Cross-border Divorce Navigator
Divorce: Switzerland → Israel
Case complexity: high. One spouse lives in Switzerland, the other in Israel.
Where you can divorce
Switzerland: Divorce on joint petition is the fast track; jurisdiction follows domicile; Swiss PIL can apply foreign law to the property side.
Israel: For Jews the divorce itself runs only through the rabbinical court (get, consent needed); property and children can go to the civil family court: whoever files first picks the track.
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
There is no marriage contract — the default regime of each country involved will apply (see the property section).
How property will be divided
Switzerland: Participation in acquisitions (Errungenschaftsbeteiligung): personal assets stay personal, the accrual of the marriage years is split 50/50; a marital agreement can elect full separation.
Israel: Resource balancing: assets accrued during the marriage are split equally on divorce (the 1973 law); pre-marital assets, gifts and inheritances stay personal.
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.
Switzerland: Maintenance reflects the marital standard of living; mandatory splitting of the occupational pension (2nd pillar) is a Swiss speciality.
Israel: Maintenance follows the parties’ religious law plus civil mechanisms; child support sits with the family court.
How the divorce is recognised across borders
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.
Switzerland: Swiss decrees are widely recognised; EU regulations do not apply — Lugano and national recognition rules do.
Israel: Israel has no civil marriage — foreign marriages (Cyprus, Utah online) are recognised; dissolving them takes a special jurisdictional procedure.
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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