What Happens After Filing for Divorce in San Bernardino | San Bernardino Divorce Guide
I’m Tim Blankenship with Divorce661. If you’ve filed your petition for divorce in San Bernardino County, that was an important first step—but it isn’t the finish line. In this guide I’ll walk you through exactly what happens next, what you must do to keep your case moving, and how to avoid common pitfalls that can delay or derail your divorce.
Quick overview: The post-filing roadmap
- Serve your spouse with the divorce papers
- Wait the mandatory six-month period before final judgment
- Exchange mandatory financial disclosures
- Draft and finalize a Marital Settlement Agreement addressing property, support, and custody
- Submit your judgment paperwork electronically for court approval
1. Serving your spouse: how it works and why it matters
After you file, your spouse must be served with the summons and petition. Service starts the clock on other deadlines and formally notifies your spouse of the action.
There are two common methods of service:
- Service by mail with a Notice of Acknowledgement — If your spouse agrees to cooperate, they can sign a notice acknowledging receipt. This is faster and less confrontational.
- Personal service — If your spouse won’t cooperate, someone over 18 (not you) must personally hand them the documents. This is required to ensure proper notice when acknowledgment by mail isn’t possible.
2. The mandatory six-month waiting period
California requires a minimum waiting period after service. Once your spouse is properly served, a mandatory six-month waiting period begins. This is the shortest amount of time before a divorce can be finalized, regardless of how quickly you complete other paperwork.
Plan accordingly: even if you and your spouse reach agreements immediately, the court will not enter a final judgment until that six-month period has passed.
3. Financial disclosures: mandatory and essential
Both spouses must exchange complete financial disclosures. These are not optional—even in amicable divorces. Full transparency helps the court and both parties reach a fair settlement.
The two required disclosures are:
- Schedule of Assets and Debts — A detailed list of all property, bank accounts, investments, vehicles, retirement accounts, debts, and other financial items.
- Income and Expense Declaration — A sworn statement of current income, monthly living expenses, and a summary of employment or other income sources.
Providing accurate, complete disclosures prevents delays, objections, and potential reopening of the case later on.
4. Creating a Marital Settlement Agreement
Once disclosures are exchanged, you and your spouse can negotiate and draft a Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA). This is where you document how you will divide property, handle support (spousal and child support), and manage custody or parenting time if children are involved.
An effective MSA should clearly address:
- Division of assets and debts (who gets what)
- Spousal support terms (amount, duration, modification terms)
- Child custody and visitation (legal and physical custody, parenting plan)
- Child support calculations or agreements
- Any other agreed-upon responsibilities or conditions
When the MSA is complete and both parties sign, it becomes the roadmap the court will adopt in the final judgment.
5. Submitting your judgment for court approval
Once the six-month waiting period is complete and you have your signed agreement and disclosures, the final step is preparing and submitting the judgment paperwork to the court. In most cases this can be done electronically, and no court appearance is necessary.
The court reviews the documents for completeness and legal sufficiency. If everything is in order, the judge will sign the judgment and your divorce will be finalized.
Real client example: How a stuck case got back on track
We recently helped a San Bernardino couple who assumed the court would handle everything after they filed. Months later their case was still pending because required disclosures and agreements were never completed.
We stepped in, completed their financial disclosures, drafted a clear Marital Settlement Agreement, and handled the judgment submission. The court approved the judgment without either party having to appear in person. The couple went from stuck to finalized.
How Divorce661 can help
At Divorce661 we provide a full-service, flat-fee solution for amicable divorces in California. Here’s what we handle so your case moves smoothly:
- Guidance on proper service of process
- Preparation and review of mandatory financial disclosures
- Drafting Marital Settlement Agreements tailored to your situation
- Electronic submission of judgment documents for court approval
- 100% remote service across California — no court appearances when not required
Our goal is to make sure nothing is missed and to prevent the common pitfalls that slow down or complicate cases.
A practical checklist: Steps to take after filing
- Arrange proper service on your spouse (mail with acknowledgement or personal service).
- Confirm the service date to track the six-month waiting period.
- Prepare and exchange the Schedule of Assets and Debts and the Income and Expense Declaration.
- Negotiate and sign a Marital Settlement Agreement covering property, support, and custody.
- Assemble and submit the judgment paperwork electronically for court approval after the waiting period.
Final thoughts
Filing your petition is an important first move, but the work after filing is what gets you to a final judgment. Serve your spouse correctly, respect the six-month waiting period, exchange complete financial disclosures, and finalize a clear Marital Settlement Agreement. Follow these steps and your divorce will move forward efficiently.
“Serve your spouse, understand the waiting period, exchange financial disclosures, and finalize agreements.”
If you need help or want to make sure nothing is missed, visit Divorce661.com for a free consultation. We’ll help you get your case back on track and finalized the right way.