Contact us
Please note that we cannot offer Legal aid
PacisLexis Family Law
Contact-us now
Appoinment can be taken in our office or live chat depending on your choice.
When you contact us for the first time, you are getting a free call back within 48 hours to define your expectations.
FIND US
We achieve together
PacisLexis Family Law
Nos services +
+ 15 ans d’expérience à aider les familles en difficulté
EN SAVOIR PLUS

Whatsapp échangés

Familles écoutées

expÉrience
PacisLexis Family Law
OUR CLIENT REVIEWS
PacisLexis Family Law
Why we are different
Live Facebook Hebdomadaires
Chaque semaine, Maître Héloïse Kawaishi répond en direct pendant une heure aux questions des internautes sur le groupe Avocats Droit Famille. Inscrivez-vous!
Psycho & Droit
Le Droit ne suffit pas toujours à résoudre un conflit. C’est pourquoi nous vous proposons un accompagnement par des coachs et psychologues, afin de vous aider à surmonter cette épreuve.
Ma pension Alimentaire
Notre Cabinet a cofondé la start-up Ma Pension Alimentaire en partenariat avec Case Law Analytics. Incubés au Barreau de Paris, notre projet est en cours.

NOS LIVE FACEBOOK
Nos derniers articles en Droit de la famille

Cohabiting couples
In France, cohabiting is the simplest and freer legal solution. The French word for cohabitation is “concubinage”.
According to the French civil law article 515-8, cohabitation is defined as two same-sex or different people, who are unmarried or not in a civil partnership living together in a long-term relationship.
Splitting up when you’re cohabiting is legal-consequence free except if there is a serious ground.

How to change your name
Every person has a surname representing a person’s identity, connecting family members between them.
In France, historically, children’s surname is the father’s surname.
Nowadays, relating to gender gap issues, this rule doesn’t apply all the time. Indeed, parents can give their children the father’s surname, the mother’s surname or both.

Cohabiting couples
In France, cohabiting is the simplest and freer legal solution. The French word for cohabitation is “concubinage”.
According to the French civil law article 515-8, cohabitation is defined as two same-sex or different people, who are unmarried or not in a civil partnership living together in a long-term relationship.
Splitting up when you’re cohabiting is legal-consequence free except if there is a serious ground.