opening is half the battle. For written exchanges, our three-step method gives you a repeatable formula, and for the hostile messages that may come back, the BIFF technique, Brief, Informative, Friendly, and Firm, keeps you from being pulled into the fight. Practicing these before you need them, ideally with a coach who can role-play the hard conversations, means your skills are ready when your emotions are not. The same preparation serves your discussions with your attorney and other professionals: articulating your needs and concerns clearly reduces misunderstandings, conflicts, and billable hours alike.
5. Planning for the Future
Divorce is not just about ending a relationship; it's about starting a new chapter in your life. Preparation involves looking ahead and planning for your future: setting new personal and financial goals, exploring career opportunities, and building a support network.
I encourage clients to give this real time, not leftover time, because the research says the future is more promising than the present pain suggests. In long-term studies following adults through divorce, nearly 72 percent showed a resilient pattern, their life satisfaction holding steady across nine years. Write down what you want your life to look like one year and five years from now, specifically: where you live, how you spend your mornings, what your work and finances look like, who is around your table. That vision does double duty. It guides your negotiation priorities today, and it becomes your anchor on the days the process tries to convince you that this struggle is all there is.
6. Handling Unexpected Challenges
Even with the best preparation, unexpected challenges will arise: a negotiation that stalls, an ex who behaves unpredictably, a financial surprise in the paperwork. Preparation doesn't prevent surprises; it changes what surprises do to you. When your documents are gathered, your priorities are written down, your support system is in place, and your communication techniques are practiced, a surprise is a problem to route around rather than a crisis that unravels everything.
Build simple contingencies into your plan: know your walkaway points in negotiation, keep an emergency fund building if you can, and decide in advance who you'll call, coach, attorney, or friend, when something unexpected lands. Resilience in divorce is mostly preparation wearing work clothes.
Conclusion
Thorough preparation is a critical component of a successful divorce process. By taking the time to understand the legal and financial aspects, managing your emotions, creating a clear action plan, enhancing your communication skills, planning for the future, and preparing for unexpected challenges, you can work through your divorce with confidence.
And you don't have to build any of it alone. The research on coaching shows significant positive effects on coping, well-being, and goal-directed self-regulation, which are precisely the capacities this season demands. As a Certified Divorce Coach, my goal is to support you through this process, ensuring you are as prepared as possible for the journey ahead. Preparation is the key to a smoother and more successful divorce experience, and it starts whenever you decide it does.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I prepare for a divorce? Work three tracks at once. Practical: gather financial documents (tax returns, account statements, pay stubs, property records, debts), build a full picture of household finances, and learn your process options before committing to one. Emotional: line up your support system, a therapist or coach if possible, and realistic expectations for the grief waves ahead. Strategic: write down your priorities and your one-year vision, then break everything into small completable steps. Preparation restores the sense of control that research links directly to lower stress.
What documents do I need before filing for divorce? Start with several years of tax returns, recent pay stubs for both spouses, statements for all bank, retirement, and investment accounts, mortgage and property records, vehicle titles, credit card and loan statements, insurance policies, and documentation of major assets like businesses or collections. Add your own credit report and a simple household budget. Organized documents save enormously on attorney fees and prevent assets from being overlooked.
How far in advance should I prepare for divorce? As early as you responsibly can. Document gathering, credit checks, and budgeting are useful months before any filing, and none of it commits you to divorcing; it simply means that whatever you decide, you decide it informed. Emotional preparation has no minimum lead time either. If divorce is a possibility rather than a certainty, preparation work often doubles as clarity work, and a coach or counselor can help you use it that way.
Should I hire a divorce coach or just an attorney? They do different jobs, and the combination is often the most cost-effective. Your attorney handles legal strategy and is the only one who should give legal advice. A coach helps with everything the attorney's hourly rate is wrong for: organizing your preparation, managing emotions, practicing hard conversations, clarifying priorities, and keeping you moving between legal milestones. Many clients find coaching pays for itself in reduced attorney hours alone.
What is the biggest mistake people make when preparing for divorce? Preparing only one track. Some people organize every document but arrive emotionally unprepared, making reactive decisions that undo their careful paperwork. Others process feelings for months while their financial picture stays a mystery. The runners-up: posting about the divorce on social media, choosing the litigation path by default without exploring mediation, and letting the process start before their support system is in place. Successful preparation covers the paperwork, the plan, and the person.
Related reading: Divorce Mediation vs. Litigation: Which Is Right for You? | Building Mental Strategies for a Healthier Divorce Process

Beverly Price, MBA, is a CDC Certified Divorce Coach and host of the Her Empowered Divorce podcast. A former financial services executive, she has helped thousands of women through the emotional, legal, and financial challenges of divorce with confidence.
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