
Massachusetts Divorce Laws (2026): Grounds, Residency, and Process
Massachusetts divorce: no-fault 1A joint or 1B contested petition, 1-year residency, 90/120-day nisi period, equitable distribution, Probate and Family Court.
Loading...
Browse our full library of legal guides, state law breakdowns, and practical legal information.
3559 articles
Browse by Category →
Massachusetts divorce: no-fault 1A joint or 1B contested petition, 1-year residency, 90/120-day nisi period, equitable distribution, Probate and Family Court.

Maryland divorce laws updated 2023: no-fault only, fault grounds repealed, 6-month separation cut from 12, mutual consent and irreconcilable differences explained.

Maine divorce laws explained: no-fault irreconcilable differences, no separation required, 60-day waiting period, equitable distribution, and how to file.

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.