
Wyoming Divorce Laws (2026): Grounds, Residency, and Process
Wyoming divorce laws explained: irreconcilable differences, 60-day residency, 20-day waiting period, equitable distribution, and how to file in District Court.
Loading...
Browse our full library of legal guides, state law breakdowns, and practical legal information.
8469 articles
Browse by Category →
Wyoming divorce laws explained: irreconcilable differences, 60-day residency, 20-day waiting period, equitable distribution, and how to file in District Court.

Wisconsin divorce laws explained: no-fault only, 6-month residency, 120-day waiting period, community property rules, and how to file in Circuit Court.

West Virginia divorce: two no-fault grounds (irreconcilable differences by mutual consent, or 1-year separation). No mandatory waiting period. Equitable distribution state.

Washington divorce requires only that the marriage is irretrievably broken. No minimum residency, no separation period, but a mandatory 90-day waiting period applies.

Virginia no-fault divorce requires 1 year of separation (or 6 months with no minor children and a written agreement). No irreconcilable-differences ground. Learn residency, property division, and how to file.

Vermont divorce requires 6 months living apart (no-fault) and 6 months residency to file, with 1-year residency required before the final hearing. Learn grounds, property division, and how to file.

Utah divorce law: irreconcilable differences no-fault ground, 3-month residency, 30-day waiting period, equitable distribution, and Title 81 recodification.

Texas divorce law: insupportability no-fault ground, 6-month residency, 90-day county rule, 60-day waiting period, community property explained.

Tennessee divorce laws: irreconcilable differences requires a written MDA, 2-year separation option, 60/90-day wait, equitable distribution. Residency: 6 months.

South Dakota divorce laws explained: no-fault irreconcilable differences requires mutual consent, 60-day wait, equitable distribution, no separation required.

South Carolina divorce laws: the only no-fault route is 1 year of separation in separate residences. Learn residency rules, fault grounds, equitable distribution, and filing steps.

Rhode Island divorce laws explained: no-fault irreconcilable differences, 1-year residency, 90-day post-decision wait, equitable distribution, and filing steps.