A complete guide to legally serving divorce papers, from selecting a process server to filing Proof of Service (FL-115). Know your options when your spouse is cooperative, evasive, or missing entirely.
California law is strict about who can serve legal documents. Using the wrong person can invalidate your service and delay your case.
Licensed and registered with the county. The most reliable option. Costs $85–$200 depending on location and urgency. They know the rules, complete FL-115 properly, and can locate evasive spouses.
A friend, relative, coworker, or neighbor who is at least 18 years old and not named in the divorce petition. They must be responsible, understand the requirements, and be willing to complete FL-115 under penalty of perjury.
County sheriff or marshal can serve papers for a fee (typically $40–$100). Often slower than private process servers but carries official authority. Contact your county sheriff's civil division.
You cannot serve papers on your own spouse. This is the most common mistake and will invalidate your service entirely.
Obviously, the person being served cannot serve themselves.
Minors cannot serve legal documents in California under any circumstances.
If your adult child, new partner, or relative is mentioned in custody or support requests, they cannot serve.
A new romantic partner, business associate, or anyone who stands to benefit from the divorce outcome is disqualified.
California Rule of Court 2.251: Service must be made by a person at least 18 years of age who is not a party to the action. Violating this rule can result in your service being quashed and your case delayed by months.
The FL-115 is the document that proves to the court your spouse was properly served. Without it, your divorce cannot proceed. Every detail matters.
The server fills out FL-115 with the exact date, time, and location of service. Must describe the person served (appearance, age, gender) to prove correct recipient.
The server must attach copies of all documents served (summons, petition, UCCJEA, etc.) to the completed FL-115 as proof of what was delivered.
The server must sign FL-115 under penalty of perjury and return it to you. You then file the original with the court clerk to establish jurisdiction.
Case name and case number (from your filed petition)
Server's full name, address, and telephone number
Exact date and time of service (not just the date)
Exact address where service occurred
Description of the person served (age, gender, height, weight, hair color, clothing)
Statement that server is 18+ and not a party to the action
Declaration signed under penalty of perjury under California law
After filing your petition, you have 60 days to serve your spouse. If you miss this deadline, the court may dismiss your case or require you to show cause.
Once served, your spouse has 30 days to file a response (FL-120). If they don't respond, you can file for a default judgment.
California requires a minimum 6-month waiting period from the date of service before the divorce can be finalized. Early service = earlier finalization.
Vague description of the person served ("adult male" is insufficient)
Wrong date or time (must be exact, not approximate)
Missing copies of served documents attached to form
Server failed to sign under penalty of perjury
Server is under 18 or a party to the case
Serving at wrong location (work vs. home rules differ)
An evasive spouse doesn't stop your divorce. California law provides multiple alternative service methods when personal delivery isn't possible.
Serve someone at your spouse's home or workplace who is "of suitable age and discretion," then mail copies. Requires at least 3 attempts at different times/days first.
If your spouse will sign a Notice and Acknowledgment of Receipt (FL-117), you can serve by mail. This requires cooperation—but if they refuse to sign, you have other options.
For missing spouses where you genuinely cannot locate them after diligent search. Requires court approval and publication in approved newspaper for 4 consecutive weeks.
Before a court will approve service by publication, you must prove you made genuine, thorough efforts to locate your spouse. Here's what courts expect:
Call or write their last known workplace to ask if they have forwarding contact information.
Request address information from the California DMV (requires court order in some cases).
Document Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and other platform searches with screenshots.
Reach out to parents, siblings, and close friends. Document who you spoke with and what they said.
Professional locators can search credit bureaus, utility records, and proprietary databases.
Search county assessor records for any property owned or leased in California or other states.
Some spouses refuse to answer the door, hide at work, or instruct coworkers to deny their presence. Here's how process servers handle these situations:
Choose the right method based on your spouse's cooperation level and your budget.
| Method | Cost | Timeframe | Best For | Court Approval? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Personal Service
Hand delivery to spouse
|
$85–$200 | Same day | Cooperative or neutral spouse | No |
|
Substituted Service
Serve adult at home/work + mail
|
$150–$300 | 10+ days after mailing | Evasive spouse at known location | No* |
|
Service by Mail
Spouse signs FL-117
|
$10–$20 | Varies | Cooperative spouse out of state | No |
|
Service by Publication
Newspaper + court order
|
$200–$500 | 4+ weeks | Missing spouse, unknown location | Yes |
|
Posting at Courthouse
Rare, last resort
|
$50–$100 | Court discretion | Extreme cases only | Yes |
* Substituted service requires documented proof of multiple failed personal attempts but doesn't need pre-approval.
Whether your spouse is cooperative, evasive, or missing entirely, we can handle the service process correctly the first time. Our network of professional process servers covers all of California.