Divorce & Family Law

Divorce & Family Law Guides — All 50 States

Divorce law is governed almost entirely at the state level, which means filing requirements, waiting periods, and how property gets divided can differ substantially depending on where you live.

Every state requires you to establish residency for a minimum period before you can file for divorce there.

How It Works

The divorce & family law process, step by step

1

Confirm residency eligibility

You generally must have lived in the state (and sometimes the specific county) for a minimum period before you're eligible to file there.

2

Choose fault or no-fault grounds

Every state now offers no-fault divorce, but some also allow fault-based filings, which can affect timelines and, in some states, support or property outcomes.

3

File the petition and serve your spouse

Proper legal service starts the clock on your spouse's response window and is a frequent source of procedural delay when done incorrectly.

4

Address custody, support, and property division

These can be negotiated through mediation, resolved through settlement, or decided by a judge if the parties can't agree.

5

Finalize through judgment

A judge must approve and sign the final divorce decree before the marriage is legally dissolved, even in fully uncontested cases.

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Pick Your State

State-specific divorce & family law rules

Filing deadlines, court structures, and procedural rules that materially differ from state to state.

Northeast

South

Midwest

West

FAQ

Common questions

How long does a divorce take from start to finish?

An uncontested divorce with no disputes over custody or property can finalize in a few months in some states; contested divorces involving custody or asset disputes commonly take a year or longer.

Do both spouses need separate attorneys?

One attorney cannot legally represent both spouses in a contested matter. Even in amicable, uncontested divorces, each spouse independently reviewing the agreement is strongly advisable.

How is property divided?

States follow either community property rules (generally an even split of marital assets) or equitable distribution rules (a fair, but not necessarily equal, split based on multiple factors).

RC
Renata Cole, J.D.
Family Law & Disability Editor · J.D., family law mediation certificate

Renata combines a law degree with mediation training to cover divorce, custody, and Social Security disability content with an emphasis on procedural clarity for self-represented readers.

Not legal advice. This page provides general legal information for educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change frequently and vary by jurisdiction — always confirm current rules with a licensed attorney in your state before making legal decisions.