PRACTICE / DIVORCE

Is divorce the right path for you?

Ohio divorce attorneys helping families across all 88 counties figure out the right next step.

Most people who land here aren't sure yet. We help Ohio families figure out whether divorce, dissolution, legal separation, or staying is the right next step — starting with a $25 conversation, in plain English, with a real human's name on it.

Schedule a $25 callAlready know what you need? Jump to options ↓
01 / DECIDING

Is divorce the right path for you, or is there a better option?

Ohio law gives you several ways to end or change a marriage. The right one depends on whether you and your spouse can agree on terms, whether you want the marriage formally ended, and what's at stake — money, children, time. Here's how the four main paths compare.

Divorce

One spouse files. Court resolves disputes.

When it fits
You can't agree, or your spouse won't participate
Timeline
4–24 months
Cost
$3,500+ retainer (full representation)
Best for
Disputed terms, fault grounds, unresponsive spouse
You're already on this page →

Dissolution

Both spouses file jointly. No fault. No fight.

When it fits
You and your spouse agree on every term
Timeline
30–90 days
Cost
From $1,750 flat fee
Best for
Cooperative split, fastest path
Learn about dissolution →

Legal Separation

Court orders for support and custody, marriage stays intact.

When it fits
You want time apart, not divorce
Timeline
2–6 months
Cost
From $1,750 flat fee
Best for
Religious or insurance reasons to stay married
Learn about legal separation →

Annulment

Marriage declared never legally valid.

When it fits
Specific Ohio statutory grounds (fraud, bigamy, etc.)
Timeline
2–6 months
Cost
From $1,250 flat fee
Best for
Marriages with rare legal defects
Learn about annulment →

"My spouse and I agree on everything — we just want this over with."

Dissolution is almost certainly your fastest, cheapest path. See if you qualify →

"My spouse won't talk, won't agree, or has disappeared."

Divorce is the right vehicle. The court can move forward even without their participation.

"We need time apart but I'm not ready to end the marriage."

Legal separation lets you formalize support, custody, and finances without ending the marriage. Learn more →

"I don't think we should have been married in the first place."

Annulment may apply, depending on the circumstances. Ohio has specific statutory grounds. Learn more →

If you're not sure, that's what the consultation is for. We'll tell you up front if divorce isn't the right fit — and which path is.
02 / THE PROCESS

What does the Ohio divorce process actually look like?

Every Ohio divorce moves through the same six stages, though the time spent in each varies wildly depending on whether the case is contested, whether children are involved, and how cooperative both spouses choose to be. Here's the full path, in plain English.

01
Day 1

Filing the Complaint

One spouse (the "plaintiff") files a Complaint for Divorce in the county where either spouse has lived for at least 90 days. The complaint states the grounds for divorce — typically incompatibility (no-fault) or one of the fault grounds in Ohio Revised Code §3105.01 — and lays out what the filing spouse is asking for: property division, custody, support, and any temporary orders.
02
Days 1-30

Service on your spouse

The other spouse (the "defendant") must be formally notified — Ohio doesn't allow a text or email. Service happens through certified mail, sheriff's service, or — if the spouse can't be located — service by publication in a local newspaper. Once served, the defendant has 28 days to file an Answer.
03
Weeks 2-8

Temporary orders (if needed)

If you need immediate orders for child support, parenting time, exclusive use of the marital home, or restraining orders against asset transfers, those happen now via temporary motions. Temporary orders stay in place until the final decree.
04
Months 2-6

Discovery & financial disclosure

Both parties exchange financial information — tax returns, bank statements, retirement account values, real estate deeds, business records. Either side can also issue formal discovery requests (interrogatories, document requests, depositions) if information isn't being shared voluntarily.
05
Months 3-12

Mediation, negotiation, & settlement

Most Ohio divorces settle before trial. The court will often require at least one mediation session. If both sides reach agreement on every issue, the settlement is written into a separation agreement and submitted for the judge's approval. If only some issues settle, the rest go to trial.
06
Months 4-24

Final hearing or trial, then decree

Uncontested divorces end with a brief final hearing — 15 to 30 minutes — where the judge reviews the agreement and issues the Decree of Divorce. Contested divorces end with a trial that can last anywhere from a half day to multiple weeks. Either way, the Decree of Divorce is the document that legally ends the marriage.

The honest range: an uncontested divorce wraps in 4–6 months. A contested one with children and significant assets can take 12–24 months. The biggest variable isn't the law — it's how cooperative both spouses choose to be.

03 / OPTIONS

What are my options for working with Gavvl?

We offer two engagement models — limited scope (flat fee) and full representation (retainer) — plus financing on every service. Most people overpay for legal help because they don't know they can buy *less* of it. Here's how to choose what fits.

MOST COMMON

Limited scope (flat fee)

We handle some of it, you handle what we don't.

INCLUDED
  • Document drafting and filing
  • Court forms and required affidavits
  • Strategy review and coaching
  • Hearing preparation
NOT INCLUDED
  • Court appearances on your behalf
  • Negotiation with opposing counsel
  • Discovery practice
FROM
From $1,750 flat fee, paid up front

Best for: Uncontested cases, dissolutions, simple modifications

WHEN CONFLICT DEMANDS IT

Full representation (retainer)

We handle everything. Start to finish.

INCLUDED
  • All document drafting and filing
  • Court appearances on your behalf
  • Negotiation and settlement
  • Discovery practice and motions
  • Trial representation
  • Post-decree enforcement
FROM
$3,500 initial retainer - not a flat fee

Best for: Contested divorces, custody disputes, complex assets

Not sure which fits? The consultation call is where we figure that out — together.

Flat-fee pricing for the most common scenarios

LIMITED SCOPE · FLAT FEE

Tier I — Dissolution Without Children

$1,750

When you and your spouse have already worked through your separation and have minimal property to divide.

INCLUDES
  • Petition for Dissolution
  • Separation Agreement
  • Affidavits & Required Forms
  • Decree of Dissolution
MOST COMMON • FLAT FEE

Tier II — Dissolution With Children

$2,300

When children are involved, your separation agreement also needs a parenting plan and child support calculated under Ohio guidelines.

INCLUDES
  • Petition for Dissolution
  • Separation Agreement
  • Parenting Plan
  • Child Support Worksheet
  • Affidavits & Required Forms
  • Decree of Dissolution
RETAINER · FULL REPRESENTATION

Tier III — Contested Divorce

$3,500 retainer

When negotiation is needed. Most cases settle before trial — but we're trial-ready when they don't.

INCLUDES
  • Negotiation & Mediation
  • Discovery
  • Motion Filing
  • Hearings & Trial

All flat fees cover document preparation. Filing fees are invoiced separately at the time of filing. Financing options available through Affirm™, other third party options may be available — ask on your consultation call.

Built on trust

OSBA Member

Ohio State Bar Association in good standing.

Local Experience

60+ years combined family law experience across Ohio's domestic relations courts.

Flat-Fee Options

Transparent pricing on every service we can flat-fee. No surprise legal bills.

24/7 Portal Access

Modern client tech (GavvLink) with always-on access to your case file.

04 / DETAILS

What else should I know about Ohio divorce?

The questions that come up the most — property division, custody, filing requirements, support — answered in detail. Tap any question to expand.

Ohio is an equitable distribution state — not 50/50. The court divides marital property fairly based on factors like length of the marriage, each spouse’s earning ability, contributions to acquiring property, and tax consequences. Marital property includes anything acquired during the marriage regardless of legal title: real estate, vehicles, bank accounts, retirement accounts, business interests. Separate property — assets owned before marriage, gifts, inheritances, certain personal injury awards — generally stays with the original owner.

Bank accounts opened or funded during the marriage are almost always marital property, regardless of whose name is on the account. Joint accounts and individual accounts are treated the same when the funds are marital. Pre-marital savings, inheritances, and gifts can stay separate — but only if they weren’t commingled with marital funds. Once you deposit your inheritance into a joint account and use it for household expenses, it usually loses its separate character.

Ohio courts award spousal support if it’s reasonable and appropriate, considering 13 statutory factors including age, earning ability, health, length of marriage, and standard of living during the marriage. Support can be temporary (during the divorce) or longer-term (after), and the duration is typically tied to the length of the marriage. Spousal support can be modified if there’s a substantial change in circumstances — unless the original order specifies otherwise.

Retirement accounts accrued during the marriage are marital property. Dividing them without triggering early-withdrawal penalties or tax consequences requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) for 401(k)s and pensions, and a careful transfer process for IRAs. Each retirement plan has its own QDRO requirements; getting this wrong is expensive. We coordinate this directly with the plan administrators.

Yes. Hiding assets, dissipating marital funds, transferring property to third parties, or running up debts in bad faith are all forms of financial misconduct that can shift the property division. Ohio courts have broad discretion to make the financial picture whole when one spouse has acted improperly.

Ohio courts apply the best interests of the child standard, considering the wishes of the parents, the wishes of the child if mature enough, the child’s relationships with siblings and others, the child’s adjustment to school and community, and each parent’s ability to facilitate a relationship with the other parent. Ohio law presumes that shared parenting is the default starting point, though sole custody is awarded when shared parenting isn’t workable.

Child support is calculated using Ohio’s statewide statutory guidelines and a standardized worksheet. The calculation factors in both parents’ gross incomes, parenting time allocation, health insurance costs, and child care expenses. The guideline figure is the figure the court will adopt unless there’s a specific reason to deviate. We run the worksheet on your consultation call so you know the number before you commit.

A parenting plan is the document that governs how parents share time and decision-making for the children after divorce. It addresses residential time (school weeks, summers, weekends, holidays), decision-making authority for major issues (medical, educational, religious), communication protocols, dispute resolution, and relocation rules. Shared parenting plans require both parents to agree to the terms; sole custody designations don’t.

Not without notice and, in most cases, court approval. Ohio law requires the relocating parent to file a notice of intent to relocate with the court, which the other parent can challenge. The court will hold a hearing and decide based on the children’s best interests. Don’t move first and ask permission later — that’s how you lose custody.

One spouse (the plaintiff) files a Complaint for Divorce in the county where either spouse has lived for at least 90 days, after at least one spouse has been an Ohio resident for six months. The complaint states the grounds for divorce, identifies the parties, and asks for specific relief — property division, custody, support. The other spouse must be formally served and has 28 days to respond.

Ohio recognizes both no-fault and fault grounds. No-fault grounds are incompatibility (the most common) or living separate and apart for at least one year. Fault grounds under Ohio Revised Code §3105.01 include adultery, extreme cruelty, gross neglect of duty, fraudulent contract, habitual drunkenness, and willful absence for one year. Most modern divorces are filed on no-fault grounds because fault is harder to prove and rarely changes the outcome.

The minimum filing package includes a Complaint for Divorce, an Affidavit of Income and Expenses, an Affidavit of Property, and (if children are involved) a Parenting Proceeding Affidavit and Health Insurance Affidavit. Each Ohio county has its own local forms on top of the state forms. We handle every form for clients on flat-fee or full representation.

Court filing fees vary by county but typically run $200–$400 for the initial complaint, plus additional fees for service of process, motions, and any guardian ad litem appointments. Filing fees are separate from attorney fees — they’re paid directly to the court clerk and listed as a line item on your invoice.

An uncontested divorce typically takes 4–6 months. A dissolution (when both spouses agree on everything) takes 30–90 days. A contested divorce can take 12–24 months or longer, especially with children, significant assets, or fault grounds. The biggest variable is whether the spouses cooperate or fight every issue.

Temporary orders are court orders issued during the divorce that govern things until the final decree — child support, parenting time, exclusive use of the home, restraining orders against asset transfers. Either spouse can ask for them at the start of the case. Temporary orders are typically issued within 2–8 weeks of filing.

Most Ohio divorces settle before trial — usually through negotiation or mediation. Trial is the last resort, used when the spouses can’t agree on at least one material issue. If the case settles, the final hearing is brief — 15 to 30 minutes — and the judge approves the agreement. If it doesn’t settle, trial can take a half day to multiple weeks depending on complexity.

The Decree of Divorce is the official court order that legally terminates the marriage and incorporates everything decided in the case — property division, custody, support, debt allocation. Once signed by the judge and journalized (entered into the court record), the divorce is final. The decree is binding, but child support and parenting plans can be modified later if circumstances change substantially.

Ohio law allows divorce to proceed even if the other spouse won’t engage. After proper service (by mail, sheriff, or publication), if the spouse doesn’t respond within 28 days, the court can grant a default judgment — meaning the court grants the relief you asked for in your complaint. We handle service by publication when a spouse can’t be located.

Domestic violence changes everything about how a divorce is handled — including whether you should be in the same room as your spouse during proceedings. Ohio has specific protective order provisions, and divorce courts can issue restraining orders alongside the divorce. If you’re in immediate danger, call 911 first. For the legal process, our team has extensive experience with cases involving domestic violence — see our Civil Protection Orders page for details.

 

Military divorces have additional federal layers — the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act, military pension division rules, and jurisdictional issues if either spouse is stationed out of state. We handle military divorces specifically — see our Military Divorce page.

05 / RELATED

Related services and resources

Divorce rarely happens in isolation. These are the issues that most often come up alongside it — and the deeper guides we've written on each.

Ready to talk?

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