For expat couples, the hardest decisions in a divorce come before any papers are filed. Which country’s court has jurisdiction? Which country’s law governs the financial outcome? Where will maintenance be paid and enforced? Where will the children live? Getting those answers right in the first fortnight almost always decides the case. Our bar-registered family lawyers run cross-border divorce work as a core specialism, not an afterthought.
International divorce doesn’t mean ‘complicated divorce’. It means a divorce where more than one country has a legitimate legal interest — because the spouses are different nationalities, because one has moved countries, because assets or children are split between jurisdictions, or because a foreign divorce needs to be recognised in Spain. The substantive legal issues (property, maintenance, children) are often the same as in a domestic case; the extra work is in choosing the right court, the right applicable law and the right enforcement path.
Two EU regulations do most of the heavy lifting. Brussels II ter decides jurisdiction over divorce and parental responsibility. Rome III decides which country’s law the court will apply to the divorce itself. For UK citizens after Brexit, a different framework applies — rooted in the Hague Conventions and domestic recognition rules. The services grid below links to the specific routes we handle; the deeper analysis is further down.
The five most common cross-border divorce patterns for expats in Spain, plus the specialist work that runs alongside them.
Registering a UK decree absolute or final order at the Spanish Civil Registry — direct recognition where possible, exequatur where needed. Post-Brexit rules fully handled.
Learn more RecognitionExequatur proceedings to have a US state divorce recognised by the Spanish courts and the Civil Registry, with full apostille and sworn translation handling.
Learn more JurisdictionFiling for divorce in Spain when one spouse lives in the UK, US or elsewhere. Jurisdiction analysis, service on the foreign spouse, and handling the case end-to-end in Spain.
Learn more ConflictWhere both sides are fighting and more than one country is in play. Strategic choice of forum, Rome III election, and coordination with lawyers in the home country.
Learn more AgreementMutual-agreement divorces for couples living between two countries — drafted to stand up in both, with proper recognition strategy baked in.
Learn more ChildrenCustody, visitation and relocation decided under Brussels II ter or applicable bilateral rules — always driven by the child’s habitual residence.
Learn more EnforcementSetting, modifying and enforcing child or spousal maintenance across borders under the EU Maintenance Regulation and the 2007 Hague Convention.
Learn more PlanningCapitulaciones matrimoniales drafted to interlock with a home-country prenup — so the same protections work in both jurisdictions.
Learn more AlternativeWhere divorce isn’t the right answer yet — legal separation in Spain with matching arrangements in the home country, for religious, tax or immigration reasons.
Learn moreThe single most important decision in an international divorce is which country’s court hears the case. Under Brussels II ter (Regulation 2019/1111), jurisdiction follows seven alternative grounds — habitual residence of both spouses, habitual residence of the applicant for six or twelve months depending on circumstances, joint nationality of both spouses, and a handful of others. Any of the seven works; the spouse who files first usually fixes the jurisdiction.
That first-to-file rule makes jurisdiction strategic, not just technical. Different countries produce materially different financial outcomes. A divorce filed in Spain is decided under Spanish law by default, with community-property presumptions, conservative maintenance figures and a specific approach to the family home. A divorce filed in England is decided under English law with its own sharing principles, discretionary maintenance regime, and pension-sharing tools. Which forum is better for you depends on the asset mix, the income split and the marriage history — not on where you happen to live today.
Post-Brexit, UK-Spain divorces don’t fall under Brussels II ter anymore. They fall under the 2007 Hague Maintenance Convention, the 1996 Hague Child Protection Convention, and domestic recognition rules in each country. This makes first-to-file more consequential because the safety net of automatic EU recognition is gone. Get the jurisdiction analysis right at the start, or you will pay for it later.
A Spanish court can apply foreign law to a divorce. Under Rome III (Regulation 1259/2010), the couple can elect the law that will govern the divorce and, in many cases, the financial consequences. The default applicable-law ladder — common habitual residence, last common habitual residence if one spouse still lives there, common nationality, law of the forum — often pushes the case into Spanish substantive law even where that isn’t the couple’s natural fit.
Electing a different applicable law under Rome III is done by written agreement, signed before the divorce proceedings start. For international couples it is one of the most underused planning tools in family law. If Spanish matrimonial-property rules don’t reflect the way your marriage actually worked, electing English, Irish, Italian or Dutch law as applicable can change the financial outcome substantially. For couples with capitulaciones matrimoniales in place, the Rome III election should line up with the regime chosen in the prenup.
Children follow their habitual residence. Wherever the child has been living for the last six to twelve months, that country’s courts have primary jurisdiction over custody, visitation and parental responsibility. This is true even if the divorce is happening somewhere else. A divorce in England where the children live in Spain means a two-track case: divorce and finance in England, custody and visitation in Spain.
Brussels II ter (for EU cases) and the 1996 Hague Child Protection Convention (for UK and most Commonwealth cases) handle the recognition piece — a Spanish custody order is enforceable in the UK and vice versa, subject to procedural steps. Where one parent wants to relocate internationally with the child, the habitual-residence country is where the application is heard, and the other parent’s consent or a court order is required before any move.
If you divorced abroad and now live in Spain — or want to remarry here, register the divorce for immigration or inheritance purposes, or change your civil status on Spanish documents — the foreign decree has to be recognised. For EU divorces granted before Brexit, direct recognition through the Spanish Civil Registry is straightforward with an EU certificate. For UK divorces granted from January 2021 onwards, exequatur proceedings before the Spanish court are usually required, though direct Civil Registry recognition is available in narrower circumstances.
For US, Canadian, Australian and other Commonwealth divorces, exequatur is standard. The foreign decree must be apostilled (or legalised), sworn-translated, and submitted with the right supporting documents. The court checks that the foreign proceedings respected basic procedural fairness, that Spanish public policy isn’t offended, and that there are no conflicting Spanish orders. Once recognised, the Spanish Civil Registry updates your marital status and the divorce has full effect here.
Maintenance orders — child maintenance and spousal maintenance — are enforceable across borders far more effectively than people assume. Within the EU, the EU Maintenance Regulation provides direct enforcement. Between Spain and the UK, the 2007 Hague Maintenance Convention covers the same ground with slightly more procedural paperwork. Between Spain and the US, reciprocal enforcement runs through the 2007 Hague Convention and bilateral arrangements; it works, but it takes longer.
The practical message is that a parent can’t escape maintenance obligations by moving abroad. Arrears accrue, interest builds, and the creditor has real enforcement tools in both countries. For the paying spouse this means compliance matters; for the receiving spouse it means cross-border enforcement is genuinely worth pursuing even where the debtor is overseas.
Choose the jurisdiction first, choose the applicable law second, then draft for recognition in both countries. That order — always that order — is what makes international divorces work cleanly.
The same structured approach whether the case settles or goes to court.
First meeting focused on Brussels II ter or post-Brexit jurisdiction, where you can file, where is best, and the trade-offs.
Rome III election analysis, matching the divorce law to your matrimonial-property regime and capitulaciones if any.
File in Spain and, where relevant, coordinate with lawyers in your home country so the two sides of the case move together.
Final orders registered, recognised abroad where needed, and maintenance enforcement set up in both countries from day one.
Calm, strategic, international family-law advice — from bar-registered specialists.
Book a Confidential ConsultationCross-border divorce isn’t a side specialism for us. It’s the core of what we do.
Brussels II ter, Rome III, Hague Conventions and post-Brexit frameworks are daily work here — not an occasional extra.
Colegiado family specialists leading every case. Your strategy is built by a qualified lawyer, not a paralegal.
We regularly run cases alongside UK, US, Irish, Canadian and Australian family lawyers, so nothing falls between jurisdictions.
Every filing, translation, piece of advice and court interaction in plain English. No guessing what was said.
Jurisdiction and applicable-law decisions are made upfront, not after the other side has already fixed them.
International divorces are often high-stakes and high-profile. Our approach stays measured, calm and confidential throughout.
The avoidable errors that cost expats real money — and are almost always made in the first fortnight.
In cross-border cases, the first to file often fixes the jurisdiction. Delaying the decision ‘until things calm down’ regularly hands the strategic advantage to the other side.
Filing in a jurisdiction that produces a worse financial outcome for you, when a better one was available, is the single most expensive mistake in international divorce.
Not even considering whether to elect a different applicable law leaves potentially substantial financial protection on the table.
A beautifully drafted foreign divorce that can’t be recognised in Spain is functionally useless for remarriage, tax or Civil Registry purposes.
Receiving spouses regularly assume they have no remedy when the payer lives overseas. The EU Maintenance Regulation and Hague 2007 Convention say otherwise.
Having separate UK and Spanish lawyers who don’t speak to each other leads to conflicting filings, duplicated work and poor outcomes.
Couples with international assets often still rely on a home-country prenup with no Spanish equivalent. Spanish courts can’t apply what they can’t recognise cleanly.
Changing jurisdiction strategy after proceedings have started is disruptive and expensive. The work should happen before filing.
UK lawyers don’t appear in Spanish courts. You need bar-registered Spanish counsel whichever way the case runs.
The expat profiles who come to us for cross-border divorce work.
Both spouses living in Spain post-Brexit, with UK assets, pensions or children — the largest single group we represent.
One British, one Spanish spouse — the classic Costa del Sol / Costa Blanca profile, usually with property and children.
US spouses living in Spain with state-side assets, 401(k)s, property and often children at an international school.
One spouse in Spain, one in the home country — the hardest jurisdictional call and the most strategic choice of forum.
Expats moving back to the UK, US or Ireland while the divorce runs — habitual residence, jurisdiction and finance all shift.
Irish-Italian, French-Dutch, Belgian-German — Brussels II ter + Rome III work, often with capitulaciones already in place.
Divorced abroad, now in Spain — exequatur or direct Civil Registry recognition depending on the source country and date.
Multi-jurisdiction asset structures, trusts, companies and pensions — where choice of forum is the single most important decision.
Postings that move between countries — habitual residence is fluid and jurisdiction needs active management.
Yes, where you meet one of the Brussels II ter or post-Brexit jurisdiction grounds — typically your habitual residence in Spain for at least six or twelve months, or joint nationality. Your spouse doesn’t have to live here; service on a UK address is handled through established procedures.
That depends on the asset mix, income split and marriage history. Spanish divorce is generally quicker and cheaper; English divorce offers more discretionary maintenance and pension sharing; US state divorces vary enormously by state. The right answer is specific to your finances, not generic.
Rome III lets couples in the EU choose the law that governs their divorce — from any country either spouse has a real connection to. For international couples whose marriage doesn’t fit Spanish community-property rules, electing a different applicable law can materially change the financial outcome. We assess it at the first meeting.
Often yes, for the Spanish side — recognising the English decree here, dealing with Spanish property, pensions or tax consequences, and coordinating cross-border enforcement. We regularly work alongside English family solicitors to keep the two tracks aligned.
Direct recognition through the Civil Registry (for EU pre-Brexit divorces) can be done in a few weeks. Exequatur before the Spanish court (for UK, US and Commonwealth divorces) typically takes three to six months depending on the court and the documents.
Yes, the financial aspects (lump sums, maintenance) are enforceable via the 2007 Hague Maintenance Convention and domestic procedures. Property orders over Spanish real estate are more complicated and sometimes need a parallel Spanish declaration to become fully enforceable.
Custody follows the child’s habitual residence. If the children are now habitually resident in the UK, UK courts will typically have jurisdiction over custody regardless of where the divorce itself runs. We coordinate with UK family lawyers where this applies.
Only if at least one of the Brussels II ter (or applicable) jurisdiction grounds is met. Pure mutual agreement to a forum without a connecting factor is not enough. We always check jurisdiction before drafting.
Exequatur is the Spanish court procedure for recognising a foreign judgment — typically needed for non-EU divorces and post-Brexit UK divorces that can’t be recognised through the simpler Civil Registry route.
Any document submitted to a Spanish court or the Civil Registry needs to be in Spanish, which means sworn translations for foreign-language originals. We coordinate apostilles and sworn translations as part of the service.
Yes, through exequatur, provided the US proceedings respected basic procedural fairness and the decree doesn’t violate Spanish public policy. The decree must be apostilled under the 1961 Hague Convention and sworn-translated into Spanish.
You can challenge jurisdiction in that court and/or file the correct proceedings in the right country. Lis pendens rules apply — the second-seized court must normally stay its proceedings. Moving fast here matters.
Every international case turns on decisions made in the first two weeks. A short confidential call will tell you where you stand before you make any move.
This page provides general legal information, not individual legal advice. International divorce outcomes depend on jurisdiction, applicable-law election, asset location, habitual residence and the specific facts of each marriage. For advice on your case, book a confidential consultation with Platinum Legal Spain.