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Illinois Specific

How Long Does Divorce Take in Illinois?

Illinois has a mandatory waiting period of None (6-month separation if contested). Uncontested divorces typically take 2–4 months after the waiting period. Contested cases can take 1–3+ years depending on the issues involved.

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Key Facts

Waiting period

None (6-month separation if contested)

Residency requirement

90 days

Divorce type

No-Fault Only

Filing fee

$300–$400

The Illinois Divorce Process

1

Meet residency requirements

You or your spouse must have lived in Illinois for 90 days before filing.

2

File the divorce petition

One spouse files the petition with the court and pays the filing fee ($300–$400). Fee waivers available for low income.

3

Serve your spouse

The other spouse must be formally served with divorce papers. They then have a set time (usually 20–30 days) to file a response.

4

Exchange financial disclosures

Both spouses must disclose all income, assets, and debts. This is mandatory and cannot be skipped.

5

Negotiate or litigate

If you agree on everything, submit a settlement. If not, try mediation first. If mediation fails, the case goes to trial.

6

Final judgment

Once all issues are resolved and the None (6-month separation if contested) waiting period has passed, the judge signs the final judgment and your divorce is complete.

Tips to Speed Up Your Illinois Divorce

Complete financial disclosures quickly and thoroughly — delays here waste the most time
Consider mediation before litigation — faster, cheaper, less adversarial
Agree on as much as possible before hiring attorneys
Be organized — gather financial documents yourself
Be realistic about what you want — fighting over small items costs more than they're worth

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Legal Disclaimer: This article covers Illinois divorce law for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change frequently. Always consult a licensed Illinois family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.