Navigate a Divorce · Wisconsin

How to File for Divorce in Wisconsin — Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Filing for divorce in Wisconsin means a 180 days (6 months). at least one spouse must have resided in wisconsin for 6 months and in the filing county for 30 days. residency requirement and a 120 days (4 months) from the date of filing. waiting period, with community-property rules (a 50/50 presumption on marital assets). This page walks the complete workflow — from residency and property framework, through filing, service, and the waiting period, to health-insurance transitions, QDROs, real estate, and the post-decree administrative steps.

This guide covers 24 steps across 6 phases — with Wisconsin-specific deadlines, fees, and official links layered into each step.

Steps
24
Phases
6
Estimated time
about 42 hours total

Wisconsin at a glance

Residency required
180 days (6 months). At least one spouse must have resided in Wisconsin for 6 months AND in the filing county for 30 days.
Waiting period
120 days (4 months) from the date of filing.
Property division
Community property (50/50 presumption)
Filing fee
Typical filing fee in Wisconsin: $200–$250. Fee waivers are available in most states if you qualify financially.

The complete Wisconsin navigate a divorce workflow

Every phase, in order, with every step rendered below. Skim the phase headers to plan; expand into the step details when you're ready to execute.

Before You File

5 steps

Understand your legal standing and make informed decisions before any paperwork.

Confirm you meet Wisconsin's residency requirement

You must have lived in the filing state long enough — filing early gets your case dismissed.

Critical30 minBefore filing

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 Wisconsin: you need 180 days (6 months) before you can file. 180 days (6 months). At least one spouse must have resided in Wisconsin for 6 months AND in the filing county for 30 days. AND in the filing county for 30 days.

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 Wisconsin's minimum residency
  • If Wisconsin 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)
  • Wisconsin's residency statute summary from the official courts self-help portal
Why it matters: Residency is a jurisdictional requirement — if you don't meet it, nothing else you do matters because the court won't take the case.

Resources

Check for mandatory separation requirements

Some states require you to live separately for a period before filing or finalizing.

Critical20 minBefore filing

A handful of states — notably North Carolina (one year) and Virginia (six months or one year depending on children and a separation agreement) — require spouses to live physically separate before a divorce can be filed or finalized. Most states do not. Where separation is required, the clock starts when you physically separate, not when you decide to divorce. Placeholder details here will read as Wisconsin-specific rule once verified data is loaded.

On separation in Wisconsin: Wisconsin doesn’t require a mandatory pre-filing physical separation.

Action checklist

  • Confirm whether Wisconsin requires a pre-filing or pre-decree separation period
  • If required, document the date you physically separated (when one spouse moved out)
  • Keep records of separate residences and financial separation to support the separation date

What you'll need

  • Wisconsin's separation-requirement summary (official courts portal)
  • Records establishing the date of physical separation (lease, mail-forwarding, utility accounts)
Why it matters: In separation-required states, filing before the separation period is complete guarantees delay. In all states, how separation is treated affects date-of-separation claims that drive property division.

Understand Wisconsin's property division framework

Community property or equitable distribution — this changes how you negotiate.

Critical30 minBefore filing

Nine states — Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin — are community-property states, where marital assets are presumed divided 50/50. Every other state is an equitable-distribution state, where courts weigh factors like length of marriage, contributions, needs, and earning capacity to reach a fair (not necessarily equal) split. Separate property (owned before the marriage or received by gift or inheritance) is usually excluded, but commingling can convert it. Wisconsin's regime is shown below.

Wisconsin is a community-property state, which means Community property state — Wisconsin follows marital property law, treating assets acquired during marriage as jointly owned. Division is presumed equal. Separate property (pre-marital, inherited, or gifted) is usually excluded, but commingling can convert it — negotiate with this baseline in mind.

Action checklist

  • Confirm Wisconsin's property division regime (community vs. equitable)
  • List marital assets (acquired during the marriage) vs. separate assets (pre-marriage, gifted, or inherited)
  • Flag any commingled accounts where separate and marital funds have been mixed
  • Note any prenuptial or postnuptial agreement that alters the default rules

What you'll need

  • List of all financial accounts, real estate, vehicles, business interests, and retirement plans
  • Documentation of pre-marital ownership for anything you consider separate property
  • Prenuptial or postnuptial agreement (if one exists)
Why it matters: Negotiating under the wrong framework leads to settlements that feel fair in the moment but aren't legally grounded — and can't be unwound once signed.

Decide: attorney, mediator, or self-file

Match the right legal path to the complexity of your case.

Critical1 hrBefore filing

Uncontested divorces with no children, no real estate, and no complex assets can often be self-filed using Wisconsin court's self-help forms — filing fees are the main cost and many states have guided workflows. Any contested issues, shared children, jointly owned real estate, retirement accounts, a business interest, or significant debt shifts the calculus toward an attorney; the cost is real, but so is the exposure. A mediator is a middle path for couples willing to negotiate but who want a neutral third party to facilitate.

Action checklist

  • Honestly inventory complexity: children, real estate, retirement plans, business interests, significant debt, or disagreement
  • If complex, schedule 2–3 consultations with local family law attorneys (many offer free or low-cost intro meetings)
  • If moderate complexity but cooperative, research mediators certified in your county or state
  • If genuinely simple and uncontested, locate Wisconsin court's self-help divorce forms portal

What you'll need

  • Honest complexity self-assessment (use the intake questions you already answered)
  • Budget for attorney retainer ($2,500–$10,000+ typical) or mediator ($1,000–$5,000 split)
Why it matters: Self-filing a case with hidden complexity leads to agreements that are hard to enforce or modify — and attorneys are expensive to retain after the fact to clean up mistakes.

Gather foundational documents

Compile the paper trail your case will need — don't wait for discovery to do this.

High priority3 hrBefore filing

Whether contested or uncontested, your divorce will require a baseline of financial and personal documents. Building this file before you file (or are served) puts you in control of the timeline rather than scrambling on a deadline. In contested cases, discovery will demand full financial disclosure — missing documents delay proceedings and can look like concealment to the court.

Action checklist

  • Pull 2–3 years of personal and joint tax returns (federal and state)
  • Collect the last 6–12 months of statements for every bank, credit, investment, and retirement account
  • Locate property deeds, vehicle titles, and insurance declarations
  • Obtain a certified copy of your marriage certificate
  • Locate any prenuptial or postnuptial agreement and recent pay stubs for both spouses

What you'll need

  • Certified marriage certificate
  • Federal and state tax returns (2–3 years)
  • Bank, credit card, investment, and retirement account statements
  • Property deeds, vehicle titles, mortgage statements
  • Recent pay stubs for both spouses
  • Prenuptial or postnuptial agreement (if one exists)
Why it matters: Documents you can't find in two days become documents you can't produce on a court-ordered deadline. Gathering them calmly now is exponentially easier than after papers are filed.

Filing and Service

3 steps

Initiate the legal process correctly.

File the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage

The petition is the formal start of your case — file it at the correct county court.

Critical2 hrAfter residency is met

A Petition for Dissolution of Marriage (named slightly differently in some states — Complaint for Divorce, Petition for Divorce) is the document that opens your case. It is filed in the county family court where you (or in some states your spouse) resides. Fees vary by state and county — typically $100–$450. The filing spouse becomes the Petitioner; the other spouse becomes the Respondent. Most courts provide form petitions for self-filers and most states accept e-filing.

On filing fees in Wisconsin: Typical filing fee in Wisconsin: $200–$250. Fee waivers are available in most states if you qualify financially.

Action checklist

  • Confirm the correct county for venue (where you or your spouse resides per state rule)
  • Download the current petition form and required attachments from Wisconsin's court self-help portal
  • Complete the petition accurately, including grounds (most states use no-fault) and requested relief
  • Prepare any required initial financial disclosure forms
  • File in person or via e-filing and pay the filing fee (or request a fee waiver if you qualify)

What you'll need

  • Completed Petition for Dissolution of Marriage
  • Initial financial disclosure forms (state-specific)
  • Filing fee (typically $100–$450) or fee-waiver application
  • Certified copy of marriage certificate (some states)
Why it matters: Filing correctly locks in jurisdiction and venue, starts your waiting-period clock, and (where applicable) triggers ATROs. Errors at this stage cascade through the rest of the case.

Resources

Serve your spouse with divorce papers

Service must be legally proper — you usually cannot serve the papers yourself.

Critical1 hrWithin days of filing (state-specific deadline)

After filing, you must serve your spouse with the petition and summons. In most states you cannot serve the papers yourself — you use a licensed process server, the county sheriff's civil division, or (where allowed) certified mail with return receipt. Proof of service must be filed with the court. Rules vary meaningfully: New York requires a New York-resident process server who is not a party; several states allow acceptance of service signed by the respondent; others require personal service regardless. Time limits on completing service after filing are common (often 30–120 days).

Action checklist

  • Confirm Wisconsin's allowed service methods (process server, sheriff, certified mail, acceptance of service)
  • Hire a licensed process server or request sheriff service and provide an accurate address
  • If the spouse will accept service voluntarily, use Wisconsin's acceptance-of-service form
  • File the proof of service with the court within the required window

What you'll need

  • Filed copy of the petition and summons (stamped by the clerk)
  • Process server fee (typically $50–$150) or sheriff's civil service fee
  • Current address where your spouse can reliably be served
Why it matters: Improper service is the most common reason divorce cases stall in the first 90 days. Until service is perfected, the case cannot move forward and responsive deadlines don't start.

Track your spouse’s Response (or proceed by default)

Respondent typically has 30 days — agreement, contest, or default decides your track.

High priority30 minRespondent typically has 30 days after service

After service, your spouse (the Respondent) typically has about 30 days to file a Response (sometimes called an Answer). If they agree with the petition, the case proceeds on the uncontested track. If they disagree on any substantive issue — property division, custody, support — it proceeds on the contested track. If they don't respond at all within the deadline, you may be able to proceed by default divorce and the court can grant essentially what you requested, subject to judicial review.

Action checklist

  • Track the response deadline in your calendar (confirm with Wisconsin's rules)
  • If a response is filed, read it carefully to understand which issues are disputed
  • If no response is filed within the deadline, consult the state's default-divorce procedure

What you'll need

  • The filed petition and proof of service
  • Access to your court case file (most states provide online case lookup)
Why it matters: The response shapes the next 3–18 months of your case. An expected contested response often becomes uncontested if communication was handled well before filing.

Waiting Period and Finalization

4 steps

Navigate the mandatory waiting period and reach a final decree.

Track Wisconsin's mandatory waiting period

Most states have a minimum gap between filing and when the court can enter a decree.

High priority15 minStarts at filing or service (state-dependent)

A waiting period is the minimum time between filing (or service, depending on state) and the earliest date the court can grant the divorce. Periods range from none at all in some states to six months in California. The purpose is reflection — to ensure decrees aren't entered in haste. Wisconsin's waiting period will be shown here once state data loads.

On the waiting period in Wisconsin: 120 days (4 months) from the date of filing. 120-day waiting period from the date the petition is filed.

Action checklist

  • Calculate your earliest possible finalization date based on Wisconsin's waiting period
  • Add a calendar milestone for the end of the waiting period
  • Schedule settlement discussions or mediation to converge near that date, not before it

What you'll need

  • Wisconsin's waiting-period statute summary
  • Your filing date (or service date, depending on Wisconsin's rule)
Why it matters: You cannot shorten the waiting period. Planning finalization before it ends results in hearing continuances that can set the case back weeks.

Negotiate and draft the Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA)

The MSA resolves everything — property, debts, custody, support, and beneficiaries.

Critical10 hrDuring proceedings; signed before the final hearing

The Marital Settlement Agreement (named differently in some states — Stipulated Judgment, Separation Agreement incorporated into the decree) is the document that resolves every issue between the parties: division of real estate, bank and investment accounts, vehicles, retirement plans, personal property, business interests, debts, spousal support, child support, custody, and any other issue. Once both spouses sign, it is binding and is submitted to the court to be incorporated into the final decree. This is the single most consequential document in your divorce.

One thing specific to Wisconsin: because Wisconsin is a community-property state, your MSA should specifically allocate each marital asset and debt. The 50/50 default doesn’t describe which spouse ends up with which specific account, car, or property — you need to spell that out.

Action checklist

  • List every asset and debt and assign it specifically (who keeps, or how it's divided)
  • Name specific dollar amounts, account numbers, and deadlines — avoid 'fair share' language
  • Include QDRO language for any employer retirement plans (see retirement section)
  • Include a parenting plan with specific schedules if there are minor children
  • Have the draft reviewed by your attorney or a second attorney before signing

What you'll need

  • Full asset/debt inventory with current values
  • Recent retirement plan statements and plan summaries
  • Real estate appraisals or comparable-sale analyses
  • Parenting schedule proposal (if children)
Why it matters: Every post-divorce dispute that lands in court comes back to the MSA. Vague language is the source; specific language is your protection.

Attend the final hearing (or submit paperwork)

The judge reviews the MSA or rules on disputed issues and signs the Final Decree.

Critical4 hrAfter waiting period and MSA (or trial)

The final hearing is the moment the court officially dissolves the marriage. In uncontested cases, this is often a short appearance where the judge confirms jurisdiction, reviews the MSA, and signs the decree; some states allow paperwork-only finalization. In contested cases that didn't settle, the final hearing is the trial — both sides present evidence and the judge rules on disputed issues and signs the Final Decree of Divorce.

Action checklist

  • Confirm the hearing date and courtroom assignment a week in advance
  • Bring all required forms, the original MSA, and any certified records the court specified
  • Dress as you would for a job interview and arrive at least 30 minutes early
  • Confirm with your attorney what questions the judge is likely to ask

What you'll need

  • Original Marital Settlement Agreement with both signatures
  • Any proposed decree Wisconsin requires you to bring
  • Certified copy of marriage certificate (some states)
  • Government-issued photo ID
Why it matters: The Final Decree is the operative legal document for everything that follows — insurance, retirement, real estate, name change, credit. Without it signed and entered, you aren't legally divorced.

Receive and secure certified copies of your Final Decree

Get 4–6 certified copies at once — you'll need them for every administrative step.

Critical30 minImmediately after decree is signed

A certified copy of the Final Decree (with a raised or colored seal and clerk's signature) is required for nearly every administrative step that follows: changing your name at SSA and DMV; transferring title to real estate; filing QDROs with plan administrators; changing insurance beneficiaries; updating financial accounts. Certified copies cost $5–$25 each depending on the state. Obtaining them one at a time as needs arise is expensive and slow — order a stack up front.

Action checklist

  • Order 4–6 certified copies from the clerk the week the decree is signed
  • Store one copy in a secure place (safe, safety deposit box, encrypted drive scan)
  • Scan one copy to PDF for quick submission where institutions accept uploads
  • Make a list of who needs a copy (SSA, DMV, banks, insurance, retirement plans, mortgage)

What you'll need

  • Case number and hearing date
  • Fees for certified copies (typically $5–$25 per copy)
  • Photo ID at pickup
Why it matters: Institutions accept only certified copies for most divorce-related updates. Every week you wait to obtain one is a week an administrative step sits incomplete.

Resources

Health Insurance

3 steps

The highest-stakes administrative deadline in divorce — coverage transitions have hard windows.

Identify your current health insurance situation

Before you file, know whose plan you're on and when coverage could end.

Critical45 minImmediately after filing

If you are covered under your spouse's employer-sponsored plan, your coverage ends the day the divorce is final — not when you file. If you carry your own coverage, your situation is simpler administratively but you may need to add or remove dependents. Either way, locating the benefits administrator and the plan's Summary Plan Description (SPD) now prevents scrambling at decree time.

Action checklist

  • Confirm whose employer plan covers you and the other family members
  • Obtain the Summary Plan Description (SPD) from the benefits administrator
  • Save contact info for the plan administrator (phone + email)
  • If you have children, note which parent's plan currently covers them

What you'll need

  • Current insurance card
  • Summary Plan Description (SPD)
  • Benefits administrator contact information
Why it matters: Every health-insurance decision downstream — COBRA, marketplace, new employer plan, Medicaid — depends on knowing whose plan you're on and what the exact termination date will be.

Notify your spouse's plan administrator of the divorce

You have 60 days after the decree to trigger COBRA eligibility — miss it and it's gone.

Critical45 minWithin 60 days of final decree

Under federal law (COBRA), either the covered employee or the qualified dependent spouse must notify the employer's group health plan administrator of the divorce within 60 days of the qualifying event (typically the date of the final decree). This notification is what triggers the plan's obligation to offer COBRA continuation coverage. If notification is not made within 60 days, the plan is not required to offer COBRA at all.

Action checklist

  • Within 30 days of the decree, send written notice (email and certified letter) to the plan administrator
  • Include your name, the employee's name, the employer, and a copy of the certified decree
  • Retain the proof of delivery (certified-mail receipt or email read receipt)
  • Follow up in writing if you don't receive a COBRA election packet within 14 days

What you'll need

  • Certified copy of the Final Decree
  • Plan administrator's mailing address and email
  • Qualified beneficiary's date of birth and SSN
Why it matters: This is arguably the single highest-stakes administrative deadline in divorce. It is a permanent cliff, not a penalty.

Elect COBRA or find replacement coverage

Price every option — COBRA, employer plan, ACA marketplace, Medicaid — before defaulting.

Critical2 hrWithin 60 days of receiving COBRA election notice

After receiving the COBRA election notice you have 60 days to elect or to obtain replacement coverage. Options: (a) COBRA — same coverage you had, up to 36 months for a divorced spouse, at the full group premium plus a 2% admin fee (typically $400–$700/month for one adult, much more for a family); (b) your own employer's plan — divorce is a qualifying life event that opens a roughly 30-day special enrollment window; (c) ACA marketplace — divorce opens a 60-day Special Enrollment Period, and subsidies may be significant at lower individual income; (d) Medicaid if you income-qualify post-divorce.

Action checklist

  • Get a cost estimate for the marketplace plan comparable to your current COBRA-eligible plan
  • If employed, check your own employer's special enrollment window (typically 30 days)
  • If income is low, check Wisconsin's Medicaid eligibility thresholds
  • Price all four options before the COBRA election deadline
  • Elect your chosen option in writing and retain confirmation

What you'll need

  • COBRA election packet
  • Current plan SPD for comparison
  • Recent pay stubs or projected post-divorce income for subsidy calculations
  • Healthcare.gov account (or Wisconsin exchange)
Why it matters: COBRA is usually the most expensive option — defaulting to it without pricing marketplace and employer alternatives can cost thousands of dollars more per year than a comparable plan.

Resources

Retirement Accounts

1 step

Employer plans require QDROs. IRAs follow different rules. Sequencing protects your share.

Execute IRA transfer incident to divorce

IRA division is a direct custodian-to-custodian transfer — never take a check.

Critical1 hrImmediately after decree

The divorce decree directs the IRA custodian to transfer funds directly to the other spouse's IRA. This must be structured as a direct transfer (custodian-to-custodian, also called a 'transfer incident to divorce' under IRC §408(d)(6)) — not a distribution. If the check is made out to you and you deposit it to a personal account first, the full amount is treated as a taxable distribution and may incur a 10% early-withdrawal penalty, even though the divorce would otherwise protect the transfer from tax.

Action checklist

  • Open the receiving IRA account before initiating the transfer
  • Provide both custodians with certified decree language specifying 'transfer incident to divorce'
  • Confirm the transfer is structured custodian-to-custodian (ACAT or equivalent)
  • Do not accept a check in your name under any circumstances

What you'll need

  • Certified copy of the Final Decree with IRA-division language
  • Account numbers for both the originating and receiving IRAs
Why it matters: Structured correctly, an IRA transfer incident to divorce is not a taxable event. Structured incorrectly, you pay ordinary income tax on the entire transfer plus potentially a 10% penalty.

Financial Separation

8 steps

Fully disentangle accounts, credit, beneficiaries, insurance, taxes, and Social Security.

Close or separate all joint bank accounts

Leaving joints open preserves both access and exposure — close them deliberately.

Critical2 hrAfter decree (or per decree terms)

Leaving joint accounts open after the decree gives your ex continued access to deposits and leaves you exposed to overdrafts or activity you didn't authorize. Most decrees specify how joint accounts are resolved — who takes what balance, by when. Coordinate the closure so automatic payments and deposits are redirected first.

Action checklist

  • Open individual accounts before closing joint accounts if you haven't already
  • Move direct deposit and all automatic payments to your individual account
  • Transfer agreed funds per the decree and document the transfer in writing
  • Formally close joint accounts and obtain written confirmation from the bank

What you'll need

  • Certified decree (for some banks' internal processes)
  • List of every automatic payment and deposit hitting each joint account
  • Individual account routing/account numbers
Why it matters: Joint access post-decree is a standing risk. Closing accounts cleanly is a one-time administrative cost; leaving them open is a recurring operational risk.

Separate all joint credit cards and lines of credit

Creditors don't honor your decree — joint accounts stay joint until closed or transferred.

Critical1 hr 30 minAfter decree

Your divorce decree assigns debt between you and your spouse, but it does not change the creditor's contractual right to pursue both parties on a joint account. If your name is on a joint card and your ex stops paying, the creditor can come after you — and your credit takes the hit. Close joint accounts where possible; where one party is keeping an account, the other should be fully removed (not left as authorized user) and confirmation obtained in writing.

Action checklist

  • List every joint card, line of credit, and loan
  • For cards in joint name: pay off and close, or transfer to one party's sole name
  • Obtain written confirmation of each closure or transfer
  • Pull a credit report 30 days later to confirm balances and account statuses

What you'll need

  • Certified decree
  • Current statements for every joint account
  • Each issuer's account-change form or customer service number
Why it matters: Joint credit is joint liability regardless of what the decree says. Credit cleanup is one of the most consequential post-decree steps because it's where one spouse's non-payment can silently destroy the other's credit.

Update all beneficiary designations

This is the most consequential and most overlooked step — do it immediately after decree.

Critical2 hrImmediately after decree

In most states, divorce does NOT automatically revoke a spouse as beneficiary on life insurance, retirement accounts, or payable-on-death designations. People die with their ex-spouse still listed as beneficiary because they forgot to update a single form. Federal ERISA preemption complicates retirement plan cases specifically — the plan administrator typically pays the named beneficiary even if the decree says otherwise. Updating every designation is the only reliable remedy.

Action checklist

  • List every account with a beneficiary designation: life insurance, 401(k), IRA, pension, POD bank, TOD investment, HSA, FSA
  • Submit new beneficiary designation forms for each
  • Retain confirmation for every update
  • Re-verify six months later by pulling statements and confirming the named beneficiary

What you'll need

  • List of every account with a beneficiary designation
  • Current forms for each institution
  • New beneficiary's full name, SSN, and date of birth
Why it matters: Beneficiary designations override wills. A 20-year-old designation on a life insurance policy pays to your ex regardless of what your current will says — and the funds are usually paid out quickly, before anyone can intervene.

Update or revoke all estate planning documents

Don't rely on automatic revocation rules — rewrite intentionally.

Critical3 hrImmediately after decree

Some states automatically revoke spousal provisions in a will upon divorce, but the rules vary and relying on them is risky. Power of attorney and healthcare proxy documents often don't auto-revoke — your ex could remain your agent for financial or medical decisions. Rewrite every estate document intentionally: will, power of attorney, healthcare proxy / medical directive, HIPAA authorization, and any trusts naming the ex-spouse as trustee or beneficiary.

Action checklist

  • Engage an estate attorney or use a reputable self-service platform
  • Rewrite the will naming new beneficiaries and executor
  • Revoke and replace power of attorney
  • Revoke and replace healthcare proxy / medical directive / HIPAA authorization
  • Review trusts and update trustees or beneficiaries as needed

What you'll need

  • Certified decree
  • Current estate documents (to identify what's being replaced)
  • List of new beneficiaries, agents, and executor
Why it matters: Dying or being incapacitated with outdated estate documents places your ex in decision-making or inheritance roles you almost certainly no longer want. Rewriting is cheaper than the cleanup.

Separate auto, home, and life insurance

After decree — but not before (ATROs may prohibit changes mid-proceeding).

Critical2 hrAfter decree

After the decree, separate auto, home, and life insurance policies. Remove the ex-spouse from your policies and, if you were on their policies, open replacements immediately. Coordinate the timing so there is no uninsured day on a vehicle or structure — even one day of lapse can void claims. In states with ATROs, do not change insurance before the decree is final; doing so can be held in contempt of court.

Action checklist

  • Contact each insurer the week of the decree
  • Quote replacement policies before cancelling existing coverage
  • Schedule the new policy effective date to overlap the old policy end date by at least one day
  • For life insurance, update beneficiary designations (see beneficiary step)

What you'll need

  • Certified decree
  • Current policy declarations
  • Vehicle info and addresses for new quotes
Why it matters: A one-day gap on auto insurance can void coverage for an accident and create personal liability that wipes out post-divorce financial recovery. A gap on homeowner's insurance can compound losses on a damaged house.

File taxes correctly for the divorce year

Filing status depends on when the decree was signed — coordinate with a CPA.

High priority2 hrTax year the decree is finalized

Your filing status for the tax year is determined by your marital status on December 31. If the decree is signed before December 31, you file as Single (or Head of Household if you maintained a home for a qualifying child). If the decree was not yet final, you may file as Married Filing Jointly or Married Filing Separately for that year. Coordinate with your ex and a CPA on: who claims each dependent child, how alimony is treated, and how shared-year income and deductions are allocated. For divorces finalized after 2018, alimony is no longer deductible for the payer or taxable to the recipient under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act — confirm the treatment if your decree predates 2019.

Action checklist

  • Confirm your filing status for the decree year (based on December 31 marital status)
  • Coordinate with your ex on who claims each dependent child
  • Engage a CPA for the first post-divorce tax year if complexity exists (alimony, shared custody, real estate)
  • Retain all decree documents and financial records through the statute of limitations

What you'll need

  • Certified decree
  • W-2s, 1099s, and 1040 for both spouses for the decree year
  • Dependent information (SSN, date of birth)
Why it matters: Filing-status errors trigger IRS notices, amended returns, and penalties. Coordinating the first post-divorce tax year with a CPA saves the error and the downstream cleanup.

Resources

Notify Social Security Administration of divorce

Marriages of 10+ years may unlock spousal Social Security benefits — don't leave them unclaimed.

Medium1 hrAfter decree (or later when eligible)

If your marriage lasted 10 or more years, you may be entitled to Social Security benefits based on your ex-spouse's work record — up to 50% of their primary insurance amount if you are at or past your full retirement age, without reducing their benefit. This is a little-known but valuable benefit, especially for spouses who were out of the workforce or lower earners. You must notify SSA to access it; it isn't automatic.

Action checklist

  • Confirm the marriage duration (date of marriage to date of decree)
  • If 10+ years and you are at or near retirement age, contact SSA
  • Provide certified marriage certificate and certified divorce decree
  • If not yet retirement age, flag the benefit in your retirement plan for later

What you'll need

  • Certified marriage certificate
  • Certified divorce decree
  • Your ex-spouse's Social Security number (if known)
Why it matters: For lower-earning or non-working spouses from long marriages, the divorced-spouse Social Security benefit can add thousands per year for decades — but only if claimed.

Resources

Pull credit report and monitor for 90 days

Run all three bureaus, confirm account statuses, and set up alerts.

High priority1 hr30 days post-decree; repeat at 90 days

About 30 days after the decree, pull your credit reports from all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Confirm every joint account is closed or transferred as agreed. Look for any accounts you weren't aware of. Set up monitoring alerts to catch new activity — especially if your ex knows your SSN and personal details.

Action checklist

  • Pull free credit reports from AnnualCreditReport.com at day 30
  • Confirm every account from your joint list is closed or transferred
  • Dispute any accounts or balances that don't match the decree terms
  • Set up ongoing credit monitoring (free options are widely available)

What you'll need

  • Decree and list of joint accounts
  • AnnualCreditReport.com account
Why it matters: Post-divorce identity issues — an ex-spouse using joint account numbers, opening new credit with marital information, or leaving old joint accounts unpaid — are best caught within 90 days when dispute processes are easiest.

Resources