Type “cheap divorce” into any search engine and the first page fills with services promising fast, affordable separations for a few hundred dollars. The branding leans heavily on legal-adjacent imagery: scales of justice, columns, suited representatives in headshots. The fine print, when consumers find it, makes clear that none of these services include actual legal representation. They sell document preparation, and the distinction matters more than most clients realize until something goes wrong.
These are not small businesses. The largest document mills process tens of thousands of cases a year, often with single-digit refund rates and a customer base that doesn’t fully understand what it bought.
What document mills actually do
The service is, mechanically, a form-filler. Customers answer questions through a web interface, the platform populates standardized state-specific divorce templates, and the resulting paperwork gets sent to the customer or filed with a court. Some services include limited paralegal support. None include the practice of law, because doing so without a license is a crime in every state.
The marketing carefully threads this needle. Words like “guidance,” “support,” and “specialists” appear constantly. “Attorney” and “legal advice” appear only in disclaimers. Customers consistently misread the offering as a discount lawyer, which is exactly the impression the brand language is engineered to produce without ever being prosecutable for unauthorized practice.
Where it goes wrong
For genuinely simple, uncontested divorces between two people with no children, no real property, no retirement assets, and full agreement on terms, the document mill output is often adequate. State courts process these filings without difficulty, and the cost savings versus a contested attorney engagement are real.
The failures cluster in cases that look simple on the intake form but aren’t. A retirement account that needs a Qualified Domestic Relations Order to divide properly. A house with a mortgage where one spouse is staying. A custody arrangement that won’t survive the first scheduling conflict. The document mill produces forms that are technically valid, the court accepts them, and the consequences emerge months or years later when the parties realize the paperwork didn’t address something it should have.
The structural problem is that document mills can’t tell you what you don’t know to ask. A licensed attorney has a duty to identify issues outside the questions on the intake form. A non-attorney service has the opposite incentive: stay narrowly within the form to avoid practicing law. The gap is exactly where unsophisticated clients lose money, time, and sometimes custody arrangements they didn’t realize they were giving up.
The regulatory failure
State bars have known about this dynamic for decades and have largely declined to act decisively. Enforcement against the largest services would face deep-pocketed legal challenges and accusations of protecting attorney income from low-cost competition. The compromise has been to allow document preparation while requiring disclaimers that consumers reliably miss.
The takeaway
Document mills are not scams in the legal sense. They deliver what they explicitly promise, which is exactly what makes them risky for clients who think they’re buying something more. Anyone with assets, children, or disagreement should treat the service as a starting point for paperwork only, not as a replacement for advice.
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