Jersey City JEDS Protocol: How to Submit Divorce Filings Online in Hudson County Using NJ Courts’ JEDS System
Important: This page is general information, not legal advice. 345Divorce is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or court representation. For official instructions, always rely on njcourts.gov JEDS and njcourts.gov Divorce.
If you’re filing in Jersey City / Hudson County (and nearby: Hoboken, Bayonne, Union City, North Bergen, West New York), the New Jersey Judiciary allows you to submit many court documents online through JEDS (Judiciary Electronic Document Submission). JEDS is available 24/7 for submission, and filings are processed during business hours.
JEDS is a document submission portal for the Superior Court. Your job is to submit the right documents, in the right category, to the right county, with clean formatting and correct uploads.
What JEDS is (in plain English)
- Online way to submit documents to the New Jersey Superior Court anytime.
- Supports common file formats (like PDF), with size limits (NJ Courts provides current limits).
- Payments (when required) are handled inside the submission workflow.
Critical JEDS rule that causes major delays
NJ Courts states that if you file your divorce case electronically, you must upload each required document as a separate upload—not all together as one attachment.
Translation: One PDF with “everything” is often the fastest way to get rejected or delayed.
Hudson County “JEDS filing” workflow (step-by-step)
This is a process overview. Your exact required documents depend on your situation (children, support, property, and whether your matter is contested). Always verify requirements on njcourts.gov.
Step 1 — Confirm you’re filing in the correct county
Hudson County (Jersey City area) is the correct place to submit only if your facts match NJ Courts’ “where to file” guidance. Don’t guess. Wrong-county submissions are a classic delay.
Step 2 — Create your JEDS account (one-time setup)
Use NJ Courts’ JEDS page to register. Set up your login carefully so you can track submissions and confirmations.
Step 3 — Start a new “Create Filing” submission
Select the appropriate court division and docket type for your matter.
NJ Courts identifies divorce as an FM docket type in Family matters (divorce/dissolution).
Step 4 — Select Hudson County as the filing county (if appropriate)
Choose the county that matches where your divorce must be filed under NJ Courts’ instructions. If you are in Jersey City, that typically points you to Hudson County—but confirm based on your separation residence rules.
Step 5 — Upload documents as separate files (clean naming)
Upload each required document separately. Keep a consistent naming system so your packet is readable:
Complaint, Confidential Litigant Info Sheet, Certification, etc.
- Use clear, readable PDFs (not dark phone scans)
- Keep within the size and format limits listed on NJ Courts’ JEDS page
- Redact personal identifiers where required (follow NJ Courts instructions)
Step 6 — Pay any required fee (or submit fee waiver request if applicable)
If a fee applies, JEDS supports payment within the workflow. If you need a waiver, use the official NJ Courts forms and instructions.
Step 7 — Submit and save your confirmation
Always keep your submission confirmation and a copy of exactly what you submitted. If you later need to prove what was filed and when, your confirmation matters.
What to avoid (the top JEDS mistakes we see in Hudson County divorces)
Submission mistakes
- Combining everything into one PDF instead of separate required uploads
- Wrong division or docket type selected
- Wrong county selected
- Unreadable scans (cropped, sideways, blurry, dark)
- File size or format issues (exceeding limits)
Case-quality mistakes
- Inconsistent names, addresses, or dates across documents
- Missing required forms/attachments for your situation
- Failing to keep a master checklist and proof folder
- Not tracking confirmations and status
Your divorce doesn’t “stall” randomly. It stalls because the file isn’t clean enough to process efficiently.
How 345Divorce helps with JEDS submissions (without being a law firm)
Document preparation + packet discipline
- One clean master checklist for your case type
- Separate-file upload structure (JEDS-ready)
- Readable PDFs + consistent naming
- Organized exhibits and supporting documents
- Status/confirmation tracking support
Mediation structure (when appropriate)
If your “uncontested” divorce still has points of disagreement, mediation structure can help you reach a workable agreement before you upload an unstable packet that triggers conflict later.
FAQs: JEDS electronic submission for Hudson County divorce (Jersey City)
1) What is JEDS in New Jersey?
JEDS is NJ Courts’ online system for submitting documents to the New Jersey Superior Court electronically. Official info: njcourts.gov JEDS.
2) Can I file my divorce documents online for Hudson County (Jersey City)?
Many divorce documents can be submitted electronically through JEDS. Always verify the correct process and required forms on NJ Courts Divorce Self-Help.
3) Do I upload all my documents as one PDF?
No—NJ Courts states that electronic divorce filers must upload each required document as a separate document, not combined into one attachment.
4) What docket type is a divorce case in NJ Family Court?
NJ Courts identifies divorce/dissolution matters under the Family division with an FM docket type. See: NJ Courts Family Practice Division.
5) Is JEDS available at night or on weekends?
NJ Courts states JEDS is available 24/7 for submission, and documents are processed during business hours.
6) Where do I find official divorce forms and instructions?
Use Divorce Self-Help and the Forms Library on njcourts.gov.
7) Are you a law firm? Can you give legal advice about my filings?
No. 345Divorce is not a law firm. We provide document preparation/organization and mediation structure only—no legal advice or representation.
8) How do I start with 345Divorce for a Jersey City JEDS submission?
Call or text 201-205-3201. We’ll help you build a clean, JEDS-ready packet and submission checklist for Hudson County.
Internal resources (345divorce.com)
Related pages for long-tail SEO and next steps:
Official resources: JEDS • Divorce • Court Locations