About Guy R. Greenstein, P.C. — Divorce Louisville Colorado
Divorce Louisville Colorado attorney Guy R. Greenstein offers both traditional representation and mediation for couples dissolving a marriage in Boulder County. The firm handles equitable-distribution analysis, parenting plans, maintenance disputes, and post-decree modifications. Because Greenstein is trained as a mediator, many clients use the practice for collaborative divorce, parenting coordination, and structured negotiation outside of formal litigation. Residents looking for counsel in Louisville, Colorado can schedule an initial meeting by phone or through the firm website.
The office serves clients across Louisville, Lafayette, Superior, and the broader Boulder Valley, with cases filed at the Boulder County Justice Center on 6th Street. Colorado’s no-fault dissolution framework and Child and Family Investigator process often shape early strategy, and the firm prioritizes clear financial disclosures under C.R.C.P. 16.2 before entering settlement talks. Post-divorce contempt actions, relocation petitions, and modification of parenting time are also routinely handled.
What Clients Say
Reviewers highlight a measured, solution-oriented approach that prioritizes reducing conflict where children are involved. Clients describe clear communication about Colorado’s 91-day waiting period, realistic maintenance formulas, and responsiveness during temporary orders hearings. Several specifically mention that mediation sessions stayed productive even when tensions were high.
Divorce Louisville Colorado — Practice Areas & Services
- Dissolution of marriage in the Boulder County District Court, including equitable property division.
- Divorce mediation and collaborative law for clients seeking to avoid contested trials.
- Parenting plans, decision-making allocation, and parenting-time schedules.
- Maintenance (spousal support) calculations under C.R.S. § 14-10-114.
- Post-decree modification and enforcement of custody, support, and maintenance orders.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a divorce take in Boulder County?
Colorado requires a 91-day waiting period from service of the petition before a decree can enter. Uncontested cases often finalize shortly after that window; contested matters involving custody evaluations or business valuations commonly take 9 to 14 months.
Is Colorado a no-fault divorce state?
Yes. Colorado requires only that the marriage be irretrievably broken. Fault concepts such as adultery do not affect property division or maintenance under Colorado’s dissolution statute, though conduct can matter in specific custody contexts.
Where are Louisville divorce cases heard?
Louisville divorces are filed at the Boulder County Justice Center, located at 1777 6th Street in Boulder. Pretrial conferences, temporary orders hearings, and permanent orders trials all take place at that courthouse.
Quick Facts: Divorce in Louisville, Colorado
- Trial Court: Boulder County District Court at 1777 6th Street handles all Louisville-area dissolution filings — Colorado Judicial Branch
- Mandatory Waiting Period: 91 days from service before a decree may enter under C.R.S. § 14-10-106 — Colorado Revised Statutes
- Financial Disclosure Rule: C.R.C.P. 16.2 requires full sworn financial statements within 42 days of response — Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure


