Practical mediation for families who need a way forward.
Resolve family, financial, and business disputes with a calm, structured process designed to reduce conflict, avoid unnecessary legal costs, and help everyone make practical decisions.
Serving the San Fernando Valley and surrounding California communities.
When family conflict becomes expensive, practical help matters.
Divorce decisions, inheritance concerns, parenting issues, elder care questions, family business disputes, and financial disagreements can become overwhelming when communication breaks down. Practical Family Mediation exists for people who want a calmer, more cost-conscious path before conflict turns into a drawn-out legal battle.
Reduce unnecessary conflict
A neutral, structured conversation lowers the temperature so decisions can actually get made, instead of the same argument repeating.
Keep decisions practical
The focus stays on real issues and workable options, not on deciding who was right or wrong in the past.
Avoid preventable legal expense
Addressing disagreements early can help reduce avoidable delay and cost compared with disputes that escalate unresolved.
Mediation for the disputes families actually face.
Every situation is different. These are the conversations Practical Family Mediation is built to help you work through, calmly and on your terms.

Divorce & Separation Mediation
For couples who need help discussing property, parenting, support-related conversations, and next steps without turning every decision into a fight.
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Co-Parenting & Parenting Plans
For parents who need a structured conversation around schedules, responsibilities, communication, holidays, school decisions, and expectations.
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Family Financial Mediation
For families navigating money disagreements, shared obligations, divorce-related finances, inheritance concerns, or decisions that require clarity.
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Inheritance & Sibling Disputes
For adult children, siblings, and relatives facing conflict over estates, family property, caregiving responsibilities, or unresolved family tension.
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Elder Care & Aging Parent Mediation
For families trying to make practical decisions about care, safety, responsibilities, and living arrangements before resentment grows.
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Family Business Mediation
For relatives and partners who need help with ownership disagreements, succession questions, role confusion, or communication breakdowns.
Explore this serviceNot more pressure. Not more confusion. A practical process.
The goal is not to decide who is right or wrong. It is to create a structured space where people can identify issues, clarify priorities, explore options, and work toward practical agreements.
Boutique attention
A small practice means your situation is understood in full, not processed like a file number.
Law-trained perspective
A background in family, business, and tax-related issues helps organize complex disputes into workable parts.
Plain-language process
No intimidating jargon. Every step is explained clearly so everyone understands what is happening and why.
Practical problem solving
The focus stays on cost-conscious, realistic decisions that let people move forward.
Meet Marissa Guevara, J.D.
Marissa Guevara is a law-trained mediator focused on helping families and business owners work through difficult conversations with structure, clarity, and respect.
Her background in family law, business law, and tax-related issues gives her a practical foundation for helping people organize complex disputes and move toward workable solutions. The work is not about winning. It is about helping everyone at the table make practical decisions they can live with.
Marissa Guevara, J.D. provides mediation services. She is not currently licensed to practice law in California and does not provide legal advice or legal representation.
A clear path, from first call to practical next steps.
Private consultation
A confidential first conversation to understand your situation and whether mediation is a fit.
Issue review
We identify the real issues and what each person needs to feel the process is fair.
Session planning
We agree on how sessions will run so everyone knows what to expect.
Guided conversation
A structured, neutral discussion focused on options, not blame.
Practical next steps
Clear, workable outcomes you can act on, and take to independent counsel if you choose.
Before you spend thousands fighting, talk first.
Not every disagreement needs to become a legal battle. Mediation can help families and business owners address conflict earlier, clarify options, and reduce unnecessary escalation. Mediation may help reduce avoidable conflict, delay, and expense when compared with unresolved disputes that escalate.
Start With a ConversationPractical guidance before conflict escalates.
Plain-English reading to help you understand your options and prepare for a calmer conversation.
How much does family mediation cost in California?
What shapes the cost of mediation, and why it is often more cost-conscious than a drawn-out dispute.
Read the guide CompareMediation vs. litigation: what families should understand
How the two paths differ in cost, control, privacy, and the relationships left afterward.
Read more Elder careWhen siblings disagree about an aging parent
Practical ways to move from stuck arguments to shared decisions about a parent's care.
Read more BusinessHow family business conflicts become personal
Why business disagreements between relatives escalate, and how to keep them workable.
Read more PrepareWhat parents should discuss before mediation
A calm checklist of topics to think through before your first parenting or divorce session.
Read more LibrarySee all mediation resources
A growing library of practical, plain-English guides for families and business owners.
Browse allQuestions people ask before they start.
A family mediator is a neutral third person who helps people in a dispute talk through the issues, understand each other's priorities, explore options, and work toward practical agreements. A mediator does not take sides, decide who is right, or provide legal advice.
Mediation itself is a conversation, not a court order. Any understanding reached can be written down, and participants can choose to have independent attorneys review or formalize it. Whether a written agreement becomes legally binding depends on the situation, so participants are encouraged to seek independent legal advice.
No. Practical Family Mediation provides mediation services only. It does not provide legal advice or legal representation. Participants are encouraged to consult independent attorneys before, during, or after mediation.
No. Marissa Guevara, J.D. is a law-trained mediator. She has earned a law degree but is not currently licensed to practice law in California, and she does not act as anyone's attorney or provide legal representation.
Mediation can help with divorce and separation conversations, parenting plans, family financial disagreements, inheritance and sibling disputes, aging parent and elder care decisions, and family business conflicts.
Yes. Many people use mediation early, before a dispute escalates, to clarify issues and look for practical agreements. Mediation may help reduce avoidable conflict, delay, and expense when compared with unresolved disputes that escalate.
Cost depends on the number and length of sessions and the complexity of the issues. Mediation is often more cost-conscious than a drawn-out legal battle, though every situation is different. Reach out for current details.
Yes. Mediation is voluntary. It works when both people are willing to sit down and talk through the issues with a neutral mediator.
Participants may consult independent legal counsel at any point and, depending on the process, may involve their attorneys. Practical Family Mediation encourages independent legal advice when needed.
California has mediation confidentiality laws that generally protect communications made during mediation. The specifics can be nuanced, so participants should consult independent legal counsel for legal advice about confidentiality in their situation.
Start with a private consultation.
Tell us a little about your situation. We will follow up to talk through whether mediation is the right fit and what a calm next step could look like.