Cross-border Divorce Navigator
Divorce: Spain → Germany
Case complexity: high. One spouse lives in Spain, the other in Germany.
Where you can divorce
In the EU jurisdiction follows the Brussels II-ter Regulation: you can file where the spouses (or one of them, after a qualifying period) habitually reside, or in the country of common nationality — couples often have several forums to choose from.
Spain: Jurisdiction follows Brussels II-ter; consensual divorce without minor children is fast — including before a notary.
Germany: Jurisdiction under Brussels II-ter; divorce is judicial even when fully consensual.
The spouses live in different countries — a forum race is possible: the court seised first usually keeps the case (lis pendens). Picking the court effectively picks the division rules.
Which law governs the divorce and the assets
Spain, Germany: Rome III applies — the spouses can agree in writing, in advance, which law governs their divorce; that removes the uncertainty of relocations.
The property side in the EU follows Regulation 2016/1103: by default — the law of the first common habitual residence after the wedding. A couple that started married life in one country and moved to another may be surprised to divide assets under the first country’s law.
There is no marriage contract — the default regime of each country involved will apply (see the property section).
How property will be divided
Spain: Default is sociedad de gananciales: marital acquisitions split equally; but Catalonia and the Balearics default to separation. The regime depends on the region where married life began.
Germany: Zugewinngemeinschaft: property stays separate during the marriage; on divorce the accrued gains are equalised — the difference is paid in money, not in asset shares.
Children and maintenance
Child disputes are heard by the courts of the child’s habitual residence (Brussels II-ter / Hague 1996) — not by the country more convenient for a parent.
Relocating with a child without the other parent’s consent triggers the 1980 Hague Convention: the child is normally returned, and the removing parent’s position suffers.
Spain: No-fault divorce with no separation period (since 2005); pensión compensatoria applies where the divorce creates a clear imbalance.
Germany: A separation year (Trennungsjahr) precedes the divorce; the unique Versorgungsausgleich mandatorily splits pension rights — routinely overlooked by foreigners.
How the divorce is recognised across borders
A judgment from one EU state is recognised in all the others automatically (Brussels II-ter), with no separate procedure.
The divorce has to “work” in every country the family is tied to: somewhere it is recognised automatically, elsewhere legalisation or separate proceedings are needed — otherwise you end up with a “limping” status: divorced in one country, still married in another.
Spain: Automatic recognition across the EU; apostille for non-EU states.
Germany: Automatic EU recognition; legalisation outside.
What to set up in advance
Marriage contract (prenup / postnup)
Trust
Private foundation
What to watch out for
Whoever files first effectively picks the court and the division rules. In a cross-border divorce, timing is strategy.
Children and borders: get written consent for any cross-border relocation of a child — otherwise Hague 1980 kicks in.
Without a marriage contract, everything acquired during the marriage is divided under the default regime — as a rule, equally.
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This is a first-pass orientation, not legal advice. The rules are simplified; verify the current details with a lawyer.
Contact information
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