Not long ago, couples had to go to Nevada to get a no-contest divorce. Now all they need is a modem. Watch 'Tech Live,' Wednesday 3/20 at 9 p.m. Eastern for details.

You can find a date, a mate, a chapel, and a minister for your wedding online. Why not a divorce? A Seattle attorney is making it as easy as filing online tax forms.

Stacey Kiss couldn't get her husband to agree on anything during their seven-year marriage, except to get divorced online.

"At first I was a little nervous," Kiss said. "I thought, 'What kind of Internet scam is this?'"

But it was no scam.

CompleteCase.com, which bills itself as the only website offering online divorces from start to finish, handled Kiss' divorce.

"I have people call me all the time saying that they can't afford a lawyer," CompleteCase.com founder Randy Finney said. Finney, a Seattle family law attorney, sees his site as a way to help unhappy couples end their marriages without the pain and expense of a trip to the courthouse.

Finney says more people would end unhappy marriages if it weren't for the cost of divorce. According to Finney, divorcing couples spend an average of $1,500 on legal fees. A couple seeking an uncontested divorce can use Finney's site for a mere $249.

"We pulled out the credit card and went through the whole thing and did all the papers in one night," Kiss said. "It's almost like doing your tax return online. Some of [the questions] are yes or no, some of them are multiple choice. It even has little pop-up boxes with case law information so you know exactly what you are getting yourself into."

The forms CompleteCase.com uses are available free from state and county courts. What you pay for is convenience.

"Your spouse can be in a completely different state," Finney said. "They can come online and take a look at the forms themselves, so they can both remotely access the information and negotiate it that way."

However, not every uncontested divorce can go through CompleteCase.com. The site only works for residents of Washington, California, New York, Florida, and -- very soon -- Texas. And even in those states, some divorcing couples must present their paperwork in person at a courthouse.

"Many states and many counties allow you to file [the divorce] by mail or fax, but some do require you to come in and do it," Finney said. He says 1,000 people have used his service, but he's not sure how many have completed their divorces.

Courts are seeing more "pro se litigants" -- people who represent themselves and do their own paperwork instead of retaining an attorney. Finney says that is what CompleteCase.com is all about.

"The documents are getting into court, they are being signed by the judges, and parties are getting divorced in an amicable and inexpensive way, so that's what we consider success," he said.

But online divorce is still divorce.

Stacey Kiss and her husband were forced to answer some tough questions, especially about the sensitive subject of child custody. The two had to decide on who had custody of their daughter over holidays and school vacations. "It's definitely not for a couple who can't agree on anything," Kiss said.

But for couples who can agree, it sure beats a trip to Nevada.