By Adrian Davis, Board-Certified Family Law Specialist · Cape Fear Family Law
Serving Wilmington, Durham, Jacksonville, Greensboro, Oxford, and Benson
DIRECT ANSWER
In North Carolina, a collaborative divorce for an estate between $100,000 and $3,000,000 typically costs $4,000 to $20,000 in total professional fees across both spouses combined — roughly $2,000 to $10,000 per spouse. These costs are not only the attorney time and fees, but also for the experts such as forensic accountants or psychiatrists. Final cost depends on asset complexity, use of neutral financial professionals, whether minor children are involved, and ultimately the parties’ themselves.
— Adrian Davis, Cape Fear Family Law

A Note from Adrian: The Quiet Path Through a Loud Season
I am a wife. I am the mother of two boys. I’m a daughter and a sister. And for more than a decade I have practiced family law the way I learned to read the weather from looking at the clouds in the sky growing up here in eastern North Carolina — patiently, and with my eyes open.
Here is the truth most people never hear before they hire a lawyer: a divorce does not have to be a wildfire. A wildfire is loud, it is fast, and it consumes everything in its path — the savings, the retirement, the goodwill you will still need to co-parent on the far side of it. A collaborative divorce is the controlled, deliberate path. Slower in some ways, yes. But you reach the clearing with your dignity, your finances, and your children’s sense of safety still intact.
Owls do not hunt by making noise. They hunt by stillness, by patience, by seeing clearly in low light when everyone else is blind. That is the spirit of collaborative practice, and it is the one I bring to every table. Now — because clients ask me this in the first ten minutes of every consultation — let’s talk plainly about what it costs.

How much does a collaborative divorce cost in North Carolina?
For most North Carolina estates valued between $100,000 and $3 million, a collaborative divorce runs roughly $4,000 to $20,000 combined for the typical core team — about $2,000 to $10,000 per spouse. More complex estates approaching the $3M end — a business to value, several properties, blended retirement accounts — push toward the upper end of the broader range, up to about $20,000 combined. The table below shows how the typical core-team cost is built, line by line.
COLLABORATIVE DIVORCE COST — NC 2026 (RANGE, BOTH SPOUSES COMBINED)
| Professional service | Range (both spouses combined) |
|---|---|
| Legal fees (collaborative attorneys, both sides) | $3,500 – $10,000 |
| Neutral financial professional (if used) | $500 – $5,500 |
| Child specialist (if used) | $300 – $4,500 |
| TOTAL TYPICAL RANGE (combined) | $4,000 – $20,000 |
| PER-SPOUSE EQUIVALENT | $2,000 – $10,000 |
FROM THE OWL’S PERCH
What makes up the cost of a collaborative divorce?
A collaborative divorce is a team sport with a deliberately small roster. Each professional has one job, and you only pay for the ones your case actually needs:
- Your collaborative attorneys (one for each spouse). Both lawyers are specially trained to negotiate to resolution rather than to trial. They draft the agreements, protect your legal rights, and keep the conversation honest and moving. This is the bulk of the cost.
- A neutral financial professional (optional). One shared, unbiased expert organizes the marital balance sheet — accounts, real estate, retirement, debts — so both spouses work from the same numbers. Sharing one neutral costs a fraction of hiring two dueling experts who cancel each other out.
- A child specialist or coach (optional). A neutral professional who keeps the children’s needs at the center and helps you build a parenting plan that fits your actual family. For families with younger children or special needs, this is often the highest-value line on the page.
The phrase “if used” matters. A couple with a straightforward balance sheet and grown children may need only the two attorneys, landing near the bottom of the range. A couple with a business, a special-needs child, and three retirement accounts will rightly use the full team — and still spend far less than they would in litigation.

Is collaborative divorce cheaper than litigation in North Carolina?
In most cases, yes — and often dramatically so. A contested courtroom divorce in North Carolina commonly runs $15,000 to well over $100,000 combined once discovery disputes, dueling experts, depositions, and trial preparation pile up. High-conflict custody and high-asset cases climb higher still. Here is the honest comparison:
COLLABORATIVE vs. LITIGATED DIVORCE — NC 2026 (BOTH SPOUSES COMBINED)
| Factor | Collaborative | Litigation (contested) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical total cost | $4,000 – $20,000 | $15,000 – $100,000+ |
| Experts | One shared neutral | Two opposing, each billed |
| Discovery / depositions | Usually none | Common and costly |
| Who controls the outcome | The two of you | A judge on a full docket |
| Typical timeline | Often a few months | Often 1–2+ years |
| Co-parenting relationship | Preserved by design | Often damaged |
One caution, said plainly: collaborative law has a built-in tripwire. Under North Carolina law, if the collaborative process ends without a settlement, both collaborative attorneys must withdraw, and each spouse must start over with new litigation counsel. That is the law’s way of keeping everyone honestly committed to the table — but it means that if a case truly cannot settle, you can end up paying twice. Choosing the right path at the start is everything, and it is the first thing we assess together.

What does a collaborative divorce cost for a $100K–$3M estate?
Here is a counterintuitive truth I share at nearly every consultation: the size of your estate matters far less than its complexity. The dollar figure on the balance sheet is not what drives the bill — the number of moving parts is.
- Lower-complexity estates ($100K – $1M): a home, a few retirement accounts, ordinary savings and debts. These cases typically land in the $4,000 – $10,000 combined range shown in the table above.
- Higher-complexity estates (approaching $3M): a closely held business needing valuation, multiple or out-of-state properties, executive compensation, or commingled inheritances. These cases use the full neutral team and move toward the upper end — commonly $12,000 – $20,000 combined.
A clean $2 million estate (house, 401(k), brokerage account) can cost less to resolve collaboratively than a tangled $300,000 estate with a struggling small business and ten years of commingled funds. Complexity is the river’s current; the dollar total is just how wide the river looks from the bank.

Does a collaborative divorce cost more if our child has special needs or an IEP?
Slightly — and it is some of the wisest money a parent will ever spend. As a mother who has lived alongside the worlds of autism, neurotypical and neurodivergent siblings, and IEP meetings, I will tell you what a crowded courtroom calendar cannot give you: time to get the parenting plan right.
A judge with forty cases on the docket cannot draft a plan around your child’s therapy schedule, sensory needs, transition routines, or the specific language of an IEP. A collaborative team can. The child specialist line on your invoice may rise modestly, but in exchange you build a durable, customized plan — how to handle service providers, who attends school meetings, how transitions between homes are structured — written by the two people who know the child best, with a neutral expert guiding it.
FROM THE OWL’S PERCH
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a collaborative divorce legally binding in North Carolina?
Yes. Collaborative law is established in North Carolina by statute — Article 4 of Chapter 50 of the General Statutes (§ 50-70 through § 50-79). Your final agreement is reviewed and approved by the court and entered as an enforceable order, every bit as binding as a litigated judgment.
What happens if a collaborative divorce fails in North Carolina?
If the process ends without a settlement, North Carolina law requires both collaborative attorneys to withdraw, and each spouse must retain new litigation counsel to go to court. This disqualification rule is intentional: it gives everyone a powerful, shared incentive to stay at the table and reach agreement.
How long does a collaborative divorce take in North Carolina?
The collaborative negotiation itself often resolves in a matter of months, compared with one to two years or more for a contested case. Keep in mind that North Carolina separately requires spouses to live separate and apart for one year before an absolute divorce can be granted — the collaborative process can do its work during or after that period.
Do both spouses need their own attorney in a collaborative divorce?
Yes. Each spouse has their own collaboratively trained attorney. Both lawyers are committed in writing to reaching a settlement and to withdrawing if the case goes to court — which keeps the focus squarely on resolution rather than positioning for trial.
Is collaborative divorce cheaper than mediation?
They are different tools. Mediation can be less expensive for a simple, low-conflict split. Collaborative divorce provides a full professional team — attorneys for each spouse plus optional neutral financial and child specialists — which makes it the stronger fit for complex finances, emotional cases, or families with special-needs children, while still costing far less than litigation.
Can we use a collaborative divorce if we own a business?
Yes, and it is often ideal. A single neutral financial professional can value the business once, transparently, instead of each side paying a separate expert to produce competing numbers. That protects both the business and your wallet — and keeps confidential financials out of the public court record.
Ready to choose the quieter path?
Schedule a confidential consultation with Adrian Davis at Cape Fear Family Law.
Schedule a Confidential Consultation Today
No Attorney-Client Relationship: Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship. That relationship is formed only when we both sign a formal engagement agreement.
Information, Not Advice: This content is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice for your specific situation.
Estimates, Not Quotes: All cost figures are general ranges based on typical North Carolina collaborative cases. They are not a quote or guarantee of fees. Your actual cost depends on the facts of your matter.
No Guarantee of Results: Every family and every estate is different; past outcomes do not guarantee future results.
Board-Certified Specialization: Adrian Davis is a Board-Certified Specialist in Family Law as recognized by the North Carolina State Bar.
Office Responsibility: Cape Fear Family Law is responsible for the content of this advertisement. Our principal office is located in Wilmington, North Carolina.




