Divorce and Other Options for Ending Your Marriage with Children in Washington State

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If you have children and are considering getting a divorce, read this first. This does not include court forms but will guide you to the forms you need. #3240EN

Part 1: Ending the Relationship

No. Washington is a “no-fault” divorce state. You do not need to prove a spouse was “at fault.” You must only prove irreconcilable differences: you no longer get along.

It legally ends your marriage. The court can also divide your property and debts, award one of you maintenance (alimony), limit one spouse’s contact with the children or other spouse, change a spouse’s name, and, if you have children, enter a parenting plan and order child support.

The court may give you everything a divorce does, but does not end the marriage. You are still married. Read Legal Separation.

It is called "invalidity" in Washington State. This court action can make it as if your marriage never happened. Generally, you will have to be able to prove that you were not competent to agree to marry in the first place, or you could not legally agree to be married for other reasons. Read Divorce: General Information to learn more.  

No. If you are in a registered domestic partnership, you file to end your partnership. Use our File for Divorce packet or Washington Forms Online interview. The forms and procedure are the same for divorce and domestic partnership.

Part 2: Where to file

Yes, IF one of these is true:

  • You live in Washington.

  • Your spouse lives in Washington.

  • You are in the military and stationed in Washington.

  • Your military spouse will be stationed in Washington for at least 90 days after you file and serve the divorce.

Washington must have personal jurisdiction over your spouse to be able to make certain types of orders. Washington generally will have personal jurisdiction over your spouse if one of these is true:

  • Your spouse lives in Washington.

  • Your spouse lived in Washington at some point during your marriage.

  • One of your children was conceived in Washington.

  • You still live, or are stationed in the armed forces, in Washington.

You may still be able to file for divorce and serve your spouse by publication. You can still ask the court to end your marriage, divide any property and debts located in Washington, and (if Washington has jurisdiction over your children) enter a parenting plan.  Use Service by Certified Mail or Publication.

You may have to file your divorce in tribal court. Talk to a lawyer with expertise in Indian law.

Before filing for divorce here, make sure Washington has jurisdiction over your children. If not, you cannot ask for a parenting plan or custody order here. You may need to file in another state.

Jurisdiction is complicated. If you have questions about whether Washington has jurisdiction over your children, talk with a lawyer as soon as possible. If you have a low income and live outside King County, call CLEAR at 1-888-201-1014.

You must wait at least 90 days after filing and serving the petition before entering final orders. If you and your spouse have an agreement, you can enter final orders right after the 90-day period.  Divorces can take longer than 90 days if you cannot agree. If you cannot come to an agreement, your case will go to trial.

*In most counties, you ask for a trial date after your spouse has filed a response.

How long it takes to finalize also depends on your county and how complicated your case is. If are claims of domestic violence, child abuse, alcoholism, drug addiction, or other things that could be dangerous to the children, or you have complicated property issues, your case could take much longer.

It is best to try to come to an agreement if possible. Trials can be complicated. You may need a lawyer.

Part 3: I want child support or a parenting schedule now. What do I do?

You may want Temporary Family Law Orders. The court enters these quickly. They can last until trial or the end of your case.

Example 1:  You want a parenting plan before trial saying who has custody and how much visitation the other parent will have.

Example 2:  You want an order keeping your spouse from cleaning out the bank accounts or selling things before trial.

 

Ask yourself:

  • Are you happy with how things are right now without them? 

  • Do you need an order making your spouse do (or stop doing) something?

 

Temporary orders can include:

  • A parenting plan saying whom the children will live with until the divorce is final. Until you have an order, each parent has an equal right to custody. If your spouse will not let you see the children, a parenting plan can give you visitation.  

  • Restraining orders to keep one spouse from harassing or coming near the other.

  • Restraining orders keeping a spouse from taking the children out of state.

  • Restraining orders keeping a spouse from getting rid of property, taking out loans in both your names, or taking your name off insurance policies.

  • Orders for temporary child support, maintenance (alimony), attorney’s fees, or use of your house or car.

  • Order that one spouse can live in the house and the other cannot.

  • Appointment of a guardian ad litem (GAL) or parenting evaluator. Read Guardian ad Litems in Family Law Cases.

If there is an emergency, you may need an Immediate Restraining Order right away. The judge often enters this without giving the other spouse any notice, or very little notice. (The other spouse later can have a hearing. The judge decides there if the order will continue.)

You may need this order if you cannot wait one to three weeks for a hearing to get help from the court. Examples:  Your spouse

  • Is harassing or harming you.

  • Has harmed the children OR poses a danger to them.

  • Has threatened to take the children.

  • Is taking a lot out of your accounts, or selling or hiding property.

If you file for Immediate Restraining Orders, you do not need to file for Temporary Orders.

Yes, any time before your divorce is final. To ask the court to change a temporary order, you file another Motion for Temporary Family Law Orders.   

If you are afraid that your spouse may hurt or threaten you or the children, the court can issue special orders to help protect you. If you have been a domestic violence victim, or your spouse has threatened you, you can ask for a Domestic Violence Protection Order anytime. You can also ask for a permanent protection order as part of the final divorce orders.

A Domestic Violence Protection Order can:

  • Give you custody.

  • Set up visitation for your spouse, OR stop your spouse from seeing the children.

  • Keep your spouse out of the home and away from your home, work, or school.

  • Order your spouse not to threaten, assault, harass, or stalk you.

  • Order your spouse to get domestic violence and/or alcohol or drug treatment.

  • Order your spouse to turn their gun in to law enforcement.

For more about Protection Orders, contact your court’s protection order advocates or local domestic violence program, or call the National Domestic Violence Hotline 1.800.799.7233. Protection order forms are available from the court clerk or your local domestic violence program. You can also use our do-it-yourself interview program, Washington Forms Online, to fill out the forms at WashingtonLawHelp.org.  

Part 4: Dividing Property & Debts

You must tell the court about all your property and debts. Washington is a community property state. Generally, all property (house, other real estate, car) a spouse gets during the marriage is community property. It belongs to both of you, even if only one of you is on the title. Each spouse’s earnings during the marriage is community property.

Your Divorce Petition proposes how the court should divide the property and debts. The court in the Final Divorce Order decides who gets what.

Separate property belongs to only one spouse. Generally, it is property you got before the marriage through inheritance or as a gift (before or during the marriage), or after separation.

*If you lived together before your marriage, property and earnings you had while living together might also be community property.  Talk to a lawyer.

Generally, all debts either spouse incurred during the marriage are community debts. Both spouses are equally responsible for them.

You incur separate debts before the marriage or after separation.

The law about division of property in divorces can be complicated. Talk to a lawyer.

It depends. The court can make any division that is just and equitable, after considering:

  • The nature and extent of the community property.

  • The nature and extent of the separate property.

  • How long the marriage lasted.

  • Each spouse’s economic circumstances at the time the property division will become effective.

  • Whether the spouse with custody should get the family home.

It will depend. If you have children, the court looks at who gets custody. The court will probably let the parent with custody keep living in the family home, if possible. The court may award that parent more property and fewer debts, especially if the other spouse cannot pay much child support.

The court will also consider what condition property and debt division will leave you each in post-divorce. It generally does not want one spouse very wealthy and the other poor. It will consider your

  • Age.

  • Health.

  • Education.

  • Work prospects.

Example 1:  You had a long marriage.  You have not worked much outside the home. The court may award you more community property (or long-term maintenance) so you do not end up much poorer than your spouse is. 

Example 2:  You have a disability. You cannot work. The court may award you more community property. 

Example 3:  The court can consider which spouse will be able to afford to pay the debts when deciding who must pay them.

In most cases, the court will award each spouse their separate property and order each to pay their separate debts. It rarely awards one spouse’s separate property or debts to the other.

You may have signed a written agreement before marrying stating how you would divide your property and debts if you divorced. We often call this a prenuptial agreement.

You may have signed an agreement during the marriage stating which of your property is community and separate. We call this a Community Property Agreement. Couples sometimes do these as part of an estate plan.

You might have signed an agreement after separation dividing property and debts. We call this a Property Settlement Agreement or Separation Contract.

If you think you have any written agreement about your property and debts, have a lawyer look at it. This might determine how the court will divide property and debts in your case.

It depends. Property you bought with money earned during the marriage is community property. Your income during the marriage is community property. Anything you buy with your income belongs to you both. The judge will divide the car and other property according to what they decide is just.

Maybe. The court might award you an interest in the house.

The house is your spouse’s separate property. They bought it before your marriage. It remains separate after you marry UNLESS your spouse gives it as a gift to the community. This could happen if, for example, you refinance it in both names.

You may be entitled to an interest in any increase in the house’s value from improvements you made to the house (such as a remodel or new deck) during the marriage, plus the community payments on the mortgage. The court would subtract the house’s reasonable rental value from your community interest because you benefited from living there during the marriage. It could rule you have no community interest in the house because of the value you got from living there. 

*This issue is complicated. Talk to a lawyer.

Look at

  • The home’s value.

  • What you still owe on it.

  • Your post-divorce incomes.  

Example: can just one of you pay the mortgage?  If not, awarding one of you the property may lead to foreclosure and damage your credit.  It might be safer to sell it.

Do not create a post-divorce situation where title is in one name, the debt in another. Example: The divorce court awards you title to the home. No one takes action to make this official. Your spouse’s name stays on the mortgage. Your spouse falls behind on payments. It will then be very hard to get the lender to give you a modification with your spouse’s name still on the mortgage. To avoid problems, you must refinance the property in one spouse’s name at/near the time of the divorce.

*These are important, often complex, considerations.  Talk to an experienced lawyer. 

Yes, even if one spouse objects. The court will most likely do this if one of these is true:

  • You must sell it to divide the property fairly.

  • You are behind on payments.

It depends:

  • Retirement and pension benefits, including 401(k) plans, earned during the marriage are community property. Both spouses have a legal interest in them.

  • Pensions earned both before and during the marriage: the portion earned during the marriage (and the increase in value of that portion) is community property. 

  • Disability benefits substituting for pension benefits might be community property.

If you believe your spouse has a pension (including a military pension), 401(k), IRA, or other retirement or disability plan, talk with a lawyer about what your rights. You may be able to get a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) ordering your spouse’s pension plan to pay you benefits directly after your spouse retires. The Pension Rights Center publishes Your Pension Rights at Divorce: What Women Need to Know. Read it or call them at (202) 296-3776.

No. Washington has “no-fault” divorce. The court cannot consider who “caused” the divorce when dividing property. The court may consider if your spouse wasted marital assets without your consent OR tried to hide assets from the court.

Maybe. Maintenance (alimony) is a payment one spouse makes to the other for financial support. The court does not always award maintenance. It must look at things such as:

  • How long you have been married.
  • Both your financial situations, given the division of property and debts and your spouse’s ability to pay maintenance.

  • Time it will take for you to get education or training.

  • Standard of living during the marriage.

  • Your age and health.

If you have been unemployed a long time (example:  you stayed home to care for the children), you are more likely to get maintenance than if you have been laid off temporarily. On the other hand, you can get maintenance even if you are working, if the court decides you should enjoy the same standard of living you had during the marriage. You are more likely to get maintenance if both of these are true:

  • You were married many years.

*Maintenance is complicated. Try to talk to a lawyer.

  • You have a disability and/or stayed home to care for the children while your spouse worked. You are less likely to get a good job now. 

Maintenance payments generally end when you remarry or die.  The Final Divorce Order may say otherwise.

You must pay the debt and sue your spouse to pay you back.  Even if the court orders your spouse to pay a debt, the creditor (person owed) may still come after you to collect. You cannot stop the creditor by telling the creditor the debt is your ex’s responsibility.

If you think this might happen, check the “hold harmless” box in the Final Divorce Order form. It is the second box in section 12. Then, if you must sue your ex- to force them to pay you back for debts you paid, they must also pay your attorney’s fees and costs.

Maybe. If your spouse files for bankruptcy, you should get notice of it. Talk immediately with a lawyer who knows bankruptcy law. You may need to take part in the bankruptcy case to protect yourself.

Part 5: Custody and Visitation

Washington courts generally do not say custody and visitation anymore. They talk about the parenting plan, residential schedule and decision-making authority for the children.

As part of your divorce, the court will decide:

  • Who will have custody, or if the children will live with each parent half-time.   

  • Visitation.  

  • Who will make decisions about the children’s schooling, medical care, and other issues.

  • How you will work out disagreements about the children.

The court puts this in a court order we call a Parenting Plan.

*How the court decides your parenting plan is complicated. Talk with a lawyer about your case if possible.

Yes, if you have any children together under age eighteen. If your spouse served you with a parenting plan, and you disagree with what it proposes, you must file your own proposed parenting plan. The court may enter a temporary parenting plan to cover the period while the divorce is pending. It enters a permanent parenting plan at the end of your divorce.

A parenting plan signed by a judge or court commissioner is a court order. You both must follow it. If you do not, the court could hold you in contempt. You might face criminal charges.

You must have a good excuse not to follow a parenting plan. Example: following it would cause serious harm to you or the child. Even then, you cannot just stop following it. You must go back to court to ask to change it. Do this as soon as you can. Then the court can approve a new, more appropriate schedule. Read Change a Parenting Plan/Child Custody Order.

If you believe your child may be in danger, you can contact Child Protective Services (CPS).

*If you do not want to follow part of a court-ordered parenting plan, get the other parent’s permission in writing OR contact a lawyer.

It must consider:

1. Reasons to restrict one parent’s time with the children

The court must first decide if there is any reason under RCW 26.09.191 to limit a parent’s time/contact with the children. In most cases, the court must limit a parent’s time if that parent, or someone living with him/her, has engaged in any of these:

  • Long-time willful abandonment of or refusal to care for the children.

  • Physical/sexual/emotional abuse of any child.

  • A history of domestic violence or an assault or sexual assault that causes serious bodily harm or the fear it.

  • Has a conviction as an adult of certain sex crimes with a child victim, or has been found to be a sexual predator.

The court may choose to limit a parent’s time with the child if it finds any of these:

  • The parent neglected or substantially failed to provide care for the children.

  • The parent has a long-term emotional/physical problem interfering with their ability to take care of the children.

  • The parent has a long-term drug, alcohol, or other substance abuse problem interfering with their ability to take care of the children.

  • There is no bond or a seriously damaged bond between parent/child.

  • That parent has engaged in the abusive use of conflict, creating a danger of serious damage to the child’s psychological development.

  • The parent has kept the child from the other parent for a long time for no good reason.

  • There is another reason unrestricted contact would be bad for the child.

2. Limiting a parent’s time if there is a reason to under RCW 26.09.191

It depends. In most cases, the court will not let this parent have custody. In very serious cases, it must order no contact between parent/child. 

*The court must follow very detailed rules if a parent or someone living with them has a conviction for a sex crime against children or been found to have molested/harmed children in a civil case. Courts rarely allow that parent unsupervised contact with their child. If you or your spouse has a conviction for such a crime, talk to a lawyer.

The court may order any restriction reasonably calculated to protect the child OR a parent from abuse/harm that could come from contact with the other parent.  Restrictions can include requiring a parent to:

  • See the children only when supervised.

  • Complete domestic violence or substance abuse treatment.

  • Take random drug/alcohol tests.

  • Complete a parenting class.

  • Go to counseling or take medication for a mental health condition.

  • Complete a sexual deviancy evaluation.

  • Stop interfering with the other parent’s contact with the children.

  • Stop creating conflict with the other parent without good reason.

3. None of RCW 26.09.191 applies. How will the court decide custody?

The court must encourage each parent’s relationship with the child, consistent with the family’s social/economic circumstances. The court must consider:

  • The relative strength/nature/stability of the child’s relationship with each parent.

  • The parents’ agreements, if you entered them knowingly and voluntarily.

  • Each parent’s past/future potential for taking care of the children, including if one of you has taken more daily responsibility.

  • The child’s emotional needs and developmental level.

  • The child’s relationship with siblings and other important adults, and involvement with school/activities/community.

  • Your wishes.

  • The child’s wishes, if mature enough to say. (This usually means a teenager.)

  • Each parent’s work schedule. 

The court should not give much weight to:

  • Which parent earns more, or is remarrying.

  • When deciding a permanent parenting plan, what the temporary parenting plan says.

RCW 26.09.187.

4. Will the court order equal time with the children?

Only if it finds it is in the child’s best interests.  How close the ex-spouses live to each other may matter.

Either parent can make emergency OR day-to-day decisions (examples: what the child will eat; who will babysit the child) when the child is in that parent’s care. The court may let or both parents make non-emergency decisions, such as where the child will go to school, what health care providers the child will see, when the child gets medical care, and what religious institution the child attends.

The court must give only one parent the authority to make these decisions if there is a limiting factor under RCW 26.09.191 against the other parent OR the parents do not want to decide together. If one parent disagrees with joint decision-making, the court may order one parent sole decision-making if any of these is true:

  • RCW 26.09.191 applies to the other parent.

  • The other parent has never taken part in decision-making about the children.

  • The parents cannot and do not want to cooperate.

  • The parents do not live close enough to each other.

In most cases, the court should treat decisions about the children’s religious upbringing differently from school and medical care decisions. The court should allow each parent to provide the child the religious instruction of the parent’s choice while in that parent’s care, unless the court decides that exposure to those religious views will harm the children.

The parenting plan has a section saying how you will solve future disagreements about it. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) refers to ways of solving disagreements besides going to court. You can choose counseling, mediation, or arbitration. The court should not order ADR if any of these is true:

  • RCW 26.09.191 applies to one parent.

  • The parents cannot take part in ADR equally.

  • One parent cannot afford ADR.

In any of those cases, the parenting plan should just require you to go back to court over any disagreements about the parenting plan. 

If you choose counseling, you typically meet with a mental health professional who uses counseling techniques to help you solve your disagreement. If you choose mediation, you meet with a neutral third party who may be a lawyer, retired judge, or mental health professional. That mediator tries to encourage you to come to agreement. If you choose an arbitrator, you meet with a neutral third party (often a lawyer or retired judge) who tries to help you reach agreement, but who makes a decision you both must follow if you cannot agree. You can file a motion asking for a review of the arbitrator’s decision if you do not agree with it.

In most cases, you must pay for ADR. It can cost a lot. However, ADR can also help you avoid the stress/expense/unpredictability of going to court. Some people find ADR helpful.

*Mediation: Should I Use Ithas more info. 

Your parenting plan says what happens if you want to move. You must give the other parent notice before moving. They can object to the move and ask the court to change your parenting plan. RCW 26.09.405 - RCW 26.09.560 Questions and Answers about Washington’s Relocation Law has more info.

Yes. You must tell the court your spouse is pregnant. The court cannot use the pregnancy to put off entering final divorce orders.

*The law presumes that any child born during your marriage or within 300 days after the entry of your Final Divorce Order is your spouse’s child even if it is not actually their biological child. 

You should resolve the unborn child’s parentage before the entry of Final Divorce Orders. You can:

  • File a motion for genetic testing. Parentage Cases: File a Motion for Genetic Testing has forms and instructions.

  • Contact the Division of Child Support, for referral to the family support section of the Prosecuting Attorney’s office. They may file a parentage action in court.  There are strict time limits in which a presumed or acknowledged father may deny or challenge parentage. Talk with a lawyer.

Part 6: Child support

It is what one parent pays the other to help support the children. You usually must pay child support monthly. The court bases the amount on the Washington State Support Schedule. The court also considers

  • The children's needs.

  • Both parents' incomes.

Parents have a legal duty to help support their children. In most divorce cases, the non-custodial parent pays the other parent child support. Even if the parents split custody evenly, one may have to pay support if there is a big difference in their incomes.

*A stepparent may have a legal duty to help support stepchildren until a divorce from the child’s parent is final or the court ends this obligation.

The court uses the Washington State Child Support Schedule. It works like an income tax table. The court figures out each parent’s income, adds it together, and finds the amount of support on the Schedule that applies to the number and ages of children.

The court’s main concern is making sure your children have enough to meet their needs. Support is for clothes and food, to give the children a place to live (rent, mortgage, utilities), and assure they have decent daycare and medical care.

You both may have to share costs for uninsured health care, daycare, school tuition, and long-distance visits. The court determines how much each parent pays in proportion to their incomes and by considering the number of children living with them. The court may award the federal income tax exemptions each spouse is entitled to claim.

*How is Child Support Set has more info.

Part 7: Our Do-it-Yourself Resources

Yes! Use our Washington Forms Online program. Fill out legal documents online for free. It's simple: we ask you questions and use your answers to complete the documents you need.

Yes! 

We have printable packets with blank forms for you to print and fill out on your own, with how-to instructions for completing and filing.

Check the list below to see what is available. This list should help you decide which you need. You may need more than one. Get only what you need when you need them.

Hire a lawyer to represent you. If you can afford to, you should talk to one about your case and consider hiring them to file for you. If you cannot afford a lawyer, contact your local legal services office. Some legal services offices, county bar associations, and pro bono programs handle divorces. They usually can directly represent only a very few people. If you have a low income and live outside King County, call CLEAR for a referral at 1-888-201-1014. If you have a low income and live in King County, call the King County Bar Association at (206) 623-2551. Ask for a referral for low-income representation in family law.

Take a “Self-Help” class. Some counties have classes on how to file your own divorce. It may cost more than this packet, but may give more help with forms and local procedures. If you can go to a class, you should. To find out if your county has a self-help class, contact your local family law facilitator, if there is one.

Where available, use the local family law facilitator’s Do-It-Yourself packets. Some counties have family law facilitators who can help you file your own divorce. They are not lawyers. They cannot give legal advice. They do often have do-it-yourself packets designed for that county.

We have more divorce resources and links for legal research. If you need more info, or do not have a printer or internet access, visit your local law library (usually in your county’s Superior Court building). The library staff may be able to help you find the resources you need.

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Last Review and Update: Jun 21, 2022
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