Family Law Lawyers inKadina, South Australia
Connect with experienced family law lawyers serving Kadina and surrounding areas. Get expert legal advice from local professionals who understand your needs.
Need a family lawyer in Kadina? LawyerLink connects you with a verified South Australian partner firm. Our AI intake handles urgent matters 24/7. Family law in Australia is federal: Kadina matters are filed in the Adelaide registry of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (FCFCOA), with many procedural appearances run by audio-visual link. South Australian intervention-order work runs separately at Kadina Magistrates Court at 60 Graves Street under the Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) Act 2009 (SA). The partner firm covers parenting, property settlement, divorce, child support, binding financial agreements, and intervention-order interactions for clients across Kadina on the northern Yorke Peninsula in the historic 'Copper Triangle' of Kadina, Wallaroo, and Moonta.
Family law in Australia operates under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) — a federal Act applying uniformly across all states. The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (unified in 2021) has its South Australian registry in Adelaide; circuit sittings and audio-visual hearings extend that reach across the state. The Court operates as a two-division court: Division 1 hears the most complex matters and appeals; Division 2 hears the bulk of trial-level family work. A Kadina family matter will be filed in the Adelaide registry — and many of the procedural steps (mention hearings, interim hearings, case-management conferences) can be progressed by audio-visual link without requiring repeated trips to the registry.
Parenting matters proceed under Part VII of the Family Law Act. The Court makes parenting orders setting out who a child lives with, who they spend time with, and how parental responsibility is allocated. The 2024 amendments to the Act removed the previous presumption of equal shared parental responsibility, reframing the framework around the best interests of the child as the paramount consideration. The two primary considerations are the benefit to the child of a meaningful relationship with both parents and the need to protect the child from harm — with protection given priority where the two pull in different directions.
Property settlements proceed under Part VIII (married couples) or Part VIIIAB (de facto couples). The Court applies a four-step approach: identify and value the asset pool, assess each party's contributions (financial and non-financial), consider future needs (earning capacity, care of children, health, age), and check that the proposed outcome is just and equitable. Most Kadina property matters resolve through negotiated consent orders or financial agreements rather than contested final hearings. Time limits matter: applications for property division must be made within 12 months of divorce, or within 2 years of separation for de facto matters.
Family Dispute Resolution under the Family Law Act is mandatory before most parenting filings — a section 60I certificate from an accredited provider is required, with exemptions for urgency and family violence. Accredited FDR providers operate across SA and many run sessions by audio-visual link, which is practical for Kadina clients. Where there are urgent safety concerns, an exemption from FDR is available and an urgent-interim parenting-order pathway can be pursued. Divorce in Australia requires 12 months of separation and that the marriage has broken down irretrievably; the divorce application itself is procedurally straightforward and is often progressed in parallel to substantive parenting or property work.
Intervention orders in Kadina are made under the Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) Act 2009 (SA) at Kadina Magistrates Court at 60 Graves Street. The Act covers a wide range of relationships (spouses, de factos, family members, informal-care relationships) and a wide definition of "abuse" (physical, emotional, financial, coercive). The Court can make an interim intervention order urgently — often on the day of application — and a final order after a defended hearing. Police-issued interim intervention orders give immediate effect to a protective regime pending court review.
Family Law Services in Kadina
Our network of Kadina-based partner firms offer comprehensive family law services to meet your needs.
Family Law Areas Our Network Covers
Our network of family law lawyers can assist with a wide range of legal matters. Connect with a lawyer through our network.
Divorce & Separation
Legal guidance through the divorce process, including contested and uncontested divorces.
Child Custody & Parenting
Arrangements for children's living situations, visitation schedules, and parental responsibilities.
Property Division
Fair division of assets, property, and finances following separation.
Spousal Maintenance
Financial support arrangements between former partners.
Prenuptial Agreements
Binding financial agreements before marriage to protect assets.
Domestic Violence Orders
Protection orders and legal support for domestic violence situations.
Child Support
Calculating and enforcing child support payments.
De Facto Relationships
Legal rights and entitlements for de facto couples.
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We can refer your enquiry to a family law lawyer in our partner network based on your location and situation. Our referral service is free with no obligation.
Local Legal Resources in Kadina
Our family law lawyers are familiar with the local courts, tribunals, and communities in Kadina and surrounding areas.
Courts & Tribunals
Kadina Magistrates Court
Criminal Court60 Graves Street, Kadina SA 5554
Nearby Suburbs Served
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Family Law in Kadina — FAQs
- What happens after I submit my enquiry?
- Most enquiries are routed to a verified South Australian partner firm without delay, including out of hours via our 24/7 AI agent on 1800 959 981. Time-critical matters are prioritised in the intake queue. This includes bail applications, urgent intervention-order interim hearings, statutory limitation deadlines, injunctions, and next-sitting court dates. Tell our intake if you have a court date in the next few days and we will route the enquiry to a partner firm with capacity for short-notice appearance.
- Where will my Kadina family-law matter be heard?
- Parenting, property, divorce, and de facto matters are heard in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia at the Adelaide registry. Intervention orders are made separately at Kadina Magistrates Court at 60 Graves Street under the Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) Act 2009 (SA). Many family-law conferences, mediations, and procedural hearings are conducted by audio-visual link without requiring a trip to Adelaide.
- How much does a family lawyer cost in Kadina?
- These are general ranges. Your actual fee depends on the firm and your specific matter. Initial consultations are commonly quoted in the $250-$500 range. Negotiated consent orders for an uncontested property split typically cost $2,500-$5,000 all up. Contested parenting or property proceedings range from $20,000 to well into six figures depending on complexity, length of any contested hearings, and whether expert witnesses (single-expert valuation, family report, treating doctor) are required. The partner firm provides a written engagement letter and scope before any work begins.
- Do I need a section 60I certificate before I can file parenting orders?
- In most cases, yes. The Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) requires Family Dispute Resolution and a section 60I certificate before parenting filings, with limited exemptions (urgency, family violence, matters already on foot). Accredited providers operate across SA — many run sessions by audio-visual link. The partner firm coordinates with the provider and tells you whether you qualify for an exemption.
- How long do I have to bring a property settlement claim from Kadina?
- For married couples, the time limit is 12 months from the date the divorce order takes effect. For de facto couples, the time limit is 2 years from the date of separation. Late applications can sometimes be brought with the Court's leave but the test is demanding.
- Can my lawyer also help with related issues beyond family law?
- Yes. Many Kadina matters touch more than one area of law — a separation can trigger a property settlement and a will update; a workplace injury can intersect with employment-law issues; a commercial dispute may also involve property or contract claims. Where the partner firm runs multiple practice areas in-house, they will handle the related work directly. Where it sits outside their scope, they will refer to a South Australian partner firm that covers it and coordinate the handover so you are not chasing two firms.
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