
Louisiana Divorce Laws (2026): Grounds, Residency, and Process
Louisiana divorce law: community property state, 180-day separation (no kids) or 365 days (minor children), fault grounds, and covenant marriage explained.
Loading...
Browse our full library of legal guides, state law breakdowns, and practical legal information.
8521 articles
Browse by Category →
Louisiana divorce law: community property state, 180-day separation (no kids) or 365 days (minor children), fault grounds, and covenant marriage explained.

Kentucky divorce law explained: pure no-fault (irretrievably broken), 180-day residency, 60-day waiting period, equitable distribution of marital property.

Kansas divorce guide: incompatibility ground, 60-day residency and waiting period, equitable distribution of property, and step-by-step filing process.

Iowa divorce guide: the no-fault breakdown ground, 90-day waiting period, equitable distribution of property, and step-by-step filing process.

Indiana divorce requires irretrievable breakdown, 6-month state residency, 3-month county residency, and a mandatory 60-day waiting period. No separation required.

Illinois is no-fault only since 2016. Learn the irreconcilable-differences ground, 90-day residency rule, 6-month separation presumption, and equitable distribution rules.

Idaho divorce laws explained: irreconcilable differences no-fault ground, 6-week residency, 21-day waiting period, and community property division 50/50.

Hawaii divorce laws explained: no-fault irretrievably broken ground, 3-month circuit residency, no waiting period, and equitable distribution of marital property.

Georgia divorce law explained: no-fault (irretrievably broken) plus 12 fault grounds, 6-month residency, 30-day wait after service, equitable distribution, and how to file in Superior Court.

Florida divorce law explained: pure no-fault (irretrievably broken), 6-month residency, 20-day waiting period, equitable distribution, and how to file in Circuit Court.

DC divorce law since Jan 2024: no separation required, no-fault only, 6-month residency. File in DC Superior Court Family Court. Equitable distribution.

Delaware divorce requires 6-month residency and 6-month separation before the court rules, except for misconduct. Learn grounds, property division, and how to file.