Form E and Financial Disclosure in Divorce: What I Tell Every Client Before They Put Pen to Paper

About the Author
Kelly Edwards
Managing Partner, Edwards Family Law
Chambers HNW Ranked
Legal 500 Ranked
Spear’s 500 Listed
18+ years HNW family law
Kelly Edwards founded Edwards Family Law in 2019 after more than a decade at Sears Tooth, where she trained under the renowned Raymond Tooth, and two years as a Director at Vardags. She has worked exclusively with high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth clients throughout her career and is recognised by Chambers HNW as ‘iconic, tough, astute, and commercially driven’. Kelly advises on all aspects of complex family law, with particular expertise in financial remedy, trusts, and international matters.
Q: What is Form E in divorce?
A: Form E is the financial disclosure document each party must complete in financial remedy proceedings. It sets out all assets, income, debts, pensions, and financial needs. Both parties are required to complete it honestly and fully – it is signed with a statement of truth, meaning deliberate omissions can amount to contempt of court.
Financial disclosure is the foundation of every fair divorce settlement. Without it, neither party – nor the court – can properly assess what a fair outcome looks like. Form E is the document that makes financial disclosure happen, and getting it right is one of the most important things you can do in your case.
In my experience, the cases that go wrong – whether through protracted litigation, orders that are later challenged, or settlements clients later regret – almost always have flawed financial disclosure at their root. Here is what you need to know.
What does Form E cover?

Form E is a comprehensive document that runs to many pages. It requires full details of all property owned (in the UK and abroad), all bank and savings accounts, investments, business interests, pensions, and any other assets. It also covers income from all sources, debts and liabilities, and financial needs going forward – including housing, income requirements, and the needs of any children.
In high-net-worth cases, it will also need to address shareholdings, options, deferred compensation, trust interests, and assets held through corporate structures. The document must be accompanied by supporting financial documentation for every item disclosed.
A well put together form E includes documentary evidence to support what you say, cross-referencing bank accounts to make sure nothing has been missed and if it calls for it, including documents to assist that are not on the standard list. This helps to limit the questions to be asked and hopefully bring the parties to a resolution far quicker.
What are the consequences of incomplete disclosure?
The duty of full and frank financial disclosure in financial remedy proceedings is absolute. Deliberate concealment is treated extremely seriously by the courts. In cases where a party is found to have hidden assets or provided misleading disclosure, the court has the power to draw adverse inferences – meaning it can assume the concealed assets are worth whatever figure it considers appropriate.
In more serious cases, the court can set aside an existing order, impose costs penalties, and, in extreme cases,s refer the matter for contempt proceedings. The consequences of being caught are invariably worse than those of the underlying disclosure.
I acted in the case of Young v Young where Mr Young was sent to prison for 6 months for failing to disclose his assets adequately. This was after several years and is generally a last resort for the court. Usually the court will make costs orders against the non-disclosing party and of course, the more the party seeking the disclosure has to keep asking and making court applications, the more the costs are.
When does financial disclosure happen?
In court proceedings, both parties are required to exchange Form E simultaneously at a fixed date set by the court – usually several weeks after the first appointment (FDA). In cases that settle outside court, disclosure often takes place through voluntary exchange, though it must still be full and honest.
In complex cases, it is common for further disclosure to be sought after the initial exchange – for instance, additional documentation about business valuations, trust accounts, or overseas assets. This process is known as questionnaire responses and can add considerable time to proceedings if one party is uncooperative.
What if I think my spouse is hiding assets?

This is one of the most common concerns I encounter. Suspicions of hidden assets range from unexplained lifestyle gaps – where a spouse appears to live beyond their disclosed means – to complex offshore structures, undeclared business interests, or the deliberate undervaluation of assets.
If you believe your spouse is not being honest about their finances, there are several tools available. A questionnaire can request further documentation. The court can order third-party disclosure, requiring banks, companies, or other institutions to provide records directly. In serious cases, a freezing injunction can prevent assets from being dissipated. A forensic accountant can be instructed to analyse financial records and provide expert evidence.
If I or my client suspect non disclosure, what we do will very much depend on what stage we are in the process. There is almost always a paper trail and so it is really down to knowing where to look and who to ask, which comes down to experience.
Can Form E be used in non-court proceedings?
Yes. Even where parties are resolving their finances through mediation, collaborative law, or direct negotiation, voluntary financial disclosure in the Form E format is standard practice and strongly advisable. Any settlement that does not involve full disclosure risks being challenged later, and the court is unlikely to approve a consent order where disclosure has been inadequate.
If you have questions about financial disclosure or are concerned about your spouse’s finances, Edwards Family Law can advise you. Contact us at edwardsfamilylaw.co.uk.
Frequently Asked Questions
A: Yes. Both parties must complete and exchange their Form E simultaneously. Neither party should complete their form having seen the other’s – the exchange is simultaneous precisely to prevent this.
A: If a party refuses to provide financial disclosure, the court can make orders compelling disclosure and, if necessary, draw adverse inferences against them. Persistent non-compliance can result in costs orders and, in extreme cases, committal proceedings.
A: This is a complex area. Documents that come into your possession legitimately during the marriage – such as bank statements you have accessed on a shared account – are generally admissible. Covert recording or hacking into accounts is not. If you have concerns about what your spouse may be concealing, take legal advice before gathering evidence.
A: Form E requires 12 months of bank statements and two years of business accounts as a minimum. In complex cases, particularly where there are concerns about asset dissipation or historic transactions, the court can order disclosure going back much further.
