Conflict, not paperwork, sets the clock
People expect a single answer to how long a divorce takes. The honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on how much you disagree — and on a few mandatory waiting periods you cannot speed up.
Uncontested divorces close in months; contested ones can run a year or more. Here is what drives the clock.
People expect a single answer to how long a divorce takes. The honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on how much you disagree — and on a few mandatory waiting periods you cannot speed up.
An uncontested divorce, where both spouses agree on the terms, often closes in a matter of months. A contested one, where a court must decide custody, support, or property, can run a year or more. Mandatory waiting periods and court backlogs add time on top. Exact timelines vary by jurisdiction — confirm locally.
Agreement is the biggest accelerator: if you settle custody, support, and property, you skip the slow contested track. Complete financial disclosure, organized documents, and mediation also shorten the timeline. The less the court has to decide, the faster you finish.
Disputes over children or money, hidden or contested assets, incomplete disclosure, and crowded court calendars all stretch the timeline. Many jurisdictions also impose a mandatory waiting or cooling-off period that runs regardless of how cooperative you are — confirm the rule where you live.
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Available inside HAQQ across chat, mobile, and eFirm workflows.
Check whether a mandatory waiting or cooling-off period applies — that sets the floor for how fast you can possibly finish.
Resolve as much as you can by agreement or mediation. Every issue you take off the court's plate shortens the calendar.
Ask HAQQ privately to estimate the realistic range for your situation and jurisdiction in your language, then confirm specifics with a local lawyer. This is legal information, not legal advice.
Often a few months, since there is nothing for a court to decide. The main delay is usually a mandatory waiting period, which varies by jurisdiction — confirm locally.
Because a court must decide the disputed issues, which means hearings, exchanges of evidence, and waiting for calendar slots. Custody and asset fights are the biggest time sinks.
Mostly by reducing conflict — settle what you can, disclose finances fully, and consider mediation. You generally cannot shorten a mandatory waiting period, which varies by jurisdiction.
Many jurisdictions impose one before a divorce can be finalized, regardless of agreement. The length varies widely, so confirm the rule where you live.
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