For Family Law Firms

Skip Tracing for Family Law Attorneys

Family law cases stall on one thing more than any other: a party who cannot be found. You cannot serve a dissolution petition on a spouse who has moved without a forwarding address. You cannot enforce a support order against a parent who has dropped off the grid. You cannot file a modification or contempt motion when the other side has gone silent and the address in your file is two years stale. We are a public-records research firm that locates the missing party for family law attorneys and their paralegals, lawfully and under a permissible purpose, so your case can move from filed to served. For a legitimate matter, a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours.

Permissible-Purpose Locates Diligent Search Documented Since 2004
Attorney-FacingBuilt for Firms
24 HoursTypical Locate
DocumentedDiligent Search
Since 2004Locating Parties

The Short Version

We locate the hard-to-find party in your family law matter so the case can proceed. That means finding a respondent spouse so you can serve a divorce or dissolution petition, finding an absent parent so you can pursue custody or enforce a support order, and tracing a party who has gone quiet so you can file a modification or contempt action. We work as a public-records research firm under FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA permissible-purpose rules for the litigation and legal needs of attorneys; we are not a credit reporting agency and not licensed private investigators. We deliver a verified current address and place of work, plus a documented diligent search when a party truly cannot be found, so you can move for substituted or alternative service. One firm boundary is absolute: we do not help anyone locate a person protected by a restraining order or fleeing domestic violence.

Watch: Locating a Party in a Family Law Case

Why the locate is the part that stalls the docket, and the lawful path.

▶ Video Overview

The Wall Every Family Law File Eventually Hits

The docket does not move until the other party is located.

Family law is unusually dependent on finding people. Almost every contested matter has a second party whose participation the court requires, and that party is often the one who has the strongest incentive to disappear. A spouse who senses a dissolution is coming may relocate without leaving a forwarding address. A non-custodial parent who owes arrears may quit a job, move in with a partner, and stop answering the phone. A respondent facing a contempt motion may simply go quiet and let the file in your office grow stale. In each case the law is clear that the matter cannot advance until the person has been notified, and notification depends on knowing where they are.

That is what makes this an attorney’s problem rather than a process server’s. A process server can only knock on a door you point them to; if the address is wrong, the server returns the papers unserved and your client’s clock keeps running. The genuinely difficult work is the locate that comes before service, and it is a research task. We rebuild a current address and employer from public records and licensed databases, cross-check it against known relatives and associates, and hand your office a verified result your server or sheriff can actually use. We also pair naturally with our broader skip tracing for attorneys service when a matter spans more than family court.

Three Locates That Move a Family Law Case

The specific points where a missing party stops a matter cold.

SERVICE

Serve a Respondent Spouse

A dissolution or legal-separation petition cannot proceed until the respondent is served. When a spouse has moved out of state or is dodging service, we locate a current residence and workplace so your server completes personal service, or so you can support a motion for substituted service.

DivorceDissolutionAnnulment
ENFORCEMENT

Find an Absent Parent

Custody, paternity, and child-support matters all stall when a parent disappears. We locate the absent parent and, where available, their employer, which is what an income-withholding order ultimately needs to attach to wages.

CustodySupportPaternity
POST-JUDGMENT

Locate for Modification or Contempt

Orders change, and so do addresses. When you need to serve a modification petition or a contempt motion years after the original judgment, we trace the party to a current, verifiable location so the post-judgment matter can be heard.

ModificationContemptArrears

Each of these is a distinct procedure with its own service rules, but they share the same prerequisite: a real, current location for the other party. Two of them have dedicated walkthroughs on this site. If your immediate problem is service, our guide on how to serve divorce papers on a missing spouse covers the step-by-step path from a stale address to a served petition, and our overview of how to handle a party who is deliberately avoiding service explains substituted and alternative methods. If the matter is support, our page on child-support enforcement and finding a parent goes deeper on locating a non-paying parent and their income.

Why a Family Law Party Becomes Hard to Find

The recurring reasons the address in your file leads nowhere.

Moved Anticipating the Case

A spouse who expects a filing relocates first, leaving the marital address dead before the petition is even drafted.

Avoiding Support

A parent behind on support quits a job, switches to cash work, and moves in with a partner to keep their name off any new lease or utility.

Crossed State Lines

The party relocated to another state, layering interstate jurisdiction and out-of-state service questions on top of the locate.

Years Since the Last Order

In a post-judgment modification the only address on file is the one from the original decree, often half a decade out of date.

Actively Dodging Service

The party knows papers are coming and deliberately avoids being home, refuses to answer the door, and will not sign for anything.

Mail at Someone Else’s Address

The party collects mail at a relative’s or friend’s home but does not live there, so each service attempt at that address fails.

Permissible Purpose and a Hard Safety Line

Why an attorney can request this, and the one request we always decline.

Locating a party in active or contemplated litigation is a recognized permissible purpose under the federal privacy framework that governs data brokers and consumer information. We operate as a public-records research firm under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, and the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act, and we provide our locates for the legal and litigation needs of attorneys and their staff. We are not a consumer reporting agency, and our results are not consumer reports; nothing we deliver may be used to make eligibility decisions about credit, insurance, or employment. We are also not licensed private investigators, and we make no investigative or surveillance claims. We do one thing well: we find people lawfully, from records, for a legitimate legal purpose.

The domestic-violence safety exception we will not cross

Family law sits next to domestic violence, and that places a firm boundary on this work. We do not help anyone locate a person who is protected by a restraining or protective order, or who has fled domestic violence, and we decline any request that has the markings of an abuser trying to find a victim. Those matters belong with the court and with victim advocates, not with a locate service, and the proper path for serving a protected party runs through the court’s own confidential procedures. If a request raises that concern, we stop and refer it back to counsel and the court rather than proceed. This is not a fee question or a judgment call we negotiate; it is a line we hold every time, because a tool built to reunite a case with a missing party must never become a tool to expose someone who is hiding for their safety.

The Locate Options a Firm Actually Has

What an attorney’s office can do when an address goes cold.

ApproachWhat It DoesBest ForThe Catch
In-House Paralegal SearchStaff run free public-record and social lookups in spare time.Simple matters where the party is not really hiding.Limited database access; burns billable hours; stalls on an evading party.
Licensed Private InvestigatorAn investigator may add surveillance and field work to a locate.Matters that need physical observation beyond an address.Higher cost and slower turnaround than a records-only locate.
Process Server “Locate” Add-OnThe server attempts a skip trace before serving.Low-difficulty addresses bundled with the serve.Server tools are often thinner; a hard locate is not their core work.
Public-Records Research Firm People LocatorA focused, records-only locate with a verified address, employer where available, and a documented diligent search.Evasive, moved, or long-gone family law parties.We locate and document; your server or sheriff completes service.

The point of the table is not that one row is always right. It is that a hard family law locate is a specialized job, and trying to absorb it into staff time or bundle it into a serve is exactly how an address sits unverified for weeks. When you need a current address fast and a record you can put in front of a judge, a focused locate is the efficient path. For a fuller comparison of the records route versus hiring an investigator, see our overview of hiring a private investigator versus skip tracing.

How a Locate Runs for Your Office

From the intake you send us to a result your server can use.

1

Send the File Basics

The party’s name, last known address, date of birth, any phone, prior employer, and relatives, plus the case type and your permissible purpose.

2

We Skip-Trace

A current address and place of work are rebuilt from public records and licensed databases, cross-checked against known associates.

3

We Verify and Rank

Candidate addresses are confirmed and ordered by confidence, so your server is not burning attempts on dead ends.

4

You Serve, or We Document

Hand the address to your server or sheriff. If the party stays hidden, you receive a dated record supporting alternative service.

When the Party Cannot Be Found at All: The Diligent Search

The documented record is what unlocks alternative service.

Sometimes a party genuinely cannot be located despite a real effort, and family law has a built-in answer for that. After your office shows the court a diligent, good-faith search, the judge can authorize alternative methods, such as substituted service or service by publication, so the dissolution or support matter is not held hostage by a party who will not surface. The decisive word is “diligent”: judges expect proof of the specific steps taken, not a bare statement that you looked.

This is where a professional locate earns its place twice over. Most of the time it simply finds the party and ordinary personal service goes forward. When it does not, it produces the dated record of database checks, address attempts, and dead ends that supports an affidavit of diligent search and a motion for alternative service. A guess at an old marital address proves nothing to a court; a documented locate either delivers the party or delivers the evidence that you tried in earnest, and in family law both outcomes keep the case moving.

Who We Work With

Family law professionals who need a party found before they can act.

Divorce Attorneys

Respondent spouses located for service

Custody Counsel

Absent parents traced for proceedings

Support Enforcement

Non-paying parents and employers found

Family Law Paralegals

Verified addresses without billable churn

Self-Represented Parties

Pro se filers on a service deadline

Process Servers

Family law addresses verified to land

Whatever role you play in the matter, the obstacle is identical: the case cannot advance until the other party is found. We do the locate and document the search; you complete the service and run the case. Where a divorce involves concealed property, our locate work also dovetails with tracing hidden assets in a divorce, so a single missing-party problem and a missing-money problem can be addressed in parallel. We do not serve papers ourselves, and for a legitimate family law matter a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours.

Our Commitment to Family Law Firms

We find the party so your matter can move: a verified current address for service, or a documented diligent search when someone is determined to hide. Lawful, permissible-purpose locating for divorce, custody, and support cases since 2004 and always declining any request that endangers a protected or fleeing party.

People Locator Skip Tracing Investigation Team conducting public-records skip tracing and people-locating since 2004, working public records and licensed sources lawfully and for legitimate, permissible purposes only. Last reviewed 2026. This page is general information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you serve the divorce papers, or just find the spouse?

We locate the party and provide a current address and place of work. Your process server or the sheriff then completes the actual service. Finding a respondent who has moved or is dodging service is the part that usually stalls a dissolution.

Can you locate an absent parent for child support enforcement?

Yes. We find the parent and, where available, their current employer, which is what an income-withholding order ultimately needs to attach to wages. This supports both establishing and enforcing a support obligation.

Will you help someone find a person protected by a restraining order?

No. We do not help anyone locate a person protected by a restraining or protective order or who has fled domestic violence, and we decline any request that looks like an abuser searching for a victim. Those matters go through the court and victim advocates.

Is this legal for an attorney to request?

Yes. Locating a party for active or contemplated litigation is a recognized permissible purpose under the FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA framework. We are a public-records research firm, not a consumer reporting agency, and our results are not consumer reports.

Are you licensed private investigators?

No. We are a public-records research firm, not licensed private investigators, and we make no surveillance or investigative claims. We locate people lawfully from public records and licensed databases for legitimate legal purposes.

What if the party still cannot be found?

After a documented, diligent search, the court can authorize alternative service or service by publication. The dated record we provide of database checks and address attempts supports an affidavit of diligent search and a motion for alternative service.

Can you locate a party for a modification or contempt motion years later?

Yes. Post-judgment matters are a common request. We trace the party from the often years-old address in the original decree to a current, verifiable location so the modification or contempt motion can be served and heard.

How fast can you locate a party, and what do you need?

For a legitimate family law matter, a verified locate typically comes back within 24 hours. Send whatever you have: the party’s name, last known address, date of birth, phone, prior employer, or relatives, and we build from there.

A Party You Can’t Serve Is a Case You Can’t Move

We locate the respondent, the absent parent, or the post-judgment party so your firm can serve and proceed, with a verified current address or a documented diligent search, typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.

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