141 N. San Jacinto St., Conroe, TX · Steps from the Montgomery County Courthouse
Our family law firm is located in downtown Conroe — steps from the Montgomery County Courthouse. We handle divorce, child custody, child support, property division, and all family law matters throughout Conroe, Montgomery County, and Greater Houston.
Our family law firm is located in downtown Conroe, steps from the Montgomery County Courthouse. We represent individuals and families in divorce, child custody, child support, property division, and related proceedings throughout Conroe and Montgomery County.
When you need a divorce lawyer in Conroe or a child custody attorney in Conroe, you need someone who knows these courts — the local rules, the standing orders, the financial disclosure deadlines, and the procedures specific to the 418th, 410th, and County Court at Law No. 3. That is what we bring to every case.
All divorce and family law cases in Conroe are filed with the Montgomery County District Clerk and heard at the Montgomery County courthouse. Depending on case assignment, your matter will be heard in one of three courts. Our firm appears regularly in all three — and understands the procedures, local rules, and standing orders specific to each.
One of the primary family law district courts in Montgomery County. The 418th handles divorce, SAPCR, custody modifications, and related matters. Our firm appears in this court regularly and understands its local rules and expectations.
The 410th Judicial District Court handles a broad family law docket in Montgomery County, including divorce, conservatorship, and child support proceedings. Our firm is familiar with this court's procedures and approach to case management.
CCL3 handles certain family law matters in Montgomery County, including enforcement actions and matters within its jurisdictional scope. Knowing which court your case is assigned to — and why — matters from day one.
Divorce cases in Conroe are filed with the Montgomery County District Clerk and heard in one of the three family courts. Texas requires a mandatory 60-day waiting period from the date of filing. An uncontested divorce — where both parties agree on all terms — can often be finalized shortly after that window. Contested divorces involving property, children, or spousal maintenance typically take six months to over a year.
If you and your spouse agree on property division, children, and support, an uncontested divorce can move quickly and cost significantly less. Our firm handles uncontested divorces in Conroe, and flat-fee options may be available through 2500Divorce.com for qualifying cases.
When spouses disagree on property, custody, or support, the case proceeds through temporary orders, mediation, and potentially a final trial. All three Montgomery County courts require mediation before evidentiary hearings. We prepare every case as if it will go to trial — and are ready when it does.
Texas is a community property state. Property acquired during the marriage is divided in a just and right manner — not automatically 50/50. Common complex assets in Conroe-area divorces include Lake Conroe waterfront property, rural acreage, business interests, retirement accounts, and vehicles.
In Texas, child custody is called conservatorship. Courts presume joint managing conservatorship — where both parents share rights and duties — is in the child's best interest. One parent is typically designated to establish the child's primary residence. Possession schedules, child support, and geographic restrictions are all part of a final custody order in the 418th, 410th, and County Court at Law No. 3.
Montgomery County family courts apply the best interest of the child standard under Texas Family Code §153.002. If you and the other parent disagree on custody, the case proceeds through temporary orders, mandatory mediation, and — if unresolved — a final trial before a Montgomery County judge.
Texas Family Code §153.312 sets the default schedule: first, third, and fifth weekends; Thursday evening visits during the school year; alternating holidays; and extended summer possession. Courts can order expanded or modified schedules based on the child's needs and each parent's circumstances.
Montgomery County courts commonly restrict the child's primary residence to Montgomery County and contiguous counties — Harris, Walker, San Jacinto, Waller, and Grimes. This prevents the primary parent from relocating without a court modification order or the other parent's written consent.
Existing custody orders can be modified when there has been a material and substantial change in circumstances. Common triggers include relocation, remarriage, changes in the child's needs, substance abuse, or a parent's failure to comply with the existing order.
Conroe ISD is one of the largest school districts in Texas. Custody arrangements that determine which parent establishes primary residence directly affect school enrollment — making district boundaries a meaningful factor in many Conroe custody cases.
Family law cases in Conroe are heard in three Montgomery County courts: the 418th Judicial District Court, the 410th Judicial District Court, and County Court at Law No. 3. All three are located at the Montgomery County courthouse in Conroe. Our firm appears regularly in all three and understands the procedures and local rules specific to each.
Texas requires a mandatory 60-day waiting period from the date of filing before a divorce can be finalized. From there, timeline depends on whether the case is contested:
Yes. Property acquired during the marriage is generally community property in Texas, subject to division in a just and right manner — not automatically 50/50. Courts consider factors including each spouse's earning capacity, the children's needs, fault in the breakup, and the overall size of the estate.
Separate property — owned before marriage, received as a gift, or inherited — is generally not subject to division. The spouse claiming separate property bears the full burden of proof. Community contributions to separate property can create reimbursement claims that complicate the analysis.
Montgomery County family courts apply the best interest of the child standard under Texas Family Code §153.002. Courts consider:
Texas law is gender-neutral. Fathers and mothers are evaluated on equal footing.
Yes. Our firm offers flat-fee attorney-guided uncontested divorce for qualifying cases through 2500Divorce.com. If you and your spouse have agreed on all terms — property, children, and support — you may qualify. A licensed attorney handles every step from filing through final decree at a predictable flat fee. Free consultation to determine eligibility.
Montgomery County courts commonly restrict the child's primary residence to Montgomery County and contiguous counties — Harris, Walker, San Jacinto, Waller, and Grimes. This prevents the primary parent from relocating the child outside that area without a court modification order or the other parent's written consent. Violating a geographic restriction is grounds for an enforcement action and can support a modification petition.
Divorce and child custody cases filed in Conroe are randomly assigned to one of three Montgomery County family courts — all located at 301 N. Main Street, Conroe, TX 77301. CPS cases are always assigned to County Court at Law No. 3. If a prior case involving the same parties or children already exists, any new filing must go to that same court.
All three Montgomery County family courts require mediation before evidentiary hearings and final trial. The 418th District Court also requires mediation before temporary orders hearings. Mediation for final trial must occur within 90 days of the trial date. If the other party refuses to cooperate, a motion to compel must be filed at least 45 days before trial. Keith Phillips of Fritz & Phillips is a licensed mediator — giving our clients an informed perspective on how mediation plays out in these courts.
Conroe is the county seat of Montgomery County. The courthouse is here, the judges are here, and the local rules that govern your case apply specifically to this jurisdiction. Knowing these courts — their procedures, their filing requirements, and their expectations — is part of what Fritz & Phillips brings to every Conroe case.
Fritz & Phillips Law is located at 141 N. San Jacinto St. in downtown Conroe — less than a 5-minute walk to the Montgomery County Courthouse at 301 N. Main St. We file, appear, and handle matters in these courts regularly.
Royalty interests, mineral rights, and working interests are common divorce assets in Montgomery County. Properly characterizing these as separate or community property — and valuing them accurately — requires specific expertise that arises more often here than in most Texas counties.
Waterfront homes on Lake Conroe, rural acreage, and large tracts are common in Montgomery County divorces. Dividing these — especially when one spouse wants to keep the family property — requires knowledge of Texas property division law and local real estate values.
The Local Rules of Practice adopted by Montgomery County's family courts govern motions, hearings, financial disclosures, mediation, and order entry. Missing a local deadline or form requirement can set your case back significantly.
For temporary orders: financial statements, 2 years of tax returns, and pay stubs are due 24 hours before the hearing. For final trial: same documents plus a sworn Inventory & Appraisement due 30 days before trial. Non-compliance has real consequences.
Conroe ISD is one of the largest school districts in Texas. Custody arrangements that determine which parent establishes primary residence directly affect school enrollment — making district boundaries a meaningful factor in many Conroe custody cases.
Including downtown Conroe, Lake Conroe, and surrounding unincorporated Montgomery County communities. Not sure which county your case falls in? Call us — we'll confirm before you file.
Answers to the most common questions about divorce and custody cases filed in Conroe and Montgomery County.
Fritz & Phillips Law is located in downtown Conroe — steps from the Montgomery County Courthouse. Free consultations for divorce, child custody, and personal injury matters throughout Montgomery County and Greater Houston.
(713) 352-6900
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Attorney advertising. Fritz and Phillips, PC is a Texas law firm. The information on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or establish an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Jessica Fritz (TX Bar 2008) and Keith Phillips (TX Bar 2016) are the attorneys responsible for this content.