MyCustodyCoach Logo
LoginGet Started

JDF 1104: Certificate of Compliance with Mandatory Financial Disclosures

JDF 1104 is Colorado's Certificate of Compliance with Mandatory Financial Disclosures. It is not the Sworn Financial Statement. You file JDF 1104 with the court to certify that you sent the required financial disclosure documents to the other party under C.R.C.P. 16.2. The detailed income and asset worksheet is JDF 1111 (Sworn Financial Statement), a separate form you typically exchange and file alongside this certificate.

JDF 1104 (this form)

  • Certifies mandatory disclosures were sent to the other party
  • Filed with the court (usually within 42 days of service or co-petition filing)
  • Includes a certificate of service to the other party

JDF 1111 (separate form)

  • Sworn Financial Statement (Form 35.2)
  • Reports income, expenses, debts, and assets under oath
  • Listed on JDF 1104 as a document sent to the other party and filed with the court
File with the courtExchange with the other party only
JDF 1104 certificate itselfIncome tax returns (most recent 3 years)
JDF 1111 Sworn Financial Statement (and 1111 SS if needed)Pay stubs, bank statements, debt statements, and most other JDF 1125 list items
Child support worksheets when applicableUnless a court order says otherwise

Based on JDF 1104 and Colorado mandatory disclosure instructions. County rules and court orders can change what you must file.

Checklist match

Line up JDF 1104 boxes with what you actually sent.

1111 first

Complete JDF 1111 before you certify exchange on JDF 1104.

Service record

Keep proof of how and when you sent disclosures.

Organize before you certify

MyCustodyCoach can help you gather disclosure materials, notes, and related custody documents in one place before you prepare JDF 1104 or discuss the form with counsel. MCC does not file forms for you and is not a substitute for a lawyer.

Get started with MyCustodyCoach

JDF 1104 questions

Is JDF 1104 the same as the Sworn Financial Statement?

No. JDF 1104 is the Certificate of Compliance with Mandatory Financial Disclosures. It tells the court you sent the required disclosure package to the other party. JDF 1111 is Colorado's Sworn Financial Statement (Form 35.2), where you list income, expenses, debts, and assets under oath. Both are usually due within 42 days of service or co-petition filing, but they are separate forms with different jobs.

What is JDF 1104 used for?

JDF 1104 certifies to the court that you provided mandatory financial disclosure documents to the other party under C.R.C.P. 16.2. You check off what you sent, note anything you did not disclose and why, sign under penalty of perjury, file the certificate with the court, and serve a copy on the other party. It is not where you report your income line by line; that work belongs on JDF 1111 and the supporting documents listed on the form.

Do I file the supporting financial documents with the court?

Usually not. On JDF 1104, tax returns, pay stubs, bank statements, and most other mandatory disclosure items are sent to the other party only. The form labels those items as documents sent but not filed with the court. JDF 1111 (and child support worksheets when applicable) are typically both exchanged and filed. JDF 1104 itself is always filed with the court. Follow your county rules and any court order if your judge requires additional filings.

How does JDF 1104 relate to child support modification?

Financial disclosure rules still apply in modification cases. JDF 1104 confirms you exchanged mandatory documents; JDF 1111 gives the court your current financial picture. If you are modifying support, pair this certificate with the modification affidavit your case requires, such as JDF 1414, and confirm deadlines with official court resources.

Last reviewed: 2026-06-03

MyCustodyCoach is not a law firm. Court rules, fees, and form versions change by county; confirm what applies to your case with official court resources or counsel you hire.