Confirm you meet Arkansas's residency requirement
You must have lived in the filing state long enough — filing early gets your case dismissed.
Every state requires at least one spouse to have lived there for a minimum period before a divorce can be filed. Ranges run from roughly 90 days to a full year depending on the state, and some states also require a minimum time in the specific county where you file. Until you clear that bar, the court cannot hear your case. Placeholder residency details are shown below and will read as your verified state-specific requirement once state data is loaded.
Here’s the residency rule in Arkansas: you need 60 days (about 2 months) before you can file. 60 days (about 2 months). At least one spouse must have resided in Arkansas for 60 days before filing.
One thing worth starting today: Arkansas requires 540 days (18 months) of physical separation before a no-fault divorce can be finalized. Moving into separate residences now protects the timeline — any reconciliation can reset the clock.
Critical for Arkansas: Arkansas: 18 months of separation with a cohabitation reset. 540 days of continuous separation are required before a no-fault divorce can be finalized. Any cohabitation — even briefly — resets the clock to zero. Fault-based grounds avoid this requirement but carry their own evidentiary burden.
Action checklist
- Confirm your move-in date to your current state (use a lease, utility bill, or driver's license issuance as proof)
- Calculate your earliest eligible filing date based on Arkansas's minimum residency
- If Arkansas also requires county residency, confirm that clock separately
- If you're close to the line, plan filing for a buffer beyond the minimum to avoid disputes
What you'll need
- • Proof of move-in date (lease, mortgage, utility bill, driver's license)
- • Arkansas's residency statute summary from the official courts self-help portal
Resources
- Arkansas courts — family law self-help(official)