Family Court procedure is not designed to intimidate you — it is designed to ensure fairness. Every stage, from issuing an application to final hearing, follows a structured framework governed by the Family Procedure Rules 2010. Whether your case concerns children, finances, or domestic abuse, the court works within defined procedural steps that protect both parties and focus the judge on the legal issues. For litigants in person, understanding how the process works — and what happens at each stage — is one of the most powerful ways to reduce anxiety and strengthen your position.
Family Court Procedure Explained: A Practical Guide for Litigants in Person (England & Wales)
Key Takeaways
Family Court procedure is governed by the Family Procedure Rules 2010 (FPR).
The court follows structured stages: application, safeguarding, directions, evidence, and final determination.
Children cases are driven by the welfare principle under the Children Act 1989.
Financial cases follow strict disclosure and negotiation stages before trial.
Procedure matters — failure to comply can undermine even strong cases.
Understanding the process reduces anxiety and improves strategic focus.
Introduction: Procedure Is the Framework of Fairness
Family Court can feel overwhelming — particularly if you are representing yourself. The forms, the hearings, the terminology, the directions — it can appear procedural for the sake of bureaucracy.
It is not.
Procedure is the structure that ensures fairness. It allows both parties to know the case they must meet. It ensures evidence is exchanged. It protects children. It safeguards rights. It creates predictability in what can otherwise be highly emotional litigation.
This guide explains how Family Court procedure works in England and Wales, what stages you should expect, and how to prepare strategically at each point.
This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Each case turns on its own facts.
JSH Law provides litigation support services to litigants in person. JSH Law is not a firm of solicitors and does not undertake reserved legal activities.
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If you are a litigant in person, one of the hardest parts of Family Court is not your case — it’s understanding the system around it. This “Start Here” resource embeds and breaks down a public lecture by Baroness Hale (former President of the UK Supreme Court) on Family Law in the 21st Century. Although recorded a few years ago, it remains one of the clearest big-picture explanations of what family law actually does: it defines relationships, gives legal status to some relationships, and provides remedies when things go wrong. The lecture also tackles issues litigants regularly encounter in practice — the myth of “common law marriage”, the rationale for no-fault divorce, how children’s welfare is analysed, and why procedure and duplication create hidden barriers for unrepresented parties. This guide pulls out the practical takeaways and shows how to watch the video strategically, so you can move from confusion to structure and present your case in the language the court works in.
Start Here: A Clear, Candid Overview of UK Family Law — Baroness Hale’s “Family Law in the 21st Century”
Resources > Start Here Pillar | Video explainer for litigants in person | England & Wales focus (with references to UK-wide context where relevant)
Key takeaways for litigants in person
Family law is bigger than “family court”: it defines relationships, gives legal status to some relationships, and provides remedies when things go wrong.
The modern trend is inclusion: the law has moved away from excluding children or families based on marital status.
“Wishes and feelings” matter, but the child’s welfare is paramount and decisions are not a popularity vote.
No-fault divorce was designed to reduce conflict — because conduct-based divorce fuels acrimony and makes co-parenting harder.
Unmarried cohabitants still have major legal gaps (despite widespread belief in “common law marriage”).
Procedure matters: complexity and duplication hurt litigants in person; simplifying how cases start could improve access to justice.
If you are a litigant in person, one of the hardest parts of the Family Court is not “your case” — it’s the wider system. The rules, the language,
the assumptions, the different applications, the endless forms, and the emotional load of trying to make sense of it all at the same time.
That is why this video is worth your time.
It’s a public lecture by Baroness Hale of Richmond (former President of the UK Supreme Court) called
“Family Law in the 21st Century”. It was produced a few years ago, but it remains a strong “big picture” explainer: what family law is,
how it has evolved, and why the system feels difficult when you are unrepresented.
This article does three things:
Embeds the video so you can watch it in one place.
Explains the main ideas in plain English (without dumbing it down).
Pulls out what matters practically for litigants in person going through Family Court.
Watch the video: “Family Law in the 21st Century” (Baroness Hale)
Tip: if you are watching as a litigant in person, keep a notebook beside you. Write down the themes that apply to your situation:
relationships, parental responsibility, children arrangements, remedies, and procedure.
What family law actually does (and why that matters in court)
One of the most helpful frameworks in this talk is her starting point:
family law is not just “what happens in family court”. It does at least three things:
Defines relationships (who counts as family for legal purposes).
Gives legal status to some relationships (marriage, civil partnership, adoption, parental orders).
Provides remedies when things go wrong (child arrangements, protective orders, divorce, finances).
This matters because litigants in person often enter proceedings believing the court is there to “decide who is right”.
That is not the court’s job. The court’s job is to apply the law to the facts and make workable orders that promote welfare and safety.
If you bring the court a case that is essentially “this person is awful”, but you do not translate that into a welfare and safeguarding
framework, you will feel unheard. Often, you are not unheard — you are just not speaking the court’s language.
Inclusion: the law moved away from excluding children and families
A significant part of the lecture tracks how family law has shifted from exclusion to inclusion.
Historically, legal “family” was shaped by marriage and bloodline — and children born outside marriage could be treated very differently.
Modern reforms moved towards recognising children as full family members regardless of their parents’ marital status.
For litigants in person, the practical point is this: the court will not treat a child as “less legitimate” because a relationship was informal.
Your child’s welfare and stability come first.
But there is a second, more subtle point: the law distinguishes between:
Parentage (who is a legal parent), and
Parental responsibility (who has legal authority for key decisions).
That distinction matters in everyday disputes about schooling, medical decisions, travel, communication, and consent.
If you don’t know whether someone has parental responsibility, you can waste months arguing the wrong point.
Status relationships: marriage, civil partnership, adoption, parental orders
Another major theme is how the law “creates” family relationships through formal status.
Marriage and civil partnership change legal status without a court order. Adoption and parental orders change legal relationships by court order.
Why does this matter to litigants in person?
Because many of the most painful shocks in family breakdown happen when someone assumes they have rights that they do not.
1) The “common law marriage” myth
Baroness Hale touches on a reality that affects thousands of people: cohabitants often believe they have “marriage-like” financial rights.
In England & Wales, that is usually not true. There are property and trust claims in some circumstances, but there is no automatic
“divorce-style” financial remedy for cohabitants simply because they lived together.
If you are reading this and you are not married / not in a civil partnership, and your dispute is about housing or assets, this point is critical:
the legal framework may be completely different from what people assume.
2) Religious-only marriages (and why remedies can be limited)
She also highlights the problem of religious marriages not recognised in civil law.
This can affect financial remedies when relationships end. In plain terms: if you are not legally married under English law,
you may not be entitled to the financial remedies people associate with divorce.
For litigants in person, that does not mean “no remedy exists” — it means you need to identify the correct route early.
Leaving it until the end can be catastrophic.
Remedies: the Family Court’s main day-to-day work
When most people say “family law”, they mean the remedies:
what happens when things go wrong.
Baroness Hale lists the reality plainly:
remedies for domestic abuse, remedies for children arrangements, remedies to protect children from harm,
and remedies for divorce and finances.
For litigants in person, two practical lessons sit underneath this:
1) The system is designed for risk-management, not moral judgment
Especially in children cases, the court is forward-looking:
what arrangements reduce risk and promote stability going forward?
That is why the court repeatedly returns to statutory structure, including the welfare checklist under the Children Act 1989.
(A useful starting point is s.1 and s.1(3) for the welfare checklist.)
Children Act 1989, s.1.
2) Domestic abuse: the issue is implementation as much as law
She notes something many survivors recognise: the legal framework can look “serviceable” on paper, but outcomes depend on implementation.
In private children proceedings where domestic abuse is raised, the key procedural guidance is
Practice Direction 12J.
If domestic abuse is part of your case, do not rely on “the court will know”.
You must structure your case so the court is forced to apply the framework.
That means: allegations, evidence, impact on the child, risk factors, and workable safeguarding proposals.
No-fault divorce: reducing conflict so co-parenting is possible
There is an excellent section in the Q&A where Baroness Hale explains why she supports no-fault divorce.
Her reasoning is practical:
conduct-based divorce encourages lists of accusations that inflame conflict, create bitterness,
and make cooperation about children and finances harder.
For litigants in person, the take-home is not “divorce is easy”.
It is: the system is slowly trying to remove unnecessary conflict from the process where it can.
Family breakdown is hard enough; procedure should not make it harder.
Is the system biased against men (or women)? A more honest answer than you usually hear
One of the audience questions in the transcript asks whether the family court system is biased against men.
Baroness Hale’s answer is realistic:
men can feel it is stacked against them; women can feel it is stacked against them.
The law is intended to be gender-neutral, and the correct analysis is child-centred.
For litigants in person, this is important because “bias” arguments often become a dead end.
They drain your energy and rarely change the outcome. What changes outcomes is:
Evidence, not outrage.
Welfare analysis, not slogans.
Practical proposals, not punishment requests.
Credible safeguarding structure, not assumption.
If you want the court to make a different order, you need to show:
(a) why the current arrangement is not meeting welfare needs or managing risk, and
(b) what alternative order is workable and proportionate.
AI and family law: automation for process, not for human judgment
This is especially relevant given the wider debate about AI in legal services.
Baroness Hale draws a clear line:
some processes (like administrative steps) can be automated, but disputed facts and evaluative welfare judgments should not be.
If you are a litigant in person using AI tools:
Use them to organise, summarise, and structure.
Do not use them to invent, embellish, or “improve” evidence.
Always verify authorities and facts independently.
Your credibility matters more than your eloquence.
The “one-stop shop” idea: why procedure is the hidden barrier for litigants in person
Baroness Hale ends with a procedural reform idea that will resonate with anyone who has tried to run a case unrepresented:
a single entry point into the family justice system.
Her point is straightforward:
multiple processes, multiple application forms, repeated witness statements, duplicated facts — this creates avoidable friction.
And when legal representation is low (as it is for many families), complexity becomes a form of exclusion.
This is exactly why “Start Here” resources matter. Litigants in person need:
A clear picture of the system, not fragments.
Joined-up information (one thing should link to the next).
Practical guidance on what the court actually needs.
If you watch this video and you feel “I finally understand what is happening”, that is the point.
Knowledge reduces chaos.
How to use this video strategically (not just passively)
If you are currently in proceedings, here is a practical way to use this talk:
Identify which “bucket” your case sits in: children arrangements, domestic abuse protection, divorce, finances, or multiple.
Write your case theory in one sentence: “The order needed is X because welfare/safety requires Y.”
List your top 5 facts that support that theory (with dates).
Attach evidence to those facts (not to your feelings).
Propose a workable order (contact plan, handovers, supervision, communication boundaries, review points).
This approach moves you from “reaction” to “strategy” — and that is where litigants in person begin to regain control.
Book a 15-minute consultation (phone)
If you are a litigant in person and you want help translating what you are experiencing into a structured court-ready approach,
you can book a 15-minute consultation below.
The aim is clarity: what matters, what doesn’t, and what you should do next.
6 useful links (start here)
Children Act 1989, section 1 (welfare principle + welfare checklist)
The statutory backbone of private children proceedings: welfare is paramount and the checklist guides analysis.
View legislation
Practice Direction 12J (domestic abuse in children proceedings)
The key procedural guidance when domestic abuse is raised — how courts should approach risk and contact.
Read PD12J
Cafcass – Advice for parents and carers
Practical information on safeguarding, parental responsibility, and what Cafcass does in private law cases.
Cafcass parents hub
HMCTS – Find and download court forms
Official form access point (C100, C1A, C79 and more). Always use the current version.
Court and tribunal forms
Guidance on MIAMs and mediation
A realistic starting point for resolving disputes without hearings where appropriate and safe.
Family mediation guidance
Advicenow – Family court guides for litigants in person
Plain-English guides designed for people running cases themselves (court process, statements, hearings).
Advicenow guides
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The Family Court operates through structured applications. Every request you make must be made using the correct procedural form.
Forms are governed by the Family Procedure Rules 2010.
If you file the wrong document, your application may be delayed or rejected.
Below is a comprehensive list of forms and applications that litigants in person commonly encounter in private family proceedings.
Core Private Children Act Forms
Form
Purpose
C100
Application for Child Arrangements Order, Prohibited Steps Order, or Specific Issue Order.
C1A
Allegations of harm and domestic violence supplement.
C2
Application in existing proceedings (e.g., variation, additional directions).
C79
Application to enforce a Child Arrangements Order.
C63
Application to vary or discharge an enforcement order.
C7
Acknowledgement of service (responding to a children application).
C8
Confidential contact details form.
Emergency & Protective Applications
Form
Purpose
FL401
Application for Non-Molestation Order or Occupation Order.
C11
Application without notice (urgent applications).
C1
Application for other orders under the Children Act 1989.
Financial Disclosure & Related Forms
Form
Purpose
Form E
Financial disclosure in financial remedy proceedings.
Form E1
Financial disclosure in Schedule 1 Children Act cases.
Form A
Application for financial remedy.
D81
Statement of information for consent orders.
Appeals & Procedural Applications
Form
Purpose
FP161
Appellant’s Notice (appeal in Family Court).
C2 (urgent)
Application for directions, adjournments, permission requests.
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Nervous about a Family Court hearing? Learn how to behave, address the judge properly, and present yourself confidently as a litigant in person.
Family Court Etiquette: How to Conduct Yourself as a Litigant in Person
Category: Court Etiquette (Family Court Procedure UK) | Audience: Litigants in Person (England & Wales)
Key takeaways for litigants in person
Be calm, structured and respectful — credibility matters more than volume.
Address the judge correctly: usually “Sir” or “Madam” in the Family Court.
Speak to the judge, not the other parent.
Never interrupt. Make notes and wait your turn.
Focus on the child’s welfare — that is the court’s legal priority under the Children Act 1989, s.1.
Your behaviour in court becomes part of the evidence.
Why Court Etiquette Matters in Family Proceedings
The Family Court is less formal than the Crown Court — but it is still a court of law.
Proceedings are governed by the Family Procedure Rules 2010,
and hearings are recorded. Judges are assessing not only the evidence but also each party’s ability to prioritise the child’s welfare.
In private children cases, the court’s paramount consideration is the child’s welfare under
section 1 of the Children Act 1989.
Your conduct in court can directly affect how your credibility, insight, and emotional regulation are perceived.
Put simply: if you appear hostile, chaotic, or unable to focus on the child, that impression can undermine your position.
Before You Enter the Courtroom
Arrive early. Aim to be there at least 30 minutes before your hearing.
Dress smartly and conservatively. You do not need a suit, but avoid casual or provocative clothing.
Turn your phone off. Not silent — off.
Bring an indexed bundle and spare copies.
Prepare a short position statement. Clear, structured, and child-focused.
How to Address the Judge
In most Family Court hearings before a District Judge or Circuit Judge, you should say:
“Sir” (for a male judge)
“Madam” (for a female judge)
If unsure, court staff can advise you before the hearing begins. Do not say “Your Honour” unless you are certain of the judge’s title.
Practical tip
If you make a mistake in how you address the judge, correct yourself calmly and move on.
Confidence and composure matter more than perfection.
Speaking in Court: The Core Rules
1. Stand when speaking (unless told otherwise)
In most hearings, you stand when addressing the judge. If you are told to remain seated, follow that direction.
2. Do not interrupt
Even if something inaccurate is being said. Make a note. You will be given a chance to respond.
3. Speak to the judge — not to the other parent
You are not there to argue with the other party. All submissions go through the court.
4. Be concise
Judges prefer structure. Use this format:
The issue
The relevant fact
The evidence reference
The order you seek
What NOT to Do
Roll your eyes, sigh loudly, or react visibly to evidence.
Interrupt professionals (Cafcass, social workers, legal representatives).
Raise your voice.
Use insulting language.
Speak over the judge.
Film or record the hearing.
Recording or publishing details from Family Court proceedings can amount to contempt of court due to the privacy rules in children cases.
The Family Court is generally private, and restrictions apply to what can be shared publicly.
If You Feel Overwhelmed
Family Court hearings are emotionally intense. You may hear allegations you strongly dispute.
The judge is watching how you handle pressure.
Pause before responding.
Ask for a short break if genuinely overwhelmed.
Return to the child’s welfare as your anchor.
Key mindset shift
The hearing is not about “winning.” It is about persuading the court that your proposal best serves the child’s welfare.
After the Hearing
Listen carefully to the judge’s summary.
Make notes of directions and deadlines.
Clarify politely if you do not understand something.
Comply strictly with filing dates.
Failure to comply with directions can weaken your position significantly.
Book a 15-minute consultation (phone)
If you want help preparing for an upcoming hearing — including drafting a clear position statement,
structuring your submissions, or understanding what the judge is likely to focus on —
you can book a 15-minute initial consultation below:
Useful links
Children Act 1989 – Section 1 (Welfare Principle)
The legal foundation for how decisions are made in children cases.
Read on legislation.gov.uk.
Family Procedure Rules 2010
The procedural framework governing Family Court hearings.
Read on legislation.gov.uk.
Practice Direction 12B (Child Arrangements Programme)
Explains the structured pathway of private children cases.
Read on justice.gov.uk.
Practice Direction 12J (Domestic Abuse in Child Arrangements Cases)
Safeguarding framework where abuse is alleged.
Read on justice.gov.uk.
GOV.UK – Child Arrangements Orders
Overview of section 8 applications.
Read on GOV.UK.
Cafcass – Private Law Proceedings Guide
What parents can expect during the process.
Read on Cafcass.
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