Connecticut Divorce Timeline

How long does divorce take in Connecticut? From filing to final decree, here is the complete timeline with mandatory waiting periods and tips to avoid delays. Updated for 2026.

90

Waiting Period (days)

30

Response Window (days)

4-6

Uncontested (months)

6-18

Contested (months)

Connecticut Divorce Timeline: Step by Step

1

Preparation

1-2 weeks

Gather financial documents, complete required forms (5 mandatory), and determine grounds for divorce.

Tip: Divorce.ai can reduce this to under an hour by auto-generating your forms.

2

Filing

1-3 days

File your petition with the court and pay the $350 filing fee. E-filing is available and can speed this up.

Tip: File early in the week to avoid weekend delays in processing.

3

Service of Process

1-4 weeks

Serve your spouse using an accepted method: state marshal, constable, waiver of service, publication.

Tip: Personal service is usually the fastest method. A professional process server can expedite this.

4

Response Period

30 days

Your spouse has 30 days to file a response after being served. If they don't respond, you may be able to get a default judgment.

Tip: If your spouse agrees to the divorce, they can waive the response period by signing an answer or waiver.

5

Mandatory Waiting Period

90 days

Connecticut requires a 90-day waiting period. For standard contested and uncontested divorces, Connecticut imposes a mandatory 90-day waiting period from the Return Date before the court may hold a final hearing and enter a decree of dissolution. For nonadversarial divorces filed under the expedited process using Form JD-FM-242, the waiting period is reduced to approximately 30-35 days from the filing date. The 90-day period serves as a cooling-off period for reconciliation.

Tip: Use this time to finalize your settlement agreement if you haven't already.

6

Settlement / Trial

Varies

If uncontested, you can submit your settlement agreement for court approval. Contested cases go through discovery, negotiation, and potentially trial.

Tip: Mediation can help resolve disputes faster and cheaper than going to trial.

7

Final Judgment

1-4 weeks

The judge reviews your agreement and issues the final decree of divorce. Some courts schedule a brief hearing; others approve by mail.

Tip: Keep certified copies of your final decree. You will need them for name changes, bank accounts, and other post-divorce tasks.

Start your divorce today

Get your Connecticut forms prepared in under an hour. The sooner you file, the sooner your waiting period begins.

What Causes Delays in Connecticut Divorce?

!

Incomplete or Incorrect Forms

Missing information or errors on forms are the #1 cause of court rejections and delays. Using Divorce.ai eliminates this risk.

!

Difficulty Serving Your Spouse

If your spouse avoids service or cannot be located, this phase alone can take weeks or months. Service by publication adds 30+ days.

!

Disputes Over Assets or Custody

Contested issues require negotiation, mediation, or trial. Each dispute can add months to your timeline.

!

Court Backlog

Busy courts in Connecticut may have scheduling delays for hearings. Some counties are faster than others.

How to Speed Up Your Connecticut Divorce

1.

File uncontested. Agree on all issues before filing. Uncontested divorces are fastest.

2.

Use a process server. Professional servers complete service faster and provide proper proof.

3.

Complete forms accurately. Avoid rejection delays by using Divorce.ai to prepare error-free forms.

4.

E-file when available. Electronic filing is faster than filing in person or by mail.

5.

Use the simplified process. Connecticut offers a "Nonadversarial Divorce" option for qualifying couples. Check eligibility.

The clock starts when you file

Don't waste weeks on paperwork. Divorce.ai prepares your Connecticut forms so you can file and start the waiting period sooner.

Uncontested vs. Contested: Timeline Comparison

PhaseUncontestedContested
Preparation1-2 weeks2-4 weeks
Filing + Service1-2 weeks2-4 weeks
Response Period30 days (often waived)30 days
Waiting Period90 days90 days
Negotiation / TrialN/A (already agreed)3-12 months
Total Estimate4-6 months6-18 months

Related Connecticut Guides

Start your Connecticut divorce timeline today

The sooner you file, the sooner your mandatory waiting period begins. Divorce.ai gets your forms ready fast.