An uncontested divorce is only as good as the document that ends it. SMB Law, PC helps Georgetown couples turn their agreement into a final decree that is complete, correct, and built to last.
Georgetown couples who have already worked out their terms come to us to make sure nothing important is left out — the kind of oversight that causes headaches long after the divorce is final.
Where a Georgetown uncontested divorce is filed
As the Williamson County seat, Georgetown handles these cases at the Williamson County Justice Center on Martin Luther King Jr. Street. An agreed divorce usually moves through with minimal court appearances.
Getting the agreed decree right
In an uncontested Georgetown divorce, the whole case turns on one document: the agreed final decree. It has to translate your agreement into precise language covering property, debts, retirement accounts, and — if you have children — conservatorship and support. Getting that drafting right is what prevents problems years later. Texas still requires the 60-day waiting period and residency of six months in the state and 90 days in the county, and most agreed cases use the no-fault ground of insupportability.
Working with us from Georgetown
Our downtown Austin office is about 30 miles south of Georgetown, a 35-to-40-minute drive on I-35. Most Georgetown couples handle an agreed divorce by phone, video, and e-signature.
At SMB Law, PC you work directly with attorney Shane M. Boasberg, who has represented Texans for more than two decades. We explain things in plain English, give you a plan instead of more stress, and keep you informed from your first confidential consultation through final resolution.
Why clients choose SMB Law, PC
Direct attorney access — you talk to Shane, licensed since 2003, not a call center.
Honest advice — if a fight is not worth the cost, we say so.
Transparent fees explained before you commit.
What working with us looks like
Confidential consultation to understand your goals and the law that applies.
Strategy and records tailored to your situation.
Negotiation or court — we settle when we can and litigate when we must.
Resolution implemented correctly so you can move on.
It is the document that ends the marriage and sets out every agreed term — property, debts, retirement, and any parenting and support arrangements. The judge signs it once the waiting period passes.
What if we forgot to address something?
Left-out assets or vague terms cause disputes later. We review your agreement for gaps — retirement, debts, tax issues — before the decree is finalized.
Do I have to travel to Austin from Georgetown?
No. Our office is about 30 miles south on I-35, and we handle most of the process remotely.