How Much Does a Divorce Cost in 2026? (Full Breakdown)

A man signing a legal document titled "Divorce Decree" with a gold pen on a white desk, in front of a legal professional.
Family & Immigration

How Much Does a Divorce Cost in 2026? (Full Breakdown)

June 26, 2026

A divorce can cost anywhere from about $300 to well over $20,000 in 2026 — but most people pay far less than the frightening figures they see online. The price is driven mainly by one thing: how much you and your spouse disagree, not by whether you hire a lawyer.

Quick answer: If you and your spouse agree on the major issues, a DIY or online divorce can cost roughly $200–$900, and an uncontested divorce handled with a lawyer averages around $4,100. If you fight it out in court, a contested divorce averages $11,000–$20,000 or more. The single biggest cost factor is conflict — the more you agree, the less you pay.

Divorce Cost by Type (2026)

The fastest way to get a realistic number is to find your own situation in the table below. There’s no single “average” divorce — there are several very different paths, and the gap between the cheapest and the most expensive is enormous.

Typical total cost of divorce by path (2026 U.S. estimates)
Path Typical total cost Best for Lawyer needed?
DIY / pro se ~$200–$900 Simple, amicable splits with no kids or shared assets No
Online divorce service ~$150–$500 Agreeable couples who want help with the paperwork No
Mediation ~$2,000–$9,000 (usually split) Couples who mostly agree but need help settling a few issues Optional
Uncontested, with a lawyer ~$1,500–$6,000 (avg ~$4,100) Agreed divorces with some assets or children, for peace of mind Yes (limited)
Contested (litigated) ~$15,000–$20,000+ High-conflict cases with disputed custody, support, or assets Yes

Most amicable couples land in one of the first four rows — typically somewhere between a few hundred dollars and about $6,000. The eye-watering five-figure averages almost always come from the last row: a contested, drawn-out court fight.

What Actually Drives the Cost of a Divorce

Here’s the truth most cost guides bury: your lawyer’s hourly rate matters far less than the number of things you and your spouse fight about. The same attorney charging $300 an hour might bill $3,000 for an agreed divorce or $30,000 for a war over custody and the house. What moves the number is conflict, complexity, and time.

The factors that push a divorce from cheap to expensive:

  • Conflict level. An agreed (uncontested) divorce is dramatically cheaper than a contested one. Every disputed issue means more negotiation, more paperwork, and more billable hours.
  • Children and custody. Disputes over parenting time or support often require evaluators, a guardian ad litem, and extra hearings.
  • Asset complexity. A home, a business, or retirement accounts may need appraisals, business valuations, or a court order (a QDRO) to split a 401(k). Both dividing retirement accounts and selling the marital home — which can trigger capital gains tax — add cost and complexity.
  • How long it drags on. Time is the multiplier. According to Martindale-Nolo survey data, divorces finished in under six months averaged about $6,500 in fees, while those dragging past 30 months averaged roughly $23,000.
  • Where you live. Filing fees and attorney rates vary widely by state and county.

Notice what’s not at the top of that list: the lawyer. Hiring counsel is rarely what makes a divorce expensive — prolonged conflict is. One thing that can actually lower the bill before you even start is a clear prenuptial agreement, which settles much of the asset question in advance.

How Much Does a Divorce Cost Without a Lawyer?

If you handle your own divorce — known as filing pro se — you’ll typically spend about $200 to $900 total. In a simple agreed case, the only unavoidable cost is the court filing fee. You’re paying for:

  • The court filing fee (roughly $75–$450, depending on your state and county).
  • Forms and paperwork, which most courts provide free through their self-help websites.
  • Serving the papers on your spouse — often $50–$100 for a sheriff or private process server.
  • Occasional extras like notarization or certified copies, which can push the total toward $1,000–$1,500.

When DIY is safe — and when it’s risky

Doing it yourself is a legitimate, money-saving choice for the right case. It tends to work well when your divorce is simple and amicable: a shorter marriage, no minor children, few shared assets, and genuine agreement on how to split everything.

It gets risky when there are children, a home, a business, retirement accounts, or any real disagreement. A mistake on a property or custody form can be hard to undo and may force you to restart — or quietly cost you far more than a lawyer would have. If your case has any complications, it’s often worth paying an attorney to at least review your paperwork before you file.

Online divorce services: a middle ground

Online divorce platforms sit between full DIY and hiring a lawyer. For about $150–$500 (some packages run higher), they help you complete and organize the right forms for your state, and some add a document review. They don’t give legal advice, but for a straightforward, agreed divorce they can save hours of confusion. You’ll still pay your court’s filing fee on top.

Getting a divorce with little or no money

If money is the obstacle, you still have options. Every state has a fee-waiver process (sometimes called proceeding in forma pauperis, or filing a request to waive court fees) that can reduce or eliminate the filing fee if your income is low or you receive public benefits. Beyond that, look into legal aid organizations, law-school clinics, court self-help centers, and limited-scope (“unbundled”) help for just the tricky parts. A genuinely no-money divorce usually means free DIY forms plus an approved fee waiver.

Uncontested vs. Contested Divorce: The Real Price Gap

An uncontested divorce is one where you and your spouse agree on all the major issues — property, debts, children, and support — so a judge simply reviews and approves your agreement. A contested divorce is one where you can’t agree on one or more of those issues, so the court has to step in and decide them for you.

That single distinction is the biggest fork in the road for your wallet. An uncontested divorce with a lawyer averages around $4,100, according to Nolo‘s divorce survey. A contested case that goes to trial on one issue averages about $20,400, and trials over two or more issues average roughly $23,300.

Uncontested vs. contested divorce at a glance
Factor Uncontested Contested
Typical cost ~$1,500–$6,000 (avg ~$4,100) ~$11,000–$23,000+
Typical timeline A few weeks to a few months Often one to three years
Conflict level Low — spouses agree on the main terms High — disputed custody, support, or assets
When it fits You agree on property, kids, and support You can’t agree, or a spouse won’t cooperate

The takeaway is hopeful: you don’t move from the cheap column to the expensive one by hiring a lawyer — you move there by fighting. Every big issue you can settle by agreement (the house, the kids, support) keeps you in the affordable column.

How Much Does a Divorce Lawyer Cost?

Divorce lawyers usually charge one of three ways — by the hour, through a retainer, or with a flat fee for simple work.

Common divorce lawyer fee structures
Type Typical amount What it covers
Hourly ~$150–$500/hr (national avg ~$310–$350) Time spent on calls, emails, drafting, and court — billed in small increments
Retainer ~$2,000–$5,000+ upfront A deposit the lawyer draws against as they work; the unused portion is refunded
Flat fee ~$500–$3,000 One price for a defined, simple job — often an uncontested filing

Hourly rates commonly run $150–$500. The national average for family-law work is around $310–$350 an hour, per Clio‘s Legal Trends data, with higher rates in places like California and New York and lower ones in smaller states. Because lawyers bill in increments (often six minutes), a string of short calls and emails adds up faster than people expect.

A retainer is an upfront deposit — often $2,000–$5,000, and sometimes $10,000 or more for complex cases — that the lawyer bills against over time. It’s a deposit, not a flat price: the unused portion is generally refunded to you when the case ends. A flat fee of about $500–$3,000 is common for simple, clearly defined work like an uncontested divorce.

Reading the fee agreement

Before you hire anyone, read the engagement letter closely. Look for the hourly rate, the billing increment, what the retainer covers and when it must be “replenished,” whether paralegal time is billed at a lower rate, and which costs (filing fees, experts, process servers) are separate from the legal fees. Ask the lawyer directly what tends to make cases like yours more expensive.

When paying for a lawyer is worth it

A lawyer earns the fee when the stakes are high: minor children and contested custody, significant or hard-to-value assets (a home, a business, retirement accounts), or a spouse who is difficult or won’t cooperate. And if there’s a large income gap between spouses, a judge can order the higher-earning spouse to pay part of the other’s attorney fees — a “needs-based” award — so a lack of cash doesn’t automatically mean facing a well-funded spouse alone.

Mediation & Online Divorce: The Middle-Cost Options

Between the cheapest DIY route and a full-blown court fight sit several middle options that keep both costs and hostility down.

Mediation

In mediation, a neutral third party helps you and your spouse reach an agreement instead of having a judge impose one. Mediators typically charge $150–$600 an hour, and a full mediated divorce often totals $2,000–$9,000 — usually split between the spouses, so your own share may be far less. It’s faster and far less adversarial than litigation, and it fits couples who mostly agree but are stuck on a few issues. Many courts even require mediation before they’ll set a contested case for trial.

Online platforms and unbundled help

For the paperwork itself, online divorce platforms (about $150–$500) prepare and file forms for agreed cases. And you don’t have to choose between “all lawyer” and “no lawyer”: with limited-scope (or “unbundled”) representation, you hire an attorney for specific tasks only — reviewing your settlement, preparing one document, or coaching you for a single hearing — and handle the rest yourself. It’s one of the most effective ways to get professional protection without an open-ended bill.

How Much Does a Divorce Cost by State?

Where you live affects the bill in several ways: the court filing fee (roughly $75–$450), local attorney rates, residency and waiting-period rules that can stretch out a case, and whether your state divides property by community property (a roughly 50/50 split) or equitable distribution (a “fair,” not necessarily equal, split). High-cost states like California and New York tend to sit at the top; many Plains and Midwestern states sit far lower.

Example divorce filing fees and typical cost ranges by state (2026 estimates)
State Filing fee (approx.) Typical total range
California ~$435–$450 ~$1,000 (agreed) to $17,000+ (contested)
Texas ~$250–$400 ~$300 (DIY) to $15,000+ (contested)
New York ~$335 ~$1,500 (uncontested) to $20,000+ (contested)
Florida ~$408 ~$500 (DIY) to $15,000+ (contested)
North Dakota ~$80 Among the lowest filing fees in the country

These are estimates that change often and vary by county. Before you budget, check your own state court’s self-help or family-law page for the current filing fee and the right forms.

How to Get a Divorce as Cheaply as Possible

Because the price of a divorce is driven by conflict and billable time, almost every money-saving move comes down to reducing one or both. Here’s a practical playbook:

  1. Aim for agreement. Settling the big issues — house, kids, support — is what moves you from the expensive contested column to the cheap uncontested one. It’s the single biggest lever you have.
  2. Try mediation before litigation. A few mediated sessions, split with your spouse, are far cheaper than a court battle.
  3. Use DIY or an online service for simple, agreed cases — and keep a lawyer in reserve to review the final paperwork.
  4. Hire limited-scope help. Pay an attorney only for the hard parts instead of the whole case.
  5. Stay organized. Gather tax returns, bank statements, and account details up front. Every hour your lawyer spends chasing documents is billable.
  6. Bundle your questions. Save them for one call or email instead of a dozen — short contacts are still billed in increments.
  7. Keep emotions out of billable time. Your lawyer is an expensive listener. Lean on a therapist or a friend for support, and use legal time for legal work.
  8. Request a fee waiver if your income qualifies, and ask about payment plans.

Once everything is final, it’s worth tidying up the financial loose ends. You may want to update your will and beneficiaries and review your overall estate plan, rebuild your credit, and, if you’re setting up a new household, budget for renters insurance. And if the split has left you with debt you can’t manage, here’s how to file for bankruptcy without a lawyer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a divorce cost on average in 2026?
It depends almost entirely on conflict. An agreed DIY or online divorce can run $200–$900; an uncontested divorce with a lawyer averages around $4,100; and a contested, litigated divorce averages roughly $11,000–$23,000 or more. Most people who agree on the major issues pay far less than the scary averages.
How much does a divorce cost without a lawyer?
Typically about $200–$900 if you file yourself (pro se) in a simple, agreed case. The main cost is the court filing fee (~$75–$450), plus paperwork and serving your spouse. Notarization or certified copies can push it toward $1,000–$1,500.
What is the cheapest way to get a divorce?
An uncontested DIY divorce using your court’s free forms — and, if you qualify, a filing-fee waiver. An online service ($150–$500) is the next step up if you want help with the paperwork. The cheapest path always starts with agreeing on the terms so you avoid billable conflict.
How much does an uncontested divorce cost?
Without a lawyer, often just the filing fee plus paperwork — a few hundred dollars. With a lawyer, an uncontested divorce averages around $4,100, generally landing in the $1,500–$6,000 range.
How much does a divorce lawyer cost per hour?
Commonly $150–$500 an hour, with a national family-law average around $310–$350, per Clio’s data. Rates run higher in states like California and New York and lower in smaller states. Lawyers bill in small increments, so short calls and emails add up.
What is a divorce retainer, and is it refundable?
A retainer is an upfront deposit — often $2,000–$5,000, sometimes more — that your lawyer bills against as they work. It’s a deposit, not a flat fee, so the unused portion is generally refunded to you at the end of the case.
How much does it cost to file for divorce?
The court filing fee is usually about $75–$450, depending on your state and county (for example, roughly $435–$450 in California, about $335 in New York, and under $100 in states like North Dakota). Fee waivers are available if you can’t afford it.
Why does divorce cost so much?
Because of conflict and time, not the lawyer’s rate. Every disputed issue — custody, support, the house, a business — means more negotiation, more paperwork, and more billable hours. Cases that drag on for years cost the most; the filing fee is a tiny fraction of the total.
Can I get a divorce with no money?
Often, yes. Use your court’s free DIY forms and apply for a filing-fee waiver based on low income or public benefits. Also look into legal aid, court self-help centers, law-school clinics, and limited-scope help for just the difficult parts.
How much does a divorce cost in Texas or California?
In California, the filing fee is about $435–$450, with totals ranging from around $1,000 for a simple agreed case to $17,000+ when contested. In Texas, filing fees run roughly $250–$400 by county, with totals from a few hundred dollars (DIY) to $15,000+ for contested cases. Always confirm current fees with your local court.
What’s the biggest mistake that makes a divorce expensive?
Fighting over everything — especially turning custody or a single asset into a prolonged battle. Litigating issues you could have settled is what turns a few-thousand-dollar divorce into a five-figure one. Using your lawyer as an emotional sounding board is a close second.
Can my spouse be ordered to pay my legal fees?
Sometimes. Where there’s a significant income gap, a judge can order the higher-earning spouse to pay part of the other’s attorney fees (a “needs-based” award) so both sides can be represented. The rules vary by state, so ask a local attorney.

This article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Divorce laws, court fees, and procedures vary by state and county and change over time. Consult a licensed family-law attorney in your state for advice about your specific situation.

Sources and further reading:

Last updated: . Cost figures and filing fees are re-verified periodically; confirm current amounts with your state court before relying on them.

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