Verified & sourced · Updated June 2026

Consent Orders Explained: How to Formalise Your Agreement Without Going to Court (2026)

The Legal Desk · Editorial team, family law + personal injury + migration · Updated 11 June 2026 · How we rank · Editorial standards

This is general information, not legal advice. The official court for divorce and parenting matters is the Federal Circuit and Family Court. Free help: the Family Relationship Advice Line 1800 050 321, Family Relationships Online, and Legal Aid in your state.

Consent Orders Explained: How to Formalise Your Agreement Without Going to Court (2026)

A consent order is a written agreement about parenting, property or finances that the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (FCFCOA) approves and turns into a legally binding court order, usually without anyone attending court. You file an Application for Consent Orders plus a signed copy of the orders you want, pay a filing fee of $205 (effective 1 July 2025), and a registrar checks the agreement is "just and equitable" (for property) or in the children's "best interests" (for parenting). The court can only approve it if it meets the Family Law Act 1975 standards, so your agreement is not just rubber-stamped. Western Australia runs its own Family Court of WA, so de facto couples there follow slightly different rules.

Verified against official Australian sources, cited in each section below. Figures current for 2026; rules and prices change, so check the linked source for the latest.

Key takeaways

  • A consent order has the same legal force as an order made by a judge after a contested hearing, but it is reached by agreement and almost always decided 'on the papers' without either party going to court.
  • The court filing fee for an Application for Consent Orders is $205 from 1 July 2025 (FCFCOA). Fee reductions or exemptions apply if you hold an eligible concession card, receive legal aid, or can show financial hardship. Confirm the current figure at fcfcoa.gov.au/resources/fees.
  • Time limits matter: married couples have 12 months from the date a divorce order takes effect to apply for property or maintenance orders; de facto couples have 2 years from the date of separation. Apply outside these and you need the court's permission.
  • You can apply for a consent order any time after separation, even before a divorce is finalised, and you do not need to be divorced (or ever divorce) to formalise a property split.
  • You file at least two documents: the Application for Consent Orders form and a signed copy of the proposed orders, plus an identical unsigned Word (.docx) version that is not locked, tracked or image-laden. Parenting applications also require a Notice of child abuse, family violence or risk from both parties.
  • From 10 June 2025, new Family Law Act rules require the court to consider the economic effect of family violence (including financial abuse) in property settlements, and set out specific rules for 'companion animals' (pets), with no joint-ownership orders for pets.
  • For property, the court must be satisfied the orders are 'just and equitable'; for parenting, that they are in the 'best interests of the child'. It will not simply approve whatever you both signed if it falls outside those standards.
  • Consent orders are usually cheaper and lower-risk than a Binding Financial Agreement (BFA): a BFA needs independent legal advice for each party to be valid, whereas legal advice for consent orders is strongly recommended but not legally mandatory.

What a consent order actually is

A consent order is a written agreement, approved by the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, that records what you and your former partner have agreed about parenting, property or finances. Once the court makes the order, it has the same effect as an order made by a judicial officer after a full court hearing. In other words, it is enforceable.

The key word is 'consent'. You and the other party have already worked out the arrangement, whether directly, through mediation, or with lawyers. You are not asking a judge to decide who gets what. You are asking the court to formalise an agreement you have both signed, so that it becomes binding and enforceable rather than an informal understanding that either side can walk away from.

Parenting and financial or property orders can be sought in the same application, so a separating couple can deal with the children and the asset split in one go. A consent order cannot, however, replace a child support assessment or set ongoing periodic child support, which is administered separately through Services Australia (Child Support).

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

How the process works (and why you usually don't attend court)

Consent order applications are almost always decided 'on the papers', meaning a registrar reviews your documents and makes the orders without either party attending a hearing. That is the whole appeal: it formalises your agreement without the cost, stress and delay of a courtroom appearance.

You file at least two documents. The first is the Application for Consent Orders form, which sets out your circumstances and financial position. The second is a signed copy of the orders you are asking the court to make. You must also provide an identical unsigned Word (.docx) version of the proposed orders that is not locked for editing and contains no tracked changes, images or macros, so the court can finalise the wording.

Where you are seeking parenting orders, both parties must also file a Notice of child abuse, family violence or risk. This is mandatory and exists so the court can identify any safety concerns before approving arrangements for children.

Applications should be filed electronically (eFiled) through the Commonwealth Courts Portal at comcourts.gov.au, or at a court registry if you cannot eFile. A registrar then reviews the application. As a rough guide, practitioners commonly report a review turnaround of several weeks, often in the order of six to eight weeks depending on registry workload, but this is indicative only and varies. The court does not publish a guaranteed timeframe, so treat any figure as approximate.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

What it costs in 2026

The court filing fee for an Application for Consent Orders is $205, effective from 1 July 2025. That is the fee paid to the court itself, not legal fees. If you eFile, you pay it by credit or debit card when you lodge; if you file at a registry, you pay it there.

Fee help is available. If you hold an eligible government concession card (such as a Health Care Card or Pensioner Concession Card), receive legal aid, are under 18, or can demonstrate financial hardship, you may be exempt or pay a reduced fee. Court fees are indexed and reviewed regularly, so always confirm the current amount on the official FCFCOA fees page before you file.

Beyond the filing fee, your main cost is any legal help. Many firms offer fixed-fee consent order packages, and quoted ranges for preparing the application and drafting orders commonly sit in the low thousands of dollars depending on complexity. These are market figures from law firms, not government rates, so treat them as a guide and get your own quote. You can also prepare the application yourself using the court's free 'do it yourself' Application for Consent Orders kit.

Note that a divorce is a separate application with a separate, much higher fee (around $1,125 from 1 July 2025, with a reduced fee of roughly $365 for eligible applicants). You do not need a divorce to get consent orders, and getting consent orders does not divorce you.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

Time limits: don't leave it too long

If your consent orders deal with property or spousal maintenance, strict time limits apply. Married couples have 12 months from the date a divorce order takes effect to apply. De facto couples have 2 years from the date of separation.

You do not have to wait for a divorce to start. You can file an Application for Consent Orders any time after you separate, and you can finalise a property split without ever divorcing. The 12-month clock for married couples simply starts when the divorce order takes effect, so the date of divorce is the trigger, not a prerequisite.

If you miss the deadline, you are not automatically barred, but you must ask the court for special permission ('leave') to apply out of time. To get it, you generally have to show that you, or a child of the relationship, would suffer hardship if the application did not proceed. That adds cost, delay and uncertainty, so it is far better to act within time.

Parenting orders are not subject to the same fixed limitation periods, because arrangements for children can be revisited as circumstances change. Even so, formalising parenting arrangements promptly gives both parents certainty.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

The court still has to be satisfied it's fair

A common misconception is that the court simply approves whatever you both sign. It does not. Even by consent, the court can only make the orders if they meet the requirements of the Family Law Act 1975.

For financial and property orders, the orders must be 'just and equitable'. The registrar reviews your asset and liability position (set out in the application) to check the split is fair and within the range a court could properly make. If the agreement looks plainly one-sided or the financial disclosure is thin, the court may ask questions or decline to make the orders as drafted.

For parenting orders, the orders must be in the 'best interests of the child'. The court's paramount concern is the child's safety and wellbeing, which is why the Notice of risk is mandatory and why arrangements that could expose a child to harm will not be approved.

Because the court applies these tests, full and honest financial disclosure matters. Orders obtained by hiding assets or providing misleading information can later be set aside, which would undo the very certainty you were trying to lock in.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

What changed on 10 June 2025

The Family Law Amendment Act 2024 introduced significant property changes that commenced on 10 June 2025. These apply to all separating couples, whether a court decides the matter or you negotiate your own agreement and formalise it by consent, so they directly shape what orders the court will approve.

The reforms codify the steps the court follows in a property settlement. The court must identify each party's legal and equitable interests in property and their liabilities, weigh contributions and current and future circumstances, and ultimately only make an order if satisfied it is 'just and equitable'.

Crucially, the court must now consider the economic effect of family violence where relevant, and the changes make clear that economic or financial abuse (such as one partner controlling all the money) can amount to family violence. This can affect how contributions are assessed.

The amendments also introduced specific rules for 'companion animals' (pets). The court must consider a defined list of factors about a pet, and it cannot order joint ownership or a shared-possession arrangement for a pet. If pets are part of your agreement, your consent orders need to reflect these rules.

Source: www.ag.gov.au

Western Australia is different

Family law in Australia is mostly federal, but Western Australia runs its own Family Court of Western Australia. If you live in WA, you generally apply there rather than to the FCFCOA, and some procedures differ.

The biggest practical difference is for de facto couples. While married couples across Australia (including WA) fall under the federal Family Law Act 1975, de facto financial matters in WA are dealt with under WA's own legislation. When de facto partners in WA seek property orders by consent, the applicant typically must file an 'Affidavit as to jurisdiction' setting out how long the relationship lasted, where it was mainly based, and that it either ran for more than 2 years or that substantial contributions were made such that not making an order would cause serious injustice.

The underlying concepts (a written agreement, approved by the court, with the force of a court order) are the same. But if you are in WA, use the Family Court of WA's forms and guidance, and confirm WA-specific fees and requirements, because they will not always match the federal court's.

Everywhere else in Australia (NSW, VIC, QLD, SA, TAS, ACT and NT), consent orders go through the FCFCOA under the federal Family Law Act.

Source: www.familycourt.wa.gov.au

Consent orders vs a Binding Financial Agreement

For property and finances, the main alternative to a consent order is a Binding Financial Agreement (BFA). They achieve similar outcomes but work very differently, and the right choice depends on your situation.

A consent order is approved by the court, which checks it is just and equitable, so it carries court oversight and is harder to challenge later. A BFA is a private contract between the parties that does not go to court for approval, which gives more flexibility (for example, you do not have to meet the 'just and equitable' test) but less external protection.

Independent legal advice is what most cleanly separates the two. For a BFA to be valid and binding, each party must obtain independent legal advice and the lawyers must certify it. That makes BFAs typically more expensive to set up. For consent orders, independent legal advice is strongly recommended but not a legal precondition, which is one reason consent orders are often the cheaper, lower-risk route after separation.

A further difference is timing. You can only seek consent orders once a relationship has ended, whereas a BFA can be entered before, during or after a relationship (a 'prenup' is a type of BFA). If you have already separated and reached agreement, consent orders are usually the more straightforward option. Either way, getting advice from an accredited family law specialist before you sign is sensible.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

Common questions

Consent Orders Explained: How to Formalise Your Agreement Without Going to Court (2026) — FAQs

Do I have to go to court to get a consent order?

Usually no. Consent order applications are typically decided 'on the papers' by a registrar, without either party attending court. You file the application and proposed orders, and if they meet the legal requirements the court makes the orders. A hearing is only needed in unusual cases.

How much does it cost to file consent orders in 2026?

The court filing fee is $205, effective from 1 July 2025. Reduced fees or exemptions apply if you hold an eligible concession card, receive legal aid, are under 18, or can show financial hardship. Any legal help is extra. Court fees are reviewed regularly, so confirm the current figure at fcfcoa.gov.au/resources/fees.

How long do consent orders take to be approved?

There is no guaranteed timeframe. Practitioners commonly report a registrar review taking in the order of six to eight weeks, but this is indicative and varies with registry workload and whether the application needs anything corrected. The court does not publish a fixed processing time.

What is the time limit to apply for property consent orders?

Married couples have 12 months from the date the divorce order takes effect. De facto couples have 2 years from the date of separation. If you apply outside these limits you need the court's permission, which generally requires showing hardship would result if the application did not proceed.

Can I get consent orders without being divorced?

Yes. You can apply for consent orders any time after separation, and you can finalise a property settlement without ever divorcing. Divorce is a separate application. The 12-month property time limit for married couples only starts once a divorce order takes effect.

Will the court just approve whatever my ex and I agreed?

No. Even by consent, the court can only make the orders if they meet the Family Law Act 1975. Property orders must be 'just and equitable' and parenting orders must be in the 'best interests of the child'. Honest, full financial disclosure is essential, as orders obtained by hiding assets can later be set aside.

What is the difference between a consent order and a binding financial agreement?

A consent order is approved by the court and checked for fairness, giving court oversight and strong enforceability. A binding financial agreement is a private contract that does not need court approval but requires each party to get independent legal advice to be valid. Consent orders are often cheaper and lower-risk after separation; a BFA offers more flexibility and can be made before a relationship ends.

Are consent orders different in Western Australia?

Yes for de facto couples. WA has its own Family Court of WA, and de facto financial matters are handled under WA legislation rather than the federal Family Law Act. De facto applicants in WA usually must file an 'Affidavit as to jurisdiction'. Married couples follow the federal framework. Use the Family Court of WA's forms and confirm WA-specific requirements and fees.

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