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Divorce basics

Northwest Justice Project

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General information about getting divorced in Washington state. 

Fast facts

You can get a divorce when all of these are true:

  • You’re married legally or you’re married through common law marriage in another state or country. (Washington doesn’t have common law marriage.)
  • You or your spouse live here and plan to stay here, or you’re in the military and will be stationed here for at least 90 days after you start your divorce in court (file a court case).
  • At least one spouse believes the marriage can’t be fixed (is broken).
  • You or your spouse properly filed and served the summons and petition for divorce.
  • At least 90 days have passed since the summons and petition was filed and served.

If you’re in a registered domestic partnership, you file to end your partnership, instead of for divorce. Some of the court forms are different, but the process is the same.

No. If all the above are true, the judge will grant the divorce. But your spouse could still argue about how the judge should rule about any issues in your divorce.  

In a legal separation case, the judge makes orders for all the same issues as a divorce, including parenting planchild support, and property and debt division. Here’s how legal separation is different:

Also called invalidity, an annulment is a court case that makes it as if your marriage never happened in the first place. Either spouse can file for this. If a spouse is married to more than one person at the same time, a child of the later marriage or any other legal spouse can file for this. 

The judge rules that the relationship is over. A judge that has authority (jurisdiction) to do this will also: 

It dependsIt’s simple if you and your spouse both live in Washington now. The judge can decide all issues in your case. Even if your spouse doesn’t live here now, if they lived in Washington during the marriage and you had them personally served (you had your court papers hand delivered to them), the judge can give you a divorce and decide the financial issues. 

The judge won’t have jurisdiction over property in another state or country. 

Yes, but it’s usually best to at least try to talk to one, if you can. You may have rights you don’t know about. Example: You may have an interest in your spouse's pension plan.

You might be able to pay a lawyer to review your divorce papers after you fill them out. It’s probably worth paying for this. Some lawyers have reduced rates for this kind of work.

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