No-Fault Divorce in the United States: How It Works and Where It Doesn't
No-fault divorce is the default path out of marriage in every US state — but the rules around how you file, how long you wait, and what "no-fault" actually means in practice differ enough that crossing a state line can completely change the timeline of your divorce.
What "no-fault" means
A no-fault divorce is one where neither spouse has to prove the other did anything wrong. Instead of citing adultery, abandonment, or cruelty, the petitioner cites a generic statutory ground — usually some variant of "irreconcilable differences" or "irretrievable breakdown of the marriage." The court doesn't investigate why the marriage failed; it just accepts that it has.
This was a relatively recent innovation in American family law. California passed the first no-fault divorce statute in 1970. New York was the last to adopt it, in 2010. For most of the 20th century, an American who wanted out of a marriage had to either prove their spouse's misconduct in court or wait out a long separation period.
Pure no-fault vs. fault-optional
Today's 50 states fall into two groups:
Pure no-fault states (about 17 of them, including California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin) allow no-fault grounds only. You can't allege adultery or cruelty even if you want to.
Fault-optional states (the other 33, including Texas, New York, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Virginia, and most of the Southeast) let you choose. You can file no-fault, or you can plead a traditional fault ground. The trade-off is real: fault grounds usually require evidence and a contested hearing, which costs more and takes longer, but in some states they can swing alimony, property division, or — less often — custody.
Residency and waiting periods
Before you can file for divorce in a given state, you have to live there long enough to give the court jurisdiction. The clock varies:
- Texas: 6 months of state residency + 90 days in the county
- California: 6 months of state residency + 3 months in the county; then a mandatory 6-month cooling-off period after filing before the judgment is final
- Florida: 6 months of residency; 20-day cooling-off after filing
- New York: 1 year of residency in most cases; the no-fault ground itself requires the marriage to have been "irretrievably broken" for at least 6 months
If you've recently moved, you may not yet qualify to file in your new state — and filing in your old state might require you to fly back for hearings. Talking to a local family lawyer about jurisdictional strategy before you file is usually worth the consult fee.
Why no-fault still gets complicated
A common misconception is that no-fault makes divorce simple. It doesn't. What no-fault simplifies is the grounds — you don't have to prove anything to end the marriage. What it doesn't simplify is everything else:
- Property division. Community-property states (CA, TX, AZ, ID, LA, NV, NM, WA, WI) split marital assets 50/50 by default. Equitable-distribution states (the rest) divide assets "fairly," which can mean anything from 50/50 to 70/30 depending on the judge.
- Spousal support. Length-of-marriage tables, income disparity, and the standard of living during the marriage all factor in. In fault-optional states, proven adultery or cruelty can increase the support award.
- Child custody and child support. Calculated separately under each state's guidelines; fault rarely matters here unless the conduct directly harmed the children.
So a no-fault divorce can still take 6–18 months and run $5,000–$50,000+ in attorney fees if the spouses can't agree on these collateral issues.
Uncontested vs. contested
The cheapest, fastest divorce is one where both spouses agree on everything — assets, support, custody — and file jointly or with one spouse defaulting. Many states offer a "summary dissolution" or "simplified" track for short marriages with no kids and minimal property, which can finalize in weeks for under $500 in filing fees.
A contested divorce, where the spouses disagree on terms, goes through discovery, mediation, and possibly trial. The no-fault grounds are still cited, but the litigation is over money and kids — not over who's to blame for the marriage ending.
Bottom line
Every American can file no-fault. What that actually looks like depends on where you live, how long you've been married, and whether you and your spouse can agree on the practical terms. If you're starting the process, the first call should be to a family lawyer licensed in your state — local rules differ enough that generic advice can mislead you, and the upfront consultation usually pays for itself in avoided procedural mistakes.
This article is general information and not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction about your specific situation.