OLS Solicitors Blog
Key Considerations for Drafting a Separation Agreement in England and Wales

Separation Agreements in England & Wales: How Our Solicitors Protect Your Interests
When a relationship ends, the path forward can feel uncertain. A separation agreement (often called a Deed of Separation) is a vital tool for couples in England and Wales to formalise their split. While it provides a roadmap for finances and family life, its strength relies entirely on the precision of its drafting.
To ensure your agreement is robust and persuasive to the court, our solicitors focus on several high-level legal considerations during the drafting process.
Key Considerations Our Lawyers Prioritise
1. Maximising Court Persuasiveness
While a separation agreement is technically a contract, our goal is to ensure it carries significant weight in any future divorce proceedings. We ensure the “Radmacher” criteria are met: that both parties have provided full financial disclosure, acted without duress, and that the terms remain fundamentally fair to both parties and any children involved.
2. Technical Financial Precision
Vague terms lead to future litigation. Our legal team focuses on the granular details of asset division, including the valuation of the family home, the handling of joint debts, and the complexities of pension sharing. We aim to close every loophole that a “DIY” agreement might leave open.
3. Future-Proofing and Trigger Clauses
A separation is a snapshot in time, but lives change. We incorporate specific “trigger clauses” that account for future events—such as the sale of a property, a change in a child’s educational needs, or the cohabitation of a former partner—ensuring the agreement remains relevant for years to come.
Regulatory Notice: Reserved Legal Activities
It is important for clients to understand the legal framework surrounding the creation of these documents. Under the Legal Services Act 2007, the preparation of certain legal documents is classified as a “reserved legal activity.”
Specifically, the preparation of a Deed—which a separation agreement must be to be formalised correctly—is a reserved activity. This means that only qualified solicitors or other authorised persons are legally permitted to draft these documents for a fee. Using an unregulated provider or an automated template not only risks the document being poorly drafted but may also mean the provider is acting outside of the law, leaving you without the protection of professional indemnity insurance or the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) oversight.
Expert Drafting for a Secure Future
Don’t leave your financial and personal future to chance. By engaging a qualified solicitor, you ensure your separation agreement is drafted with the authority and protection required by the Legal Services Act.
Contact our family law team today to arrange a consultation.
