FamilyLawGPS
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File & Finish

Filed is not accepted. Accepted is not final. Tracked honestly.

The tracker refuses illegal jumps and says why: nothing submits before the packet's gates are green, a rejection cures and resubmits — never teleports to accepted — the § 61.19 clock is a statute, not a promise, and judgment belongs to the judge. When the judgment lands, the completion engine takes over: the deeds, qualified orders, refinances, insurance resets, and calendar activation your own terms created.

CaseEarly access — free today ($49/mo · $490/yr at launch)

Where your case stands

Packet gates: not yet · Composer

  1. Preparingyou

    open

    The qualifier, the Assembly Line, and the Packet Composer do their work — nothing files from this platform.

  2. · Agreement signedboth spouses

    open
  3. · Packet file-readyyou

    open
  4. · Out for signaturesboth spouses

  5. · Partially signedboth spouses

  6. · Fully signedyou

  7. · Notarized where requiredthe notary

  8. · Ready to fileyou

    open
  9. · Submitted to the clerkyou

  10. · Clerk acceptedthe clerk

  11. · Clerk rejectedyou

    open
  12. · Curing the defectyou

    open
  13. · Resubmittedyou

  14. · Case number assignedthe clerk

  15. · The § 61.19 clockthe court

  16. · Final submission or hearingthe court

    open
  17. · Final judgment enteredthe court

  18. · After the judgmentyou

  19. · Completeyou

The § 61.19 clock

Florida law generally bars entry of a final judgment of dissolution until at least 20 days after the petition is filed (§ 61.19, Fla. Stat.); a court may act sooner only on the statute's required showing. Clerk and court processing add county-varying time on top.

Saved on this device. Legal information, not legal advice — the clerk, the statute, and the judge control every gate this tracker names.