How Long Does a Divorce Case Take? 1 Month to 3 Years, From Filing to Final Decree

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A divorce case takes 1 month to 3 years from the date of filing to the entry of the final decree. The timeline is divided into two types of time: court-driven time — the mandatory waiting period, the judge’s docket schedule, and the court’s procedural rules — and party-driven time — the discovery, negotiation, and trial preparation that the parties control. The waiting period is fixed by law. The party-driven time is variable and is the reason two divorce cases in the same county with the same judge can take 2 months and 18 months respectively.

A divorce case is not continuously active. In a contested case, most of the calendar time between filing and trial is idle — waiting for discovery responses, waiting for a settlement conference date, waiting for a hearing. The actual hours of activity — attorney meetings, depositions, court appearances — are measured in tens of hours for a case that settles, and hundreds of hours for a case that goes to trial. The calendar time and the active time have almost no relationship to each other. A case that takes 12 months may involve only 40 hours of active legal work. A case that takes 18 months may involve 200 hours. The calendar is not the workload.

The Phases of a Divorce Case and How Long Each Takes


 

PhaseUncontested CaseContested — SettledFully Litigated
Filing and service1-2 weeks1-4 weeks1-4 weeks
Waiting period (state mandatory)3 weeks-6 months3 weeks-6 months3 weeks-6 months
Temporary orders hearingNot needed4-12 weeks after filing4-12 weeks after filing
Discovery (document exchange, interrogatories)Not needed2-6 months4-9 months
Mediation / settlement negotiationsNot needed1-4 months2-6 months
Trial preparationNot neededNot needed3-6 months
TrialNot neededNot needed1-5 days in court
Post-trial briefing and judgmentNot neededNot needed1-3 months
Total calendar time1-6 months6-18 months12-36 months

Court-Driven Time vs. Party-Driven Time: Who Controls What


 

Controlled by the CourtControlled by the Parties
Mandatory waiting period (state law)How quickly they file the petition
Judge’s docket — when a hearing can be scheduledWhether they agree on temporary issues or require a hearing
Deadlines for discovery responsesHow quickly they produce discovery documents
Mandatory mediation order timingWhether they settle at mediation or proceed to trial
Trial date — docket availabilityWhether they narrow the issues for trial or try every dispute

The court controls the calendar. The parties control the conflict. A court cannot force a divorce case to move faster than its docket allows — there are only so many hearing dates, and cases are scheduled in the order they are ready. But the parties control whether the case is ready for trial at all. A case that settles at mediation after 6 months is finished. A case that proceeds to trial occupies the court’s calendar for another 6 to 12 months. The court schedules the dates. The parties decide whether the dates are needed.

What Makes a Divorce Case Take Longer


 

FactorHow Much Time It AddsWithin Whose Control
Custody evaluation3-6 monthsCourt orders it; parties’ conflict drives it
Business valuation2-4 monthsParties — one side demands it
Forensic accounting (hidden assets)2-6 monthsParties — one side suspects hidden assets
Motion practice (multiple motions filed)1-3 months per motionParties — each contested motion adds a hearing cycle
Judge recusal or reassignment1-3 monthsCourt — administrative
Appeal of a temporary or final order6-18 monthsParties — losing side appeals

 

The fastest divorce case is the one that never requires a judge to decide anything. An uncontested case with a signed settlement agreement requires the judge only for a 10-minute final hearing to approve the agreement. The court’s involvement is minimal because there is nothing to adjudicate. Every disputed issue — custody, support, property division — requires the judge to schedule a hearing, hear evidence, and issue a ruling. Each ruling takes weeks or months to schedule, plus the judge’s time to write the order. The number of disputed issues is the single largest predictor of how long a divorce case will take.

FAQ: Common Questions About Divorce Case Length


What can I do to make my divorce case go faster?

Five things, ranked by impact: (1) Agree on as many issues as possible before filing — eliminates discovery and trial. (2) Produce all financial documents immediately and voluntarily — eliminates motions to compel and discovery extensions. (3) Narrow the disputed issues — fight over the house but agree on custody, rather than fighting over everything. (4) Respond to attorney communications and discovery requests promptly — delays by one party extend the case for both. (5) Accept reasonable settlement offers — a trial is always longer than a settlement. The fastest case is the one that settles.

Can a court delay a divorce case even if both parties agree?

Yes — the court’s docket is independent of the parties’ agreement. If the court has no available hearing dates for 6 weeks, the final hearing is in 6 weeks regardless of how quickly the parties want it resolved. The parties cannot force the court to schedule a hearing it does not have room for. The court’s docket delay is the one timeline factor that neither party controls. In busy urban courts — Los Angeles, Cook County, Miami-Dade — the docket delay can add 2 to 4 months to an otherwise simple uncontested case.

The Waiting Period Is the Minimum. The Disputes Determine the Maximum.


A divorce case takes 1 month to 3 years, with the state’s waiting period setting the floor and the number and complexity of disputed issues setting the ceiling. An uncontested case with no disputed issues finishes at the floor — the waiting period plus a few weeks for paperwork and scheduling. A fully litigated case with custody disputes, hidden assets, and business valuations reaches the ceiling — 2 to 3 years. Most cases fall in the middle: 6 to 18 months for a contested case that settles before trial.

The parties control the largest variable in the timeline — whether they agree or litigate. The court controls the calendar. The waiting period controls the minimum. Everything else is a function of conflict.

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