How Long Does a Divorce Take in Connecticut? 90 Days to 2 Years, With the 90-Day Clock Starting at Service

A divorce in Connecticut takes 90 days to 2 years, with Connecticut’s mandatory 90-day waiting period setting the minimum time from the date the papers are served. An uncontested divorce — both parties agree on every issue before filing — can be finalized on the 91st day after service. A contested divorce takes 12 to 24 months, with the timeline driven by the mandatory disclosure process, the court’s case management schedule, and the availability of judges in Connecticut’s Family Division. Connecticut has no residency waiting period beyond being a resident at the time of filing — one of the shortest residency requirements in the country. A spouse can move to Connecticut and file for divorce the same day.

Connecticut’s divorce law is governed by Chapter 815j of the Connecticut General Statutes. The state offers both no-fault and fault grounds. The no-fault ground — irretrievable breakdown — requires no separation period and no proof of fault. The fault grounds — adultery, desertion, cruelty, habitual intemperance, imprisonment, and mental illness — are available but rarely used because they require proof at trial and provide no advantage in property division or alimony. Connecticut divides marital property under the equitable distribution standard, and alimony is awarded based on the length of the marriage, the parties’ ages, health, earning capacity, and the standard of living during the marriage.

Connecticut Divorce Timeline by Type


 

Divorce Type Typical Timeline What Takes the Time
Uncontested — no kids, no assets 90-120 days 90-day waiting period + 1-4 weeks court processing
Uncontested — with kids and assets 4-6 months 90-day wait + parenting plan and financial agreement review by judge
Mediated — disputes resolved 4-8 months Mediation sessions + 90-day wait + court processing
Contested — settles before trial 10-20 months Discovery, case management conferences, negotiation, settlement
Fully litigated trial 18-30 months Full discovery, expert reports, trial scheduling, court backlog

Where You File in Connecticut Matters: Fairfield County vs. the Quiet Counties


 

County / Judicial District Uncontested Timeline Contested Timeline Primary Delay Factor
Fairfield County — Stamford, Bridgeport 4-6 months 14-24 months Heaviest docket in CT — most filings, highest asset cases, longest turnaround
Hartford County — Hartford, New Britain 3-5 months 12-22 months Heavy docket — urban court, but more judges per capita than Fairfield
New Haven County — New Haven, Waterbury 3-5 months 12-20 months Moderate-heavy docket; mix of urban and suburban caseload
Litchfield, Windham, Tolland Counties 90-120 days 8-15 months Lightest dockets — fewer filings, faster processing
Middlesex, New London Counties 3-4 months 10-18 months Moderate dockets — suburban and coastal

The Connecticut Divorce Process: Step by Step Through the Timeline


  1. Complaint filed and served (Day 1). The plaintiff files the divorce complaint in the Superior Court in the judicial district where either spouse resides. Filing fee: $350 to $400. The defendant is served, and the 90-day clock begins on the date of service. The defendant has 30 days to file an Appearance and an Answer.
  2. Automatic orders take effect (upon service). Connecticut’s Automatic Orders — a set of mandatory, reciprocal restraining orders — go into effect the moment the defendant is served. Both parties are prohibited from selling assets, changing insurance beneficiaries, removing the children from the state, or incurring unreasonable debt without the other party’s written consent or a court order. The automatic orders protect the marital estate during the divorce.
  3. Case management and mandatory disclosure (30-90 days after service). Both parties must exchange financial affidavits within 30 days of the return date. The court may schedule a case management conference to set a discovery schedule and address temporary issues — support, custody, exclusive use of the home.
  4. Parenting education program (if children, within 60 days of return date). Connecticut requires all divorcing parents to complete a parenting education program. The program is 6 hours, costs $150 to $200 per parent, and must be completed within 60 days of the return date.
  5. Discovery, negotiation, and settlement (90 days to 12+ months). The parties exchange financial documents, conduct depositions if necessary, and negotiate property division, alimony, custody, and support. If the case settles, the parties file a signed Separation Agreement with the court. If the case does not settle, the court schedules additional status conferences and a trial date.
  6. Uncontested final hearing (after 90 days). If the case is uncontested — the parties have signed a Separation Agreement resolving every issue — the court schedules a brief final hearing. The plaintiff testifies that the marriage has broken down irretrievably, the Separation Agreement is fair, and the parties request that the court approve it. The judge approves the agreement and enters the divorce decree. The divorce is final on the date the decree is entered.

 

Connecticut’s automatic orders are the most underappreciated feature of its divorce law. From the moment the complaint is served, neither spouse can move assets, change beneficiaries, cancel insurance, or take the children out of state without consent or a court order. The automatic orders prevent the exact kind of financial misconduct — draining accounts, hiding assets, canceling health insurance — that plagues divorces in states without this protection. The automatic orders protect both parties from the moment the divorce begins.

What Makes a Connecticut Divorce Take Longer


 

Factor Time Added Why
Custody evaluation 4-8 months Court-appointed evaluator assesses family; report takes months
Business or professional practice valuation 3-6 months Neutral appraiser values the business; CT has many closely held businesses and professional practices
Discovery disputes — motions to compel 1-3 months per motion One party refuses to produce financial documents
Pension valuation — particularly for state/municipal employees 2-4 months CT has a large public-sector workforce; state pension division requires specific orders
Real estate appraisal disputes in Fairfield County 2-6 months High-value properties — one of the most expensive markets in the U.S. — disputes over valuation are common

FAQ: Common Questions About Connecticut Divorce Timelines


What is the fastest divorce possible in Connecticut?

An uncontested divorce with a signed Separation Agreement filed at the time of service, in a quiet judicial district — Litchfield, Windham, Tolland. The 90-day clock runs from service. On day 91, a brief final hearing is held. The divorce is final on day 91 to day 100. This is the theoretical minimum and requires complete agreement on every issue, all documents prepared before filing, and a judicial district with available hearing dates shortly after the 90th day.

Do I have to live in Connecticut for a certain time before I can file for divorce?

No — Connecticut has one of the shortest residency requirements in the United States. Either spouse must be a resident of Connecticut at the time of filing. There is no durational residency requirement — no 30-day, 60-day, 90-day, or 6-month requirement. A spouse who moves to Connecticut on Monday can file for divorce on Tuesday, provided they intend to remain a Connecticut resident. This makes Connecticut a relatively fast divorce jurisdiction compared to states like California (6 months of state residency plus 3 months of county residency) or New York (1 year of residency for some grounds).

90 Days With Agreement. 18 to 30 Months Without It.


A divorce in Connecticut takes 90 days to 2 years. The 90-day clock begins at service and is the minimum time for any divorce — contested or uncontested. An uncontested divorce with a signed Separation Agreement can be finalized on day 91. A contested divorce with custody disputes, business valuation, and a Fairfield County docket takes 18 to 30 months. Connecticut’s automatic orders protect both parties from the moment of service, and its residency requirement — none beyond being a resident at filing — makes it one of the most accessible states in which to file.

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