Supreme Court Forms (Family Law)
![]() |
*CAUTION Several Supreme Court Family Forms changed format as of 25 January 2021 and 1 March 2021. See the BC Government's announcement for more details. Accordingly, some examples of completed forms have been removed until editors can revise them. |
This section links to forms prescribed by the Supreme Court Family Rules, BC Reg 169/2009.
Check Other Forms and Documents (Family Law) for forms required by other legislation (for example, the Registration of Divorce Proceedings form), and other sample documents relevant to resolving family law problems.
About the links in the forms table
Blank PDF: These forms are fillable forms available from the Ministry of Justice in .PDF format.
Blank Word: These are templates prepared by John-Paul Boyd KC (or other editors) in Word .DOC format that you can download and prepare on your computer. (Green text shows where you must make a choice, add information or provide an explanation.)
Blank HTML: Links to the forms as they appear in the regulation. These sources are good for reference but are not designed to be filled in.
Completed Example: These are examples of what forms look like when they're filled out.
Note: Any example forms are based on pretend court proceeding (e.g. between John and Jane Doe). These are provided for illustration purposes only. Do not assume that these example forms will apply to your situation.
Forms table
PDF Will Not Open? If you use a mobile devices, Chrome, or Firefox PDFs listed here may not work with your browser. Some government forms are formatted with advanced features that are not compatible with all browsers. If you can't view the PDF form, save it to your computer first, then open it on a desktop computer using the Adobe Reader application (do not your browser's Adobe extensions). |
|